Lethbridge Herald

Poor defense, cold shooting trip up Celtics in Game 2 loss

- Kyle Hightower

The Celtics are once again following a troubling script in the second round of the playoffs.

Boston opened its first-round series against Miami with a dominating Game 1 win and followed it up with a lackluster effort in Game 2.

That pattern repeated itself during the Celtics’ 118-94 Game 2 loss to the Cavaliers on Thursday night.

Almost everything Boston did well in a 25-point victory in Game 1 – knock down 3-pointers, defend and rebound — was flipped by the Cavaliers in Game 2.

The Cavs held advantages in 3-point shooting (plus-15 points), points in the paint (60-34), rebounds (44-31) and even fast-break points (14-8).

Most troubling, though, was the Celtics’ performanc­e from beyond the arc.

Boston went 8 of 35 from the 3-point line (22.9%), including 2 of 18 in the second half. Cleveland finished 13 of 28 (46.4%). Teams are now 103-6 this season when holding a plus-20 percentage points advantage from 3.

“I think it was just a bad game,” Celtics forward Jaylen Brown said. “Obviously, we didn’t shoot the ball well tonight. But defensivel­y that was unacceptab­le . ... So we didn’t help ourselves tonight.”

Brown and fellow All-Star Jayson Tatum both shot 7 of 17 from the field, scoring 19 and 25 points, respective­ly.

The poor 3-point shooting was eerily reminiscen­t of the last time Cleveland won a game in Boston in regulation – the Cavs’ Game 7 win in the 2018 conference finals. Boston went just 7 of 39 from the 3-point line in that game.

“I definitely think there were times when we went through tough stretches defensivel­y and if affected our offense,” Celtics coach Joe Mazzulla said.

As bad a night as the Celtics had, they were very much in the game entering the second half.

The score was knotted at 54-all at halftime. Then Cleveland went to work in the third quarter, getting 16 points from Donovan Mitchell and going 7 of 10 from the 3-point line. It helped the Cavaliers outscore the Celtics 36-24 for the period.

Cleveland started the fourth quarter on a 12-5 run to push its lead to 102-83 with less than nine minutes to play.

Boston threw in the towel with 4:58 remaining in the game and trailing by 24.

“We expected them to play better and they did,” Celtics center Al Horford said. “They were the better team tonight. You have to give them credit. They responded and we didn’t.”

 ?? THE ASSOCIATED PRESS PHOTO ?? Boston Celtics guard Jaylen Brown defends as Cleveland Cavaliers guard Darius Garland drives toward the basket during the second half of Game 2 of an NBA basketball second-round playoff series on Thursday in Boston.
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS PHOTO Boston Celtics guard Jaylen Brown defends as Cleveland Cavaliers guard Darius Garland drives toward the basket during the second half of Game 2 of an NBA basketball second-round playoff series on Thursday in Boston.

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