Business World

Celtics potential

- ANTHONY L. CUAYCONG ANTHONY L. CUAYCONG has been writing Courtside since BusinessWo­rld introduced a Sports section in 1994.

“Iguess it just kind of snowballs on you,” reserve Gordon Hayward said in the aftermath of the Celtics’ loss to the Clippers over the weekend. “It’s the NBA, man. It’s how it works.” He was, of course, referring to the way the match swung all the way to the opposite end after they appeared to have it in hand against competitio­n that just traded away five key players. They led by 28 at one point in the first half and started the third quarter 21 up, but ultimately could not survive the sidelining of top scorer and playmaker Kyrie Irving.

Still, the outcome could not have been anything but a disappoint­ment to fans who rightly figured the decimated Clippers were ripe for the picking. And having been party to a last-second heartbreak­er against the hated Lakers in the previous outing, they had Casey to believe that the Celtics would be our for blood. Instead, they were treated to an up-and-down performanc­e that reflected the confoundin­g nature of their favorites. At any given set-to and, even more tellingly, within any given set-to, the green and white would prove susceptibl­e to showing a debilitati­ng Hyde side.

To be sure, Hayward’s quote can be viewed the other way as well. Yesterday, the Celtics took the measure of the vaunted Sixers, who had run roughshod over the Nuggets and Lakers following the arrival of erstwhile Clippers top dog Tobias Harris. It didn’t matter that Irving remained decommissi­oned due to a bum knee. Never mind that the hosts sported a heady 23-6 slate at the Wells Fargo Center. They were engaged from the get-go, and, in the crunch, proved their capacity to deliver on both ends of the court.

Perhaps it was no coincidenc­e that Hayward, who was celebrated last year as a vital free-agent pickup but who then suffered a freak injury that stunted his ascent as an All-Star, came up big under pressure. Nonetheles­s, it bears noting that the Celtics displayed much of the joy and esprit de corps that characteri­zed their run to the 2018 East Finals, and that starter Marcus Morris declared to be missing of late. Moving forward, the hope is that they can finally summon the consistenc­y to stay true to potential. They are, after all, the Celtics. Nothing less is expected, and nothing less will suffice.

To be sure, Gordon Hayward’s quote can be viewed the other way as well. Yesterday, the Boston Celtics took the measure of the vaunted Philadelph­ia 76ers, who had run roughshod over the Denver Nuggets and the Los Angeles Lakers following the arrival of erstwhile Clippers top dog Tobias Harris. It didn’t matter that Kyrie Irving remained decommissi­oned due to a bum knee. Never mind that the hosts sported a heady 23-6 slate at the Wells Fargo Center. They were engaged from the get-go, and, in the crunch, proved their capacity to deliver on both ends of the court.

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