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Boston’s young upstarts make Philly look silly

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BOSTON — Boston’s rising stars stalled ‘The Process’ and led the Celtics to victory in Game 1 of their Eastern Conference semifinal on Monday.

Substitute point guard Terry Rozier scored 29, and firstyear Celtics forward Jayson Tatum had a career-high 28 points to outplay starry rookie Ben Simmons on Monday night and lead Boston to a 117101 victory over the Philadelph­ia 76ers.

With much of the attention focused on 76ers youngsters Simmons and Joel Embiid, Boston’s youth movement of Tatum and Rozier led the way.

Two days after scoring a career playoff-high 26 points in Game 7 against Milwaukee, Rozier topped it, while also adding eight rebounds and six assists.

“It’s been a dream come true. I want to keep going,” said Rozier, who was wearing a Drew Bledsoe New England Patriots jersey to milk one more chuckle out of his pseudo-feud with vanquished Bucks guard Eric Bledsoe. “I’m just a guy just living in the moment.”

Embiid scored 31 points with 13 rebounds for Philadelph­ia, which lost for just the second time in 22 games.

Simmons, the likely rookie of the year, scored 18, with seven boards and six assists.

With six days of rest since eliminatin­g Miami, the Sixers missed 15 of their first 20 shots and hit 5 of 26 from 3-point range to lose for just the second time since March 13.

“We’re NBA players and we have to be ready,” Embiid said. “We weren’t ready tonight.”

Al Horford had 26 points and seven rebounds for Boston, which will host Game 2 on Thursday night.

The Celtics are hoping to have guard Jaylen Brown back from a hamstring injury he sustained in the clincher against the Bucks, leaving him sidelined along with Kyrie Irving and Gordon Hayward.

Playing in place of Irving, Rozier picked up where he left off in the first round by scoring 10 points and six assists in the first quarter. He was 7 for 9 from 3-point range overall, combining with Tatum to overshadow the lottery picks accumulate­d by Philadelph­ia during The Process.

The first overall pick in the 2016 draft who sat out all of last year with an injury, Simmons was heckled by the Boston crowd with chants of “Not a rookie!” In the fourth quarter, as Tatum stepped to the free-throw line to protect a double-digit lead, the chant turned to “He’s a rookie!”

“I love when people talk trash,” Embiid said. “Keep bringing it, and we’ll see how it goes.”

Tatum was Boston’s first pick last year — third overall — after swapping the No 1 pick to the Sixers and grabbing a 2018 first-rounder as well. Philadelph­ia picked Markelle Fultz, who did not play on Monday night.

“It’s been great to see Jayson and Terry and just our guys play like that,” Horford said. “I think that Jayson’s starting to figure it out.”

Brown ’n’ out

Up until about an hour before game time, Brown was still trying to figure out a way to play on his strained right hamstring.

The Celtics’ second-leading scorer in the first round with 17.9 points per game, Brown was finally ruled out 30 minutes before tipoff following a conversati­on with doctors, trainers and Horford.

“Jaylen’s a competitor, I know he was doing everything he could to be out there,” Horford said.

“His health is most important. We didn’t want any setbacks with him. When I talked to him, I was like ‘Hey, we obviously really need you out there, but we need you for the long run.’

“Hopefully now he has couple of day to recover.”

Old-school feel

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Sixers coach Brett Brown is familiar with the Philadelph­ia and Boston matchups of the 1980s, having grown up in South Portland, Maine. Though he knows other teams in the East remain relevant, he thinks there is enough young talent on the current 76ers and Celtics rosters to give the rivalry a rebirth.

“I hope so,” Brown said. “I personally grew up with this rivalry, just right on your doorstep and just a big part of your basketball life as a young kid. It sure seems like both programs are heading into the right direction.”

 ?? AFP ?? Jayson Tatum of the Boston Celtics takes aim over Ben Simmons (25) and JJ Reddick of the Philadelph­ia 76ers during Game 1 of their Eastern Conference semifinal at TD Garden in Boston on Monday. The Celtics won 117-101.
AFP Jayson Tatum of the Boston Celtics takes aim over Ben Simmons (25) and JJ Reddick of the Philadelph­ia 76ers during Game 1 of their Eastern Conference semifinal at TD Garden in Boston on Monday. The Celtics won 117-101.

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