Houston Chronicle

Smart delivering exactly what Boston needs

- By Sopan Deb

Boston Celtics guard Marcus Smart had an open lane for an easy fast-break basket. Then he unnecessar­ily moved the ball behind his back and flubbed a layup.

A minute later, he had the ball again and hit an acrobatic circus shot on the baseline from behind the backboard. He drew a foul, too.

That was the Marcus Smart Experience in a nutshell Thursday night: sometimes ugly, sometimes entertaini­ng, always impactful. In Game 2 of the Eastern Conference finals, Smart had 24 points, nine rebounds and 12 assists in a game the Celtics dominated, 127-102, to tie the best-of-seven series. He had only a single turnover in one of the best playoff performanc­es of his career.

This season has seen the continuati­on of a remarkable shift for the 28-year-old Smart: There’s a lot less ugly. He has emerged as a steady, reliable point guard who can more than competentl­y run Boston’s offense, even as his efforts on the other end of the floor — he was named the NBA’s Defensive Player of the Year — draw the most attention.

Smart missed the first game of the series Tuesday because of a foot sprain, and his absence was evident. The Celtics collapsed in the third quarter, when Smart’s talents for calming the offense and anchoring the defense could have changed the game.

Right from the opening tip Thursday, Smart affected the game. The Celtics first scored off a difficult cross-court pass from Smart to Jaylen Brown. Smart immediatel­y followed that with a harder-than-it-looked alley-oop to former Aggie Robert Williams III.

In the first half, though, Smart shot a dismal 2for-11 from the field. For most players, that would mean they were having a bad game. But Smart still was one of the best players on the court because of his seven assists and zero turnovers. The Celtics led by 25 at halftime, and they had outscored the Miami Heat by 26 points with Smart on the floor.

“I’m not the type of coach that wants to call a play every time down,” Celtics coach Ime Udoka said. “I leave it in his hands, and he usually makes the right decision.”

Smart didn’t enjoy the same kind of trust earlier in his career.

In the previous seven years of his NBA journey, all with Boston, Smart was known mostly as a stalwart defender with a penchant for throwing up bad shots early in the shot clock and for making ill-advised passes. He was also, for the most part, a poor shooter from 3-point range. But Smart had other attributes that made him a fan favorite, such as his willingnes­s to constantly dive to the floor for loose balls.

This year, despite his perceived offensive limitation­s, Smart was handed the keys to the Celtics offense for the first time.

Smart initially struggled adjusting to his new role, as did the rest of the Celtics. In his first 50 games this season, Smart averaged 11.7 points and 5.3 assists, and Boston’s offense often looked stuck in the mud.

After a November loss to the Chicago Bulls, Smart incurred the ire of his teammates when he publicly criticized the two best players on the team, Brown and Jayson Tatum, for not passing the ball more. Meanwhile, Smart’s underwhelm­ing point guard play contribute­d to Boston’s lackadaisi­cal 25-25 start.

Then came the turnaround. In Smart’s final 21 games of the regular season, he averaged 13.2 points and 7.1 assists on 43.2 percent shooting. He also morphed into a more reliable shooter.

While there were certainly other factors, Smart’s improvemen­t coincided with the Celtics’ surge from fringe playoff team to NBA Finals contender. Tatum said Thursday that Smart had given the Celtics “another guy who can handle the ball under pressure and get us organized and get us in position where we need to be.”

His strong playmaking has carried over into the playoffs. In the first round against the Nets, Smart averaged 16.5 points and 7.0 assists in Boston’s four-game sweep. Against the Milwaukee Bucks in the second round, Smart averaged 14.0 points and 5.7 assists while shooting 39.4 percent from behind the 3-point line.

This is all while Smart often has been asked to guard the opposition’s best players. But Smart increasing­ly has found himself rescuing the Celtics with his offense as well as his defense.

When the Heat were making a third-quarter run in Game 2, it was Smart who took it upon himself to stop it. Besides his circus shot over the backboard, Smart hit multiple 3s to stop the bleeding. He scored 11 points in the quarter, including the highlight of the game.

The Heat had cut the lead to 17 and the Miami crowd suddenly was re-engaged. Smart dribbled the ball up, bounced a crossover dribble between his legs, causing Heat guard Max Strus to tumble backward to the floor. Smart then calmly stepped forward and made a free-throw line jumper.

That was the new Marcus Smart Experience. Undisturbe­d under pressure. Reliable. And still entertaini­ng.

“That’s what I got drafted here to do, and I just waited my turn,” Smart said.

 ?? Eric Espada/Getty Images ?? Marcus Smart nearly had a triple-double in the Celtics’ easy Game 2 victory over Miami.
Eric Espada/Getty Images Marcus Smart nearly had a triple-double in the Celtics’ easy Game 2 victory over Miami.

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