San Antonio Express-News

Still smarting from Game 1 loss, Boston bounces back

- By Mark Murphy

BOSTON — Jaylen Brown summed it up simply enough when he said the Celtics had to be smarter — smarter with their shot selection, smarter with their pace, smarter with the multitude of things they did wrong on offense in Game 1.

And no one took it more to heart than Brown on Tuesday night in Game 2. The wing scored 25 of his 30 points on 9-of-10 firsthalf shooting and staked the Celtics for the rest of the night on their way to a series-tying 109-86 win over the Milwaukee Bucks in their Eastern Conference semifinal series at TD Garden.

“It’s the playoffs. That’s it,” Brown said. “We can’t let one game kind of dictate how this series goes. We wanted to be aggressive from the gate.”

Though forced to play without an ailing Marcus Smart (right thigh contusion), the Celtics jumped out early, and thanks to a more balanced attack, never trailed. Jayson Tatum picked up the second-half pace in a rougher scoring half on the way to 29 points. Grant Williams found open shots all night on the way to a 21-point performanc­e that included 6-of-10 3-point shooting. Al Horford added 14 points and 11 rebounds.

“We wanted to come and play like our season was on the line and we did,” Brown said.

The Celtics raced to a 26point lead early in the third quarter, but Giannis Antetokoun­mpo (28 points, nine rebounds, eight assists) cut the Celtics lead to 12 points with two free throws with 4:30 left. But Tatum circled out to the corner and buried his fourth 3-pointer of the night — a shot clock buzzer beater — for a 97-82 lead.

The Bucks continued to threaten, cutting the margin to 13 on two Jrue Holiday (19 points) free throws. But Brown put back a Payton Pritchard downtown miss for a 99-84 lead with 3:25 left. Antetokoun­mpo answered with his 28th point of the night, Tatum hit two free throws, and came back off an Antetokoun­mpo turnover with a corner three for a 104-86 edge.

Grant Williams buried his sixth 3-pointer to put it out of reach with 1:58 left.

Antetokoun­mpo scored 18 of Milwaukee’s 26 third quarter points, with the Bucks making minor progress in cutting the Celtics lead to 83-66 by the end of the quarter.

Tatum had 19 points, Brown 25 by the start of the fourth.

Brown hit his sixth 3pointer for an 88-70 lead with 10:28 left, Williams hit his fifth 3 of the night three minutes later to answer a brief Bucks spurt for a 91-73 edge, and by the time Tatum drove with 5:50 left, they had a 94-78 edge.

Grayson Allen cut the margin to 14 points with 5:30 left, Pritchard and Brown missed from downtown, and with 4:30 left, Antetokoun­mpo cut it to 12 with two free throws.

Brown’s 25-point first half was a classic that staked the Celtics to a 65-40 lead. Antetokoun­mpo (2 for 12) took more shots, finished the half with five points, and was mainly limited to jumpers.

Antetokoun­mpo scored the first eight Milwaukee points of the third quarter, though the Celtics were matching his output down the other end with, among other things, Tatum’s third 3-pointer of the night.

The Celtics finally hit a cold stretch, missing five straight shots to go along with three turnovers during a 10-0 Bucks run that included six points from Antetokoun­mpo, and cut the Celtics lead to 72-56.

But the Celtics answered with an 11-4 burst for an 8360 lead, and included a Robert Williams transition dunk set up by Tatum’s steal and dish, followed by Tatum transition finish off his second straight steal.

 ?? Maddie Meyer / Getty Images ?? The Celtics’ Jaylen Brown reacts in the second quarter during Tuesday’s Game 2 victory. Brown scored 25 of his game-high 30 points in the first half.
Maddie Meyer / Getty Images The Celtics’ Jaylen Brown reacts in the second quarter during Tuesday’s Game 2 victory. Brown scored 25 of his game-high 30 points in the first half.

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