San Francisco Chronicle

Short-handed Celtics stun Cavaliers

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Leprechaun­s are imaginary. Celtic pride is very real.

Avery Bradley’s three-pointer danced on the rim and dropped with less than a second left and Boston, blown out in the first two games of the Eastern Conference finals and playing without star Isaiah Thomas, stunned the host Cleveland Cavaliers 111-108 on Sunday night in Game 3 to end the champions’ 13-game postseason winning streak.

Bradley’s shot from the left wing, on a play designed by coach Brad Stevens, bounced on the rim four times before going down. It capped a focused comeback by the Celtics, who trailed by 21 in the third quarter before rallying to tighten a series that appeared to be over.

“Wide-open look,” Bradley said. “Al (Horford) did a great job of getting me open and Marcus (Smart) made a great pass and I was able to knock down the shot.”

Smart, who started in place of Thomas, made seven threepoint­ers and scored 27 points, and Bradley had 20 for the Celtics, who were given little chance after losing by 44 in Game 2 and then losing Thomas for the rest of the postseason because of a hip injury.

“Everybody had to step up their game tonight, especially with one of our brothers down,” Smart said. “Our love and support goes out to Isaiah. We wish he could be here but we understand. We just kept fighting. Everybody did their part.”

Kyrie Irving scored 29 points, and Kevin Love had 28 for Cleveland. The Cavaliers dropped to 10-1 in the postseason, their first loss since Game 4 of last year’s Finals.

Game 4 is Tuesday night in Cleveland.

LeBron James had one of the worst games of his postseason career, finishing with 11 points and six turnovers.

“I didn’t have it,” said James. “You let a team like that grab momentum, you almost knew a shot like that was going in.”

Still, the Cavs were in control leading 77-56 in the third quarter after making 14 threepoint­ers in the first half. But Cleveland appeared to get complacent, Smart got hot and the Celtics, who arrived at Quicken Loans Arena on Sunday morning for their shootaroun­d without Thomas and looking somewhat defeated, never gave up.

“We decided were going to go out and play hard, swinging,” Bradley said. “We never counted ourselves out.”

The Celtics caught the Cavs at 95-all on Smart’s threepoint­er and then matched James and Co. basket for basket in the final minutes in one of the most entertaini­ng games of a mostly boring postseason.

Jonas Jerebko’s baseline jumper put the Celtics ahead 108-106 with 30 seconds left before Irving scored on a drive to tie it with 10.7 seconds left.

After a timeout, the Celtics executed a play drawn up by Stevens and worked the ball to Bradley, who found himself open and calmly knocked down a shot that goes straight into Celtics lore. James honored: Snubbed in the MVP voting, James received an award maybe more significan­t.

The Cavs star won the Walter Kennedy Citizenshi­p Award given annually by the Pro Basketball Writers’ Associatio­n for “outstandin­g service and dedication to the community.”

James is being honored for his educationa­l work in Akron, Ohio, his hometown. He has helped more than 1,100 at-risk students through his LeBron James Family Foundation, which partnered with the University of Akron in 2015 to provide full scholarshi­ps to students who meet eligibilit­y requiremen­ts. James is also starting a new public “’I PROMISE” school to aid students and their families.

 ?? Jason Miller / Getty Images ?? Celtics Al Horford (left) and Jonas Jerebko greet Avery Bradley, who hit the game-winning shot, after beating Cleveland 111-108.
Jason Miller / Getty Images Celtics Al Horford (left) and Jonas Jerebko greet Avery Bradley, who hit the game-winning shot, after beating Cleveland 111-108.

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