The Denver Post

Celtics, Heat series tight, games not close

- By Jimmy Golen

BOSTON » Huge leads. Lengthy scoring droughts. Blowouts.

The Eastern Conference finals between the Miami Heat and Boston Celtics are as close as can be, heading back to Miami all tied up at two wins apiece. But the individual games have been anything but.

Boston scored 18 of the first 19 points on Monday night on the way to a 102-82 victory in Game 4 of the best-of-seven series. The Celtics led by as many as 32 in the third quarter — a big gap, even for a series that has been full of them.

“Sometimes when you have two really competitiv­e teams, it doesn’t necessaril­y mean it’s going to be a one-point game,” Heat coach Erik Spoelstra said. “It means that it can be flammable, either way. Both teams are ignitable.”

And they seem to be taking turns catching fire: The team that has gotten blown out has won the next game each time.

“Whatever they have done to us, we can do to them,” Spoelstra said. “None of us are happy about what happened tonight. This is part of the playoffs. There are these extreme highs and lows, particular­ly when you have two teams that are pretty closely, evenly matched.”

And both pride themselves on their defense. And games dominated by defense don’t always make for entertaini­ng television. The series shifts to Miami for Game 5 on Wednesday, with Boston guaranteed another game at home on Friday. The Heat would host the decisive seventh game on Sunday, if necessary.

“I think human nature plays a part in, when you win a game, you can relax a little bit,” said Celtics star Jayson Tatum, who had 31 points in Game 4 after scoring 10 on 3-for-14 shooting the previous game. “Obviously, when we lose a game, we feel like the next game is do or die, and then we come out and play like we did.

“I think we have to have that mindset going into Game 5 — that it is a must-win game, because tonight was essentiall­y something like that,” he said. “Everybody knew it. We could all feel it. I think that showed in the way we came out.”

It was the fourth straight game that has featured a 20-point lead, with two of them topping 30. There have been four lead changes in the entire series — just one in the second half and none in the fourth quarter.

“It’s wild, right,” said Miami guard Victor Oladipo, who came off the bench to score the Heat’s first basket more than eight minutes into the first quarter after they were already trailing 18-1. “I’m not even sure how to explain it.

In a seesaw series, Game 1 was the most competitiv­e of the bunch.

The Celtics led by 13 points early before Miami outscored them 39-14 in the third quarter to take took the lead for good. The Heat nursed a double-digit advantage for most of the fourth.

In Game 2, Boston built a 34point advantage on its way to a 25point win. The Heat said they were embarrasse­d on their home court, and Game 3 was payback; they zoomed out to a 26-point lead, first-half lead.

And after losing big at home on Saturday, the Celtics led 8-0, 18-1, 26-4 in the first quarter of Game 4.

“Obviously, (it’s) because we lost last game,” Boston center Robert Williams III said. “I feel like that’s how our team is. We need to work on being better in that aspect. We shouldn’t have to get punched in the mouth to respond.”

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