The Maui News

Brown scores 30, Celtics rout Bucks to even series

- By KYLE HIGHTOWER

BOSTON — There was a moment during the Celtics’ series-opening loss to the Bucks when it seemed as if Jaylen Brown would never make a shot.

Early in Game 2, it felt like he might not miss.

Brown scored 25 of his 30 points in the first half, and Boston beat Milwaukee 10986 on Tuesday to even the Eastern Conference semifinals at one game apiece.

“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.”

Brown shook off a dismal shooting night in Game 1, going 9 for 10 in the first half, including 5 for 5 from the 3point line. Jayson Tatum added 19 points and eight assists, Grant Williams finished with 21 points and Al Horford had 14 points and 11 rebounds.

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

The series doesn’t resume until Game 3 on Saturday in Milwaukee.

Boston finished 20 of 43 from beyond the arc and scored 24 points off 16 Milwaukee turnovers.

“We wanted to match their physicalit­y and punch back tonight,” Celtics coach Ime Udoka said. “A big message was show them who we are.” They did that.

The Celtics played without Defensive Player of the Year Marcus Smart after he was ruled out before the game with a bruised right thigh he sustained in Game 1. Derrick White took his place in the starting lineup, making his first start in a playoff game since 2019 when he was with San Antonio.

“The ship’s got to keep going. Everybody got to do a little bit more,” Tatum said.

Even without Smart, the Celtics clamped down on Giannis Antetokoun­mpo after his triple-double in the series opener, limiting him to 28 points — mostly in the third quarter — nine rebounds and seven assists. Jrue Holiday added 19 points and seven assists. Bobby Portis chipped in 13 points and eight rebounds.

Antetokoun­mpo said the Celtics are doing a lot to make it tough for him inside.

“Strong bodies, being active, being physical — that’s pretty much it,” he said. “It’s gotten tougher to find your teammates.”

With Smart watching in street clothes from the bench, the Celtics scored the game’s first seven points on their way to taking an 18-3 lead and forcing a quick timeout by the Bucks.

Boston scored from a variety of different spots on the court during the run — attacking both at the rim and inside the paint. It also included 12 points from the 3-point line, where the Celtics struggled for most of Game 1.

“It’s not Wilt Chamberlai­n down there (in the paint),” Udoka said. “We can get downhill and attack.”

Antetokoun­mpo missed his first six shots before finally getting on the scoreboard via a dunk with less than a minute left in the opening period.

It didn’t stop Boston from banking a 32-21 lead heading into the second quarter, boosted by 17 points from Brown.

The Celtics continued to share and kept Milwaukee’s defense in chase mode, eventually taking a 65-40 edge into the half.

The Bucks cut into what had been a 26-point Celtics lead in the third quarter. Antetokoun­mpo keyed the charge with 18 points in the period. A 10-0 Milwaukee run, aided by a more than five-minute Celtics scoring drought, trimmed Boston’s lead to 72-56 late in the third quarter.

Milwaukee kept nibbling away and got it down it to 9482 on a pair of free throws by Antetokoun­mpo. But Tatum made a 3-pointer and Boston pulled away again.

 ?? AP photo ?? Celtics guard Jaylen Brown shoots while pressured by Bucks center Brook Lopez during the first half of Boston’s 109-86 victory over Milwaukee in Game 2 of their Eastern Conference semifinal series Tuesday.
AP photo Celtics guard Jaylen Brown shoots while pressured by Bucks center Brook Lopez during the first half of Boston’s 109-86 victory over Milwaukee in Game 2 of their Eastern Conference semifinal series Tuesday.

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