GAME THREE
Boston Celtics
vs.
Brooklyn Nets
FROM
FLATBUSH AVENUE
Extract the Positives from Games One and Two and Mold Them Together Into a Victory in Game Three
The Nets could not answer when Boston's defense stepped it up in the fourth quarter.
Or, they failed to finish; meltdown; pick your poison.
This much is true: Boston fought back and won in each game.
Flatbush took a ten-point lead into the half and, entering the fourth quarter, was still ahead by five. But they scored just four points in the opening five minutes of the final session. Kyrie Irving scored just two points in the fourth quarter, and Kevin Durant scored six points, all from the line.
Meanwhile, Jaylen Brown poured in ten fourth-quarter points in three minutes, starting at the nine-minute mark. Brooklyn got outscored by 17 points in the second half. In the fourth quarter, they were outscored by twelve.
Boston made Durant earn his 27 points the hard way. Kevin was just 4/17 from the field and 18/20 from the line.
The Nets got the requisite contributions from Seth Curry and Bruce Brown, and Goran Dragic posted a second consecutive solid effort, but it all went for naught as Kyrie Irving was 4/13 from the field and 2/2 from the line for a mere ten points.
The Celtics scored 115 points in game one and 114 points in game two, whereas the Nets' scoring outside of Dragic has been erratic.
They return to Flatbush Avenue on Saturday down two games in the series. More importantly, it's time they finally come together as one at Barclays Center. The Nets need the Nic Claxton of game one and the Bruce Brown and Seth Curry of game two working with Goran Dragic, who has performed with required consistency.
Defend this house!
Does Steve Nash try and negotiate that, or does he let them figure it out on their own?
What a terrible question to be asking this time of year.
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