McKone: I thought this Celtics team was different
This was supposed to be different. I THOUGHT THIS WAS GOING TO BE DIFFERENT.
Hand up, I was wrong.
Sure, I still believe Boston is going to win this series. The Heat set a franchise playoff record with 23 made three-pointers while shooting 53.5%. That is not repeatable (right???). That being said, the Celtics defensive effort was also nowhere near good enough. I thought Scal summed up the overall effort by Boston during the third quarter perfectly when he said, “We are not attacking, everything is slow, and we are playing on our heels.”
That combination is usually not a recipe for success. The depth on this Boston team is what powered them to a 64-win regular season. That depth was not on display in Game 2. Jayson Tatum and Jaylen Brown combined for 61 points while Derrick White chipped in with 13. No other Celtics player reached double figures. NOT GREAT. The Celtics got next to nothing out of Jrue Holiday and Kristaps Porzingis. The two combined for a whopping six second half points. Porzingis had more turnovers than field goals. I’m not a big analytics guy but I can tell you that generally that stat line does not lead to a lot of wins.
Meanwhile, Miami got another remarkable performance from Caleb Martin. The same player that looked like a perennial all-star during the eastern conference finals last year went 5-6 from three in Game 2 and finished with 21 points. It was the same story that has played out between these two teams in the playoffs for the past two years.
On paper this series shouldn’t be close. Boston is clearly the more talented team. But time and time again the Heat seem to rise to the occasion while the Celtics seem uninspired. Again, I don’t think Miami is capable of actually winning four games in this series. What the Heat are capable of, though, is exposing the Celtics flaws. Miami is not going to rollover. The Celtics need to come ready to play in each and every one of these games. And when they don’t the Heat take advantage. That is what you saw in Game 2. It is a performance by the Celtics that unfortunately has become all too familiar over the last few years.
In a game that was a golden opportunity to throw a knockout punch against an undermanned team, Boston simply was not good enough. They did not show up with any sense of urgency. And while it may not matter against this Miami team it absolutely will as the Celtics continue their pursuit of banner 18. This series is not supposed to be competitive. There is no Jimmy Butler. There is no Marcus Smart or Grant Williams to blame.
But in Game 2 we got a classic Miami vs. Boston game and that was the last thing you wanted to see if you are a Celtics fan.
LISTEN: Zolak & Bertrand react to Celtics Game 2 loss