Fast start, big night from Jaylen Brown keys Celtics’ Game 1 win
Jaylen Brown was the player of the game in the Boston Celtics’ Game 1 win over the Cleveland Cavaliers in the Eastern Conference Semifinals.
Despite having sat for nearly a week since their Game 5 series-clinching win over the Miami Heat last Wednesday, the Boston Celtics showed very little rust in their 120-95 Game 1 win over the Cleveland Cavaliers on Tuesday night. In particular, Jaylen Brown got the game, and series, started on a high note.
Brown scored the first seven points of the game for the Celtics, as they jumped out to a 7-2 early lead. He kept going from there – in eight-plus minutes on the floor in the first quarter he scored 15 points on 5-of-6 shooting, with his lone miss a last-second half-court heave that rimmed out.
What led to Brown’s early aggressiveness? “Nothing. Just like you said, just be aggressive,” Brown told reporters after the game. “Every time you catch the ball, try to get to the paint. Getting to the paint opens it up for all the guys on my team that love to shoot threes. Just trying to get some paint touches.”
Perhaps just as big of a development, Brown hit all four of the free throws he attempted in the game (all four came in the first quarter). That’s after he was 9-for-20 from the stripe overall in the first round.
Unlike playoff games he’s had in the past where he’s started fast and then faded, Brown kept the performance up and was the driving force for the Celtics’ offense for most of the night. He scored nine points between the second and third quarters.
Then in the fourth quarter, Brown took control again and helped the Celtics put the game away. He scored a team-high eight points in the fourth shooting 3-of-4 from the floor and 2-of-2 from deep, in less than five minutes of time before head coach Joe Mazzulla turned things over to the bench in a 20-point game.
Brown finished the night with a team-high 32 points on 12-of-18 shooting. He was 4-of-6 from three and had the 4-for-4 mark from the stripe. On top of that he added six rebounds, two assists, and a block while turning the ball over just once.
It’s just one game, but overall Brown looked like a completely different player than he did in the playoffs last year. After the game, Mazzulla was very complimentary of Brown’s growth this season.
“He takes a ton of pride in just growing as a player. Every year, every game, every day. He spends a lot of time on it. He’s not afraid to go after something that he knows that he can improve on, which I think is huge for his growth mindset,” Mazzulla said.
“He has evolved,” Mazzulla continued. “His ability to pick and choose his spots, when to play in transition. He had a couple times when he scored in transition, and two plays later, he slowed it down, went into the pick-and-roll, and made the right play. I think the growth with him, even if he scores six or eight in a row, he gets into the paint, and pass next one. He’s grown as a player, and it’s helped us, and he’s playing big stretches for us. It’s important.”
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