Boston Celtics Squeak By Philadelphia 76ers To Take 2-1 Series Lead
For 47 minutes, the arena in South Philly sounded like a jet engine testing facility. The home crowd, starved for playoff basketball for nearly two years, brought an absolute tidal wave of noise. But over the final 25 seconds, the only sound left was the quiet, agonizing thud of a bouncing basketball.
The Boston Celtics don’t just beat you; they drain the life out of your building. In a gritty, heavyweight slugfest on Friday night, the Celtics outlasted the Philadelphia 76ers 108-100, taking a 2-1 series lead and leaving a packed house staring blankly at the rafters.
Tyrese Maxey Brings the Fire
If you want to talk about heart, start with Tyrese Maxey. The kid put the entire franchise on his back, logging 31 points and 6 assists while dodging Boston defenders like he was running through a laser grid. After a brutally inefficient first half where the Celtics trapped him in the paint, Maxey caught fire in the third quarter. He buried step-back triples. He blew past Derrick White. He did everything humanly possible to keep the Sixers breathing.
But basketball isn’t a one-on-one sport. While Maxey was putting on a superhero cape, rookie VJ Edgecombe looked every bit like a guy playing his first high-stakes playoff series. He struggled with his shot, forced awkward passes, and got swallowed up by Boston’s suffocating wing defense. You can’t ask a rookie to be perfect, but on Friday night, the Sixers desperately needed him to be just average.
The Celtics Win the War On the Glass
You can break down X’s and O’s all night, but this game came down to something much simpler: grabbing the basketball. The Celtics dominated the margins, turning missed shots into backbreaking second chances.
Philadelphia is severely feeling the absence of Joel Embiid. With the big man still recovering, the Sixers relied on a roller-coaster rotation of Adem Bona and Andre Drummond. Bona gave the crowd some life with early blocks and hustle, but foul trouble forced him to the bench. Drummond looked stuck in mud against Boston’s stretch-five lineup. The Celtics ruthlessly targeted him in the pick-and-roll, generating wide-open looks and pulling down crucial offensive boards.
The Dagger That Silenced Philadelphia
Great teams execute when their lungs are burning and the clock is melting. The Celtics are exactly that kind of team. With the game hanging by a thread and the Sixers desperate for one final stop, the ball found Jayson Tatum. Tatum, who finished with 25 points and 7 assists, casually sized up his defender and buried a cold-blooded three-pointer with 25.3 seconds left. Game over. Series tilted.
But the real tragedy for Philly? That shot only happened because they failed to box out Derrick White on the previous sequence. It is the little mistakes that get you sent home in the playoffs.
Now, the Sixers face a massive gut-check. They have to regroup, figure out a way to rebound the basketball, and pray their secondary scorers wake up. If they don’t, the Celtics will be packing their bags for the second round sooner rather than later.
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