Tommy Points for everyone.
On a night where the Lakers honored Pat Riley, the prince of pomade himself, and the greater Showtime era, it’s fitting to see Boston win by way of physicality and vigor.
This 111-89 win was dominated both on the margins and in the more visibly loud areas of scoring and defending. Boston won the rebounding battle with a 50-39 difference, while consistently getting the first stop, holding LA to 39% shooting (LeBron and Luka were a combined 18-of-43, with James dishing five assists to Doncic’s three). This was just LA’s second loss this season where they scored under 90 points.
Defending with the aggressive intent to disrupt while connected enough to avoid giving up 2-on-1 advantages, Boston’s help activity made it both difficult for LA’s stars to score, and for them to exploit that attention to feed the ball into space — not an easy feat when it comes to playmaking mavens such as Doncic or James.
In their quest to disrupt shooting angles and passing lanes, the Celtics collectively had 19 deflections on the ball, led by Jaylen Brown with five and four from Derrick White. They collectively recovered nine loose balls in the process. Both of those hustle data figures are well above their per game averages. For the season, Boston is 21st in deflections (16.3) and 14th in loose balls recovered (4.5).
The Lakers only turned the ball over eight times for the game, yet the way they were flummoxed made possessions ending in shots still feel like an abject failure. Compounded by a game-long officiating battle — featuring a lack of get-back defense on made baskets and one particularly foul-heavy possession that sent Brown to the line four times — the Lakers simply lost their composure, and Boston continuously grinded them down. The first half alone felt like you’d died and went to Hustle Heaven.
If this late first quarter sequence headlined by Hugo Gonzalez and Derrick White’s full court defense doesn’t make you want to run through a brick wall, then you need to get your pulse checked.
The hustle element of this team hasn’t been an issue this season, even in their biggest off nights, but Sunday night’s primetime rivalry showdown was a special kind of high-energy performance. To do it in Staples Center (I’m not calling it that) with Riley in the house against a team led by two stars that are forever linked to this franchise means something.
It’s one game on the record, just a small part of a greater process and purpose, that’s what Joe Mazzulla would tell you, and it’s true at the end of the day, but the team that won last night played like their season was on the line. A desperation to disrupt, but a connectivity that makes it hard to exploit. The Celtics of decades past would be proud.
If Heinsohn was on the call he’d have had a hard time dishing out just one Tommy Point. Why not spread the love and credit all twelve Celtics that stepped foot on the floor.