NBA: Boston Celtics beat the Nets in the top game

In the top duel in the east between the Boston Celtics and Brooklyn Nets, both teams offered a real offensive spectacle. All eyes were on Durant and Tatum, the latter leading the Celts to victory with a monster performance.

Boston Celtics (39:27) – Brooklyn Nets (32:33) 126:120 (BOXSCORE)

It was a duel between two equal scoring machines that traded heavyweight boxer-style layups, midrange jumpers and long-range shots – with the better ending for Jayson Tatum and the Boston Celtics.

The Celts have won four of their last five games, most recently a win once morest the Grizzlies that saw Jayson Tatum put on a 37-point performance on his 24th birthday. “He’s become a vocal leader in the cabin, he’s a bucket on the court. He can score 30 points in his sleep,” said Celtics head coach Ime Udoka ESPNs NBA Today.

Against the Nets, a direct East competitor in the fight for home advantage in the playoffs, he went one better – and how: Tatum set a season best with 54 points (16/30 FG, 8/15 3FG) and delivered himself gripping scoring duel with Kevin Durant. With 37 points, he was the best scorer for the guests and showed no rust in his second game following a long injury break (21 games).

Jaylen Brown returned to the Celts’ starting lineup following missing the last game with an ankle injury. Brown was a reliable scoring partner for Tatum with 21 points, with all five Celtics starters scoring in double figures. Daniel Theis had 3 points, a rebound and an assist in 10 minutes.

With the Nets, Kyrie Irving was unsurprisingly booed when announcing the starters, even though he was on the ball on offense throughout the game, it rained boos in the TD Garden. When a behind-the-back pass from Irving landed in the outfield on the Nets’ first possession, a loud, gloating cheer echoed through the hall. In the end, the Nets playmaker had 19 points (8/18 FG) and 6 assists.

The first quarter offered exactly what you want as a neutral NBA fan: an open exchange of blows between two top teams. Boston and Brooklyn both threw 50 percent from the field and looked good on offense. Together, both teams sank 7 of 12 three-pointers, with the hosts all five starters bringing points on the scoreboard, led by Tatum (9).

Durant had two fouls following the first five minutes, but Nets coach Steve Nash trusted his superstar and left him on the court. It proved to be the right decision: KD ended the quarter with 12 points. The Nets were just ahead following the first 12 minutes (34:29).

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