Even his new coach admitted it is hard to see sometimes, but it
is there.
Prince helped revive his team's pulse, too.
The 34-year-old forward scored 19 points, and the Boston Celtics won
for the third time in four games Monday, posting a 99-90 victory
over the Utah Jazz at EnergySolutions Arena.
"He knows what's going on. He's lived it all," Boston coach Brad
Stevens said of Prince, a 13-year veteran. "A team's got you down by
20 in a quarter, it doesn't look like his pulse is moving. You go up
by 20 in a quarter, it doesn't look like his pulse is moving. He's
just playing. He's just playing the right way."
Prince, who was picked up by the Celtics in a trade with the Memphis
Grizzlies two weeks ago, had a big first half off the bench to help
Boston build a 24-point lead that proved large enough.
Center Tyler Zeller scored 14 points in a reserve role, while guard
Avery Bradley and forward Jared Sullinger, two starters, each
pitched in 12 points.
Boston, which ends its six-game road trip Wednesday in Minnesota,
improved to 16-27 overall, 3-2 on its current Western trek.
"Our older guys really made a lot of savvy basketball plays, and I
thought our younger guys all played well," Stevens said. "We made
some shots and got going, so it's nice to play that way."
Utah small forward Gordon Hayward scored 26 points and grabbed six
rebounds, but the Jazz couldn't overcome a devastating 31-point
first half.
Utah fell to 16-29 after winning its previous two games, including
its biggest win of the season in terms of margin, 108-73 over the
Brooklyn Nets on Saturday.
"We didn't play hard. It's a little more complicated than that,"
Jazz coach Quin Snyder said. "We played soft as much as anything.
There was nothing we did with any force."
The Celtics dominated the first half despite playing the night after
a 114-111 loss at Golden State.
Boston exploded in the second quarter, turning a tie game after one
quarter into a huge halftime lead by scoring 38 points on 60 percent
shooting.
Prince scored 12 of his points in the first half, and Bradley added
10 points before the break to help put Boston up 55-31.
The Jazz only made 13 of 36 shots (36.1 percent) in that opening
half.
"We didn't come out mentally the way we needed to. Not just the guys
on the court, the guys on the bench, too," said Jazz point guard
Trey Burke, who scored 18 points in his third game as a backup. "We
weren't into it. We didn't have the energy we needed to come out and
win this game."
[to top of second column] |
Utah, which was hoping to get its first three-game winning streak
since last February, made it interesting in the third quarter.
Hayward scored 13 points in the period and the Jazz stormed back,
cutting the Celtics' 24-point lead down to five going into the
fourth quarter.
"I think we just realized we could play a lot better and be more
aggressive on both ends," Hayward said. "Coach didn't yell at us or
anything (at halftime). It was more internal. We can't let them
bully us. That's not who we are. We came out a little too cool in
the first half."
Boston took advantage of Hayward being on the bench to begin the
final period. The Celtics scored eight straight points to
re-establish a double-digit lead.
Rookie guard Marcus Smart's putback dunk with 47.7 seconds remaining
all but clinched the win for Boston, giving the Celtics a 93-85
lead.
NOTES: Celtics coach Brad Stevens was asked if Jazz SF Gordon
Hayward, who played for him at Butler, is underrated in the NBA.
Stevens replied, "It's hard to say with the money he earns that he's
underrated. Until he pays for his dinner the next time, that's what
I'll say." ... Hayward, who is having an All-Star-like season, said
he and other Jazz players will get more recognition with more wins.
"I see myself as one of the elite players in the league," he said.
"Whether you're popular or not, to me, doesn't matter." ... The Jazz
signed 27-year-old rookie G Elijah Millsap for the rest of the
season and for two additional years with a nonguaranteed contract.
Millsap was signed to two 10-day contracts after being called up
from the NBA Development League. ... Boston F Shavlik Randolph did
not play because of a strained left hamstring.
[© 2014 Thomson Reuters. All rights
reserved.]
Copyright 2014 Reuters. All rights reserved. This material may not be published,
broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
|