Celtics rally to beat Warriors for 14th straight victory
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[November 17, 2017]
(The Sports Xchange) - A media
type suggested to Steph Curry that Golden State will be returning to
Boston's TD Garden again this season.
For the NBA Finals.
"Very, very likely," Curry, who had a dreadful shooting night, said
after the Boston Celtics rallied to beat his Warriors 92-88 for
their 14th straight victory on Thursday.
"They're playing the best right now in the East."
He then added, "I hear the weather's great here in June so we'll
see."
Kyrie Irving shed his protective face mask in the third quarter and
then shed the world champions in the fourth, scoring 11 of his 16
points in the final 4:20 to give the Celtics their longest winning
streak since 2009.
The loss ended a seven-game winning streak for the Warriors (11-4).
It was the Celtics' second win while shooting below 33 percent since
1983-84.
The Boston trainers didn't recommend Irving taking off the mask,
which he was wearing for the second game since suffering a slight
facial fracture. But off it came.
He did it in the third quarter and, soon after, the Celtics went on
a 17-0 run to erase a 17-point deficit, and start a grinding war
that led to the Boston win -- and chants of "M-V-P" for Irving from
the crowd.
He hit two free throws with 14 seconds left and then, after Kevin
Durant missed a jumper, rookie Jayson Tatum nailed two more foul
shots with 6.7 seconds remaining and the Warriors' four-game TD
Garden winning streak was history.
Irving gave the game ball to Jaylen Brown, who scored 22 points,
grabbed seven rebounds and had two steals and two blocked shots --
after learning of the death of his best friend in Atlanta the
previous night.
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Warriors guard Stephen Curry (30) reacts on the court during the
game against the Boston Celtics in the second half at TD Garden.
Mandatory Credit: David Butler II-USA TODAY Sports
Brown had bursts of explosive offense, stealing the ball from Curry
and flying in for a slam dunk in the first half and hitting two
straight 3-pointers and scoring eight points during the 17-0 run.
Said Irving: "It's never a good thing when someone's going through
it. You do your best to console them but at the end of the day it's
the strength within themselves and he showed a lot of that tonight.
To go out there and perform the way he did, I knew exactly where the
game ball was going."
The Celtics (14-2) have overcome a 17-point and two 18-point leads
during their streak. They now have a three-game road trip to try to
equal the franchise's longest winning streak.
There were many reasons for Boston not to win this game. The Celtics
shot 32.9 percent from the floor, their lowest percentage during the
streak. Their bench was a combined 2-for-19, with Marcus Smart going
0-for-7. Irving was 4-for-16.
But this team plays defense, all kinds of defense, and the Warriors
(11-4) had two field goals in the last 4:40.
"They were just tougher and smarter," said Warriors coach Steve
Kerr.
Said Curry: "We had control of the game despite how bad we all were
shooting. We just couldn't sustain our defense when they made a
couple of runs."
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