Heat, Celtics set for Eastern Conference finals
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[September 15, 2020]
The Miami Heat's path to the
Eastern Conference finals has been nothing short of dominant. The
Boston Celtics' journey has featured a few more bumps in the road.
But it'll be a clean slate when the teams face off in Game 1 of the
best-of-seven series Tuesday night at the NBA bubble near Orlando.
The Celtics, in the East finals for the third time in four seasons,
are playing for their first NBA Finals berth since 2010. The Heat
are looking to get back to the Finals for the first time since a
four-year run of consecutive appearances during the LeBron James,
Dwyane Wade and Chris Bosh era ended in 2014.
During that stretch, Miami eliminated Boston from the playoffs in
2011 and 2012, the latter matchup going seven games in the
conference finals. The Heat's Udonis Haslem is the only holdover
from those teams, along with his coach, Erik Spoelstra.
Miami swept the Indiana Pacers in the first round of the 2020
playoffs before eliminating the top-seeded Milwaukee Bucks in five
games in the conference semifinals. The Celtics swept the
Philadelphia 76ers in the first round before needing seven games to
get past the defending champion Toronto Raptors in Round 2.
As a result of the length of that series, Boston most recently
played Friday while Miami has been idle since Sept. 8. The Celtics
rode their stars hard down the stretch of their semifinal, with
Jayson Tatum, Jaylen Brown, Kemba Walker and Marcus Smart each
playing north of 40 minutes in the final two contests.
"This is a great group. Tough group. Resilient group," Brown said.
"We've got a lot of heart. A lot of fight about ourselves. We don't
back down from challenges. That's what we need from each other."
The Celtics might be able to count on reinforcements during their
series with the Heat as starting forward Gordon Hayward nears his
return from a right ankle sprain sustained in the first game of
Round 1.
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Hayward "looked good" during a workout Monday, according to coach
Brad Stevens, though he did not practice with the team. Also of note
is that Hayward's wife is expected to go into labor soon with their
fourth child, so Hayward might need to leave the bubble.
For the Heat, the hope is that the extended time between games won't
cool off their potent offense. Jimmy Butler and Goran Dragic both
are averaging more than 20 points per game during the playoffs,
while Bam Adebayo (16.2 points, 11.7 rebounds) and Tyler Herro (14.7
points) have emerged as consistent threats.
"I don't think that we're the underdog," said Butler, who will play
in his first conference finals. "I think that we're a really good
team. We play together. Everybody knows their role. We just
compete."
The Celtics and Heat met three times during the regular season, with
Boston winning twice. Miami won the most recent meeting on Aug. 4 in
the bubble.
"At the end of the day, we're a totally different team, certainly
than the first time we played them in December," Spoelstra said.
"And they're a much different team. That's what you expect out of
high-quality, high-level teams."
--Field Level Media
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