spot_img
28 C
Philippines
Friday, March 29, 2024

Bulls halfway to history; Raptors, Clippers rebound

- Advertisement -

LOS ANGELES—The Chicago Bulls powered past the Boston Celtics 111-97 Tuesday to take a 2-0 lead over the Eastern Conference top seeds in their NBA playoff first-round series.

The Bulls, who clawed their way to the eighth and final playoff spot in the East, are trying to become the first eighth seed to topple the top-ranked team in the opening round since the Philadelphia 76ers upset Chicago in 2012.

While both the Toronto Raptors and Los Angeles Clippers avoided their second straight defeats at home on Tuesday, the Celtics were again unable to solve Chicago.

The Bulls head home to Chicago for game three on Friday with a 2-0 lead in the best-of-seven set thanks in large part to a vintage performance from Rajon Rondo.

Rondo, a former Celtic who won a title in Boston, narrowly missed the 11th playoff triple-double of his career with 11 points, 14 assists and nine rebounds.

- Advertisement -

Rondo also produced five steals and three blocked shots.

“It’s key when you have a point guard like him that controls the whole game—you’ve just got to play,” said Dwyane Wade. “Tonight, our job was easy. We just had to play. As I told him, ‘Way to run your team.’”

Wade and Jimmy Butler scored 22 points each, leading six Bulls players in double figures. The Bulls didn’t trail in the second half, using a 10-0 scoring run—which included eight points from Wade—to build a 19-point lead in the fourth quarter on the way to the convincing win.

Celtics guard Isaiah Thomas, still reeling from the death of his sister, Chyna, in a road accident over the weekend, had a quiet night. He scored 20 points but made just six of 15 shots from the floor, missed six of his 13 free-throw attempts and had five turnovers.

Rajon Rondo of the Chicago Bulls handles the ball against the Boston Celtics during the Eastern Conference Quarter-finals of the 2017 NBA Playoffs at TD Garden in Boston, MA. AFP

Jae Crowder matched his career playoff high with 16 points and said the Celtics were far from done.

“[The Bulls] came in and took [it], and we have to do the same thing,” Crowder said. “Take it one game at a time and try to get game three.”

Lowry ‘a fighter’

In Toronto, Kyle Lowry bounced back from a lackluster game one as the Raptors beat the Milwaukee Bucks 106-100 to level their series at one game each.

DeMar DeRozan scored 23 points and produced the go-ahead jump shot late in the fourth quarter.

Lowry, who scored just four points in the Raptor’s series-opening defeat, added 22 points and delivered a clinching jump shot over Bucks rookie Malcolm Brogdon.

His basket gave the Raptors a four-point lead with 8.9 seconds remaining.

“It’s just his competitive edge,” Raptors coach Dwane Casey said. “I’ve seen him in the trenches before, and he’s always bounced back.” 

“It’s just who he is, he’s a fighter, a competitor, and I knew he wasn’t going to satisfied with the way he played in the first game.”

Patrick Patterson added two free throws for Toronto, while the Bucks were left to regret five missed shots to end the game.

That included a three-pointer by Brogdon that rattled in and out of the hoop. 

Giannis Antetokounmpo led the Bucks with 24 points and 15 rebounds. Khris Middleton added 20 points for Milwaukee, who will seek to regain the series edge when they host game three on Thursday.

In the only Western Conference game on Tuesday, the Los Angeles Clippers leveled their series against the Utah Jazz at 1-1, leading wire-to-wire in a 99-91 triumph.

The Jazz had snatched a 97-95 game-one victory in Los Angeles despite losing star center Rudy Gobert in the opening seconds.

They were without the defensive standout again in game two and in his absence, the Clippers out-scored the Jazz in the paint 60-38.

Blake Griffin scored 24 points. Chris Paul had 21 points and 10 assists and DeAndre Jordan added a double-double of 18 points and 15 rebounds.

Gordon Hayward led the Jazz with 20, but while Utah repeatedly fought back from double-digit deficits they couldn’t get the gap under six points in the fourth quarter.

- Advertisement -

LATEST NEWS

Popular Articles