Current:Home > FinanceBurley Garcia|Doncic scores 29, Mavericks roll past the Celtics 122-84 to avoid a sweep in the NBA Finals -Wealth Pursuit Network
Burley Garcia|Doncic scores 29, Mavericks roll past the Celtics 122-84 to avoid a sweep in the NBA Finals
SignalHub Quantitative Think Tank Center View
Date:2025-04-09 22:09:23
DALLAS (AP) — Luka Doncic scored 25 of his 29 points in the first half,Burley Garcia Kyrie Irving added 21 points and the Dallas Mavericks emphatically extended their season on Friday night, fending off elimination by beating the Boston Celtics 122-84 in Game 4 of the NBA Finals.
The Mavs’ stars were done by the end of the third quarter, with good reason. It was all Dallas from the outset, the Mavs leading by 13 after one quarter, 26 at the half and by as many as 38 in the third before both sides emptied the benches.
The 38-point final margin was the third-biggest ever in an NBA Finals game, behind only Chicago beating Utah 96-54 in 1998 and the Celtics beating the Los Angeles Lakers 131-92 in 2008.
Before Friday, the worst NBA Finals loss for the 17-time champion Celtics was 137-104 to the Lakers in 1984. This was worse. Much worse, at times. Dallas’ biggest lead in the fourth was 48 — the biggest deficit the Celtics have faced all season.
The Celtics still lead the series 3-1, and Game 5 is in Boston on Monday.
The loss — Boston’s first in five weeks — snapped the Celtics’ franchise-record, 10-game postseason winning streak, plus took away the chance they had at being the first team in NBA history to win both the conference finals and the finals in 4-0 sweeps.
Jayson Tatum scored 15 points, Sam Hauser had 14 while Jaylen Brown and Jrue Holiday each finished with 10 for the Celtics.
Tim Hardaway Jr. scored 15 points, all in the fourth quarter, and Dereck Lively II had 11 points and 12 rebounds for Dallas. It was Lively who provided the hint that it was going to be a good night for the Mavs in the early going. He connected on a 3-pointer — the first of his NBA career — midway through the first quarter, a shot that gave the Mavs the lead for good.
And they were off and running from there. And kept running.
It was 61-35 at the half and Dallas left a ton of points unclaimed in the opening 24 minutes as well. The Mavs went into the break having shot only 5 of 15 from 3-point range, 10 of 16 from the foul line — and they were in total control anyway.
The lowlights for Boston were many, some of them historic:
— The 35 points represented the Celtics’ lowest-scoring total in a half, either half, in Joe Mazzulla’s two seasons as coach.
— The 26-point halftime deficit was Boston’s second biggest of the season. The Celtics trailed Milwaukee by 37 at the break on Jan. 11, one of only eight instances in their first 99 games of this season where they trailed by double figures at halftime.
— The halftime deficit was Boston’s largest ever in an NBA Finals game, and the 35-point number was the second-worst by the Celtics in the first half of one. They managed 31 against the Lakers on June 15, 2010, Game 6 of the series that the Lakers claimed with a Game 7 victory.
Teams with a lead of 23 or more points at halftime, even in this season where comebacks looked easier than ever before, were 76-0 this season entering Friday night.
Make it 77-0 now. Doncic’s jersey number, coincidentally enough.
The Celtics surely were thinking about how making a little dent in the Dallas lead to open the second half could have made things interesting. Instead, the Mavs put things away and fast; a 15-7 run over the first 4:32 of the third pushed Dallas’ lead out to 76-42.
Whatever hope Boston had of a pulling off a huge rally and capping off a sweep was long gone. Mazzulla pulled the starters, all of them, simultaneously with 3:18 left in the third and Dallas leading 88-52.
The Mavs still have the steepest climb possible in this series, but the first step was done.
___
AP NBA: https://apnews.com/hub/nba
veryGood! (79)
Related
- Why members of two of EPA's influential science advisory committees were let go
- Jennifer Lopez and Ben Affleck's BFF Matt Damon Prove Their Bond Is Strong Amid Her Divorce
- ‘Shogun’ wins 11 Emmys with more chances to come at Creative Arts Emmy Awards
- Jewish students have a right to feel safe. Universities can't let them down again.
- Could your smelly farts help science?
- Disney Launches 2024 Family Holiday Pajamas: Unwrap the Magic With Must-Have Styles for Everyone
- Tyreek Hill was not ‘immediately cooperative’ with officers during stop, police union says
- Princess Kate finishes chemotherapy, says she's 'doing what I can to stay cancer-free'
- Justice Department, Louisville reach deal after probe prompted by Breonna Taylor killing
- A blockbuster Chinese video game sparks debate on sexism in the nation’s gaming industry
Ranking
- Taylor Swift makes surprise visit to Kansas City children’s hospital
- Futures start week on upbeat note as soft landing optimism lingers
- Bruce Springsteen's wife Patti Scialfa reveals blood cancer diagnosis
- Polaris Dawn: SpaceX targets new launch date for daring crewed mission
- Backstage at New York's Jingle Ball with Jimmy Fallon, 'Queer Eye' and Meghan Trainor
- Extra private school voucher funding gets initial OK from North Carolina Senate
- Spring rains destroyed a harvest important to the Oneida tribe. Farmers are working to adapt
- Takeaways from AP’s report on how Duck Valley Indian Reservation’s water and soil is contaminated
Recommendation
How to watch new prequel series 'Dexter: Original Sin': Premiere date, cast, streaming
Residents unharmed after small plane crashes into Arizona home, hospitalizing pilot
Caleb Williams has forgettable NFL debut with Chicago Bears – except for the end result
Olympian Abbey Weitzeil Answers Swimming Beauty Questions You’ve Wondered About & Shares $6 Must-Haves
Paige Bueckers vs. Hannah Hidalgo highlights women's basketball games to watch
A federal judge tosses a lawsuit over the ban on recorded inmate interviews in South Carolina
Pitt fires athletic director Heather Lyke months before her contract was set to expire
'Hillbilly Elegy' director Ron Howard 'concerned' by Trump and Vance campaign rhetoric