By Bill Burt
THE EAGLE-TRIBUNE (NORTH ANDOVER, Mass.)
NORTH ANDOVER, Mass.
Sun, May 18 2008
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Thursdaynight was a mulligan. The Boston Celtics didn't have to win.
Their wins at San Antonio and Houston, on back-to-back nights, were historic enough, overcoming a 22-point deficit against the defending NBA champs in the former and ending a legendary 22-game winning streak in the latter.
The Dallas Mavericks really and truly needed this win. They hadn't beaten a team above .500 since the acquisition of Jason Kidd, going a disappointing 9-6 since the trade, and they are currently seventh overall in the Western Conference and dangerously close to not making the playoffs (3<1/2> games ahead of Denver with 13 to go).
But the Celtics passed on the mulligan and rallied to win at Dallas, 94-90.
They decided they needed to win because, well, they're the Celtics and frankly, for the first time in a decade and a half, that means something.
It's called pride. It's something Baby Boomers took for granted in the Dave Cowens years of the 1970s and the Larry Bird era of the 1980s.
The 55-13 Celtics are on pace for 66 wins, a number surpassed by only one Celtics team before, maybe the greatest team the franchise ever had | the championship 1985-86 squad which won 67 games.
But back to Thursday night's win for a moment.
The Celtics did not play well. Their point guard tandem of Rajon Rondo and Sam Cassell combined for a 1-for-16 evening. Overall, the team shot 34.5 percent, one of its lowest percentages of the year.
But numbers don't matter, wins do.
This Celtics team, which is universally noted as the best defensive group in the NBA, slowed this once-offensive juggernaut to a crawl.
If you've listened to their last few opponents, you wouldn't be surprised.
Rockets MVP candidate Tracy McGrady said of the C's, "It's a hell of a team over there. They outplayed us. I've never seen a defense like that. I mean, if they play defense like that, night in and night out, the NBA is in trouble because that was defense at its finest."
The bench, which has been a mainstay during this recent hot-streak, wasn't so dependable. But that's OK, because the Big Three, played like the Big Three, scoring 63 points.
Ray Allen's 3-pointer, to give the Celts a lead they would never relinquish, 90-88 with 31 seconds remaining, broke a 3<1/2>-minute dry spell in which the Celtics didn't score.
To be honest, I wasn't surprised. I am more surprised when Allen, who had been out three games with an ankle injury, or Paul Pierce don't make those shots.
The Celtics deserve a break. They really do. But that break will only be one day of rest because they play at red-hot New Orleans Saturday night.
The Celtics don't need it. But I have to admit, there will be some bragging rights at stake. The Hornets recently took over the best record of the Western Conference (46-21) while winning seven of nine games, including over San Antonio, Los Angeles and Houston.
I guess we will have to see. We will have to see if the Celtics feel that losing is unacceptable around here.
Pride, when mixed with talent, we are finding, goes a long way. Unless I am misinterpreting what I am seeing, that long way might go to championship banner No. 17.
Bill Burt writes for The Eagle-Tribune at North Andover, Mass. He can be reached at bburt@eagletribune.com.
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Streaking
Boston has won 14 of its last 15 games
The Celtics became the first team to sweep their Texas trip (San Antonio, Houston, Dallas) since Sacramento in November of 2001.
Houston had won 22 straight games, the second longest streak in NBA history.
The Spurs hadn't lost at home in six weeks.
It was only Dallas' sixth home loss of the year.
Boston is on a pace for 66 wins, second highest in franchise history.
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