Oshae Brissett swung the momentum in the Celtics‘ favor and made a strong case for a rotation spot in Friday’s win over the Heat, writes Adam Himmelsbach of The Boston Globe. The Eastern Conference Finals rematch saw Boston trailing 26-13 when Brissett entered the game in the first quarter. He pounded the offensive glass and threw down an impressive dunk that cut the lead to three points within about five minutes.
“He was the sole reason that we got back into the game, and I told him that,” Jayson Tatum said. “He came right in, and we were kind of flat. His energy, his offensive rebounding, giving us second- and third-chance opportunities was big. And that’s his job. For him to come do that, to not play last game and come in today and give us the spark to turn the game around was huge. And that’s what I love about our team.”
“We know that we’re going to be important throughout a lot of these games of the season,” he said of himself and his fellow reserves. “And then when it comes to playoff time, we’re going to be relied on, even if it’s for a little bit. Just go in there and just do what we do and do what we’ve learned all of training camp. So we take every practice like that and we’ve taken it really serious and going up against starters and it’s making them better. And it’s also making us better and more confident in ourselves knowing that any time we do get thrown in, we’ve just got to play the same way.”
There’s more from Boston:
- Jaylen Brown is prepared to fill some of the leadership void created when Marcus Smart was traded to Memphis, per Gary Washburn of The Boston Globe. Brown, now the longest-tenured member of the team, plans to take a more vocal approach than in past years. “I’m comfortable being in that (leadership) role,” he said. “I think at times I’ve wanted to be more in that role, but we had a lot of cooks in the kitchen so sometimes your voice is redundant.”
- Derrick White showed an increased level of aggressiveness in closing out the win over Miami, observes Matt Vautour of MassLive. White scored 14 points in the fourth quarter and attacked the basket when he got the opportunity instead of deferring to his star teammates. “I’ve been an advocate for D-White since he joined the team three years ago,” Tatum said. “I tried to tell him to be more aggressive. To score. To attack. To make plays. He’s at his best when he’s being aggressive.”
- With the Celtics adding size in the offseason, Mazzulla is placing a greater emphasis on offensive rebounding, according to Souichi Terada of MassLive. It paid off Friday as Boston scored 23 second-chance points and grabbed 36% of the available offensive boards.