Celtics start post-Rondo era with win over Wolves
Published 4:35 pm Saturday, December 20, 2014
BOSTON — Celtics coach Brad Stevens was curious how his team would play in its first game without Rajon Rondo.
Boston did just fine.
Moving the ball crisply one day after the NBA assists leader was traded to the Dallas Mavericks, the Celtics beat the struggling Minnesota Timberwolves 114-98 on Friday night.
“I’m looking forward to seeing what kind of emotion we have,” Stevens said before the game.
Afterward, he said, “We did a lot of good things. I thought the ball was moving great.”
Of course, it came against a team that lost for the 10th time in 11 games and fell to 5-20.
Leading 95-92 midway through the fourth quarter, the Celtics scored the next eight points and 12 of 14 to take a 107-94 lead with 3:25 remaining. They stayed ahead by at least 12 the rest of the way.
“We played hard, got to the sixth-minute mark and we had a couple sequences where … we turned it over,” Minnesota coach Flip Saunders said.
Kelly Olynyk scored 21 points to lead six Celtics in double figures during their third straight victory, all against teams that have combined for just 17 wins this season.
Minnesota was led by Shabazz Muhammad with 26 points and Chase Budinger with a season-high 19 off the bench
“It felt good, personally,” Budinger said, “but it didn’t feel good that we still got beat.”
Jeff Green added 18 points for Boston and Jared Sullinger, Tyler Zeller and Avery Bradley had 14 each. Sullinger led all rebounders with 10.
Without Rondo, seven Celtics had at least three assists and Bradley led them with seven.
“I was obviously down” about Rondo’s departure, Bradley said. “He’s like an older brother to me.”
Boston also outshot Minnesota 56.5 percent to 45.2 percent.
“We had our ups and downs,” Olynyk said, “but we were just playing together, moving the ball and everyone contributed. That’s a fun way to play.”
Neither team led by more than four points in the first quarter and the game was tied at 43 with 3 minutes left in the first half.
Boston scored the next six points on a short jumper by Zeller, a 13-footer by Evan Turner, who started in place of Rondo, and two free throws by Bradley. Minnesota chipped away but still trailed 53-48 at halftime.
The Celtics led 83-77 after the third quarter as Zeller scored 10 points in the period, many on layups after quick passes.
The decisive spurt came after a layup by Thaddeus Young with 6:12 to go cut Boston’s lead to 95-92.
Rookie guard Marcus Smart then hit a 3-pointer, and Green dunked on a fast break after one steal and then hit a 3-pointer following another.
Budinger stopped the eight-point run with a short turnaround shot, but consecutive layups by Smart and Sullinger made it 107-94.
Wolves trade Brewer
The Houston Rockets made a move to bolster their depth on the perimeter on Friday, obtaining veteran swing man Corey Brewer from the Minnesota Timberwolves in a three-team trade that also included the Philadelphia 76ers.
The Rockets sent shooting guard Troy Daniels, cash considerations and a pair of future second-round selections to Minnesota: a protected pick in 2015 originally belonging to Sacramento (acquired by Houston in September) and a protected pick in 2016. The Timberwolves sent center Ronny Turiaf to the 76ers, who dealt guard Alexey Shved to the Rockets. Houston also sent to Philadelphia its own 2015 second-round draft pick and the rights to center Serhiy Lishchuk, a Ukraine native currently playing in Spain.
The trade gave the Rockets another proven veteran defender in Brewer to compete in the demanding Western Conference, where they were in fourth place at 19-6 after Thursday’s games. Rockets general manager Daryl Morey has been in pursuit of help for weeks, knowing that Golden State, Memphis, San Antonio and the Clippers all could have superior depth to his roster.
Houston lost out to rival Dallas in the bidding for point guard Rajon Rondo on Thursday, so Morey immediately set his sights on Brewer, who scored 51 points in a game against them last year. That scoring explosion was an anomaly, but Brewer is a hard-working veteran who should fit in well with teammates James Harden and Dwight Howard. Brewer is one of the NBA’s best at stealing the ball, and his ability to sprint out for easy transition baskets ought to allow him to make an easy transition to Houston.
Rockets coach Kevin McHale knows Brewer well. McHale was the general manager in Minnesota when the Wolves chose him seventh overall in 2007.