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Saturday, January 14, 2012

Pacers Beat The Celtics For The Second Time In Eight Days, 97-83 In Indiana


Boy am I glad that I watched about three minutes total of tonight's Boston Celtics-Indiana Pacers game.

If I was a smarter man, I would have bet everything I have on the Pacers since there was no way the Celtics were going to beat them, particularly on the road after a back-to-back.

Sure enough, Boston (4-7) continues to be the easiest team to figure out in the NBA since they'll never beat good opponents. The Pacers (9-3) won 97-83 at Bankers Life Fieldhouse (sweet name).

The Celtics dropped their fourth straight game, making them 1-4 on the road. It was also their second loss to the Pacers (5-0 at home) in the last eight days. Finally, Boston has failed to score over 100 points in its last nine games.

I'd love to come up with a creative new way to make fun of the C's but since I hardly paid attention to this game that was a foregone conclusion before it started and I've been saying the same stuff for weeks, I'll just leave you with the facts from this one.

Kevin Garnett and Paul Pierce actually both led Boston with 21 points. The problem was that Ray Allen (7 points) and Rajon Rondo (6 points, 9 assists) didn't have it going. It seems like they can't all put it together on the same night anymore. Zombie Jermaine O'Neal grabbed 12 rebounds so that's something to be excited about.

Brandon Bass (10 points, 8 rebounds) was the only other Celtic in double-figures, off the bench. I'm happy to see that rookie E'Twan Moore played 20 minutes and notched seven points, three assists, two rebounds and two steals. With Keyon Dooling out last night and tonight, what better time to find out what Moore has? After all, he has much more of a future ahead of him than Dooling.

Not that it matters one bit but Chris Willcox missed tonight's game and he's expected to be out the next two games as well after hurting his calf last night vs. Chicago. The plethora of injuries on every NBA team is predictable specifically because of the lockout. It's clear that many guys, especially veterans, weren't in the best shape coming into training camp and they're paying for it now.

Danny Granger led the Pacers with 21 points. Darren Collison and Paul George both put up 17 points while Roy Hibbert had 11 points and nine rebounds.

The outcome was never in doubt as the Pacers led wire to wire. They were up 29-24 after one quarter and 56-48 at halftime. Indiana pushed it to 82-67 after three.

In a common theme of almost every loss so far, the Celtics made less free throws (22-14), pulled down less rebounds (52-45), had less steals (12-4), less blocks (10-6), less fast break points (23-13) and less points in the paint (42-24). But other than that, they played great.

It will only get more depressing for the Green and White in their next game since the Oklahoma City Thunder-one of the top teams in the NBA-visit TD Garden on Monday night. It will be Kendrick Perkins's first game against the Celtics since he was traded last season.

Not only can we wallow in self-pity from that mind-numbingly bad deal but to top it off, the Thunder will kick Boston's ass. Oh joy.





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