Current:Home > NewsCeltics win 18th NBA championship with 106-88 Game 5 victory over Dallas Mavericks -Excel Money Vision
Celtics win 18th NBA championship with 106-88 Game 5 victory over Dallas Mavericks
View
Date:2025-04-11 12:14:04
BOSTON (AP) — The Boston Celtics again stand alone among NBA champions.
Jayson Tatum had 31 points, 11 assists and eight rebounds as the Celtics topped the Dallas Mavericks 106-88 on Monday night to win the franchise’s 18th championship, breaking a tie with the Los Angeles Lakers for the most in league history.
Boston earned its latest title on the 16th anniversary of hoisting its last Larry O’Brien Trophy in 2008. It marks the 13th championship won this century by one of the city’s Big 4 professional sports franchises.
Jaylen Brown added 21 points and was voted the NBA Finals MVP. Jrue Holiday finished with 15 points and 11 rebounds. Center Kristaps Porzingis also provided an emotional lift, returning from a two-game absence because of a dislocated tendon in his left ankle to chip in five points in 17 minutes.
It helped the Celtics cap a postseason that saw them go 16-3 and finish with an 80-21 overall record. That .792 winning percentage ranks second in team history behind only the Celtics’ 1985-86 championship team that finished 82-18 (.820).
Second-year coach Joe Mazzulla, at age 35, also became the youngest coach since Bill Russell in 1969 to lead a team to a championship.
Luka Doncic finished with 28 points and 12 rebounds for Dallas, which failed to extend the series after avoiding a sweep with a 38-point win in Game 4. The Mavericks had been 3-0 in Game 5s this postseason, with Doncic scoring at least 31 points in each of the them.
Kyrie Irving finished with just 15 points on 5-of-16 shooting and has now lost 13 of the last 14 meetings against the Celtics team he left in the summer of 2019 to join the Brooklyn Nets.
NBA teams are now 0-157 in postseason series after falling into a 3-0 deficit.
Boston never trailed and led by as many as 26 feeding off the energy of the Garden crowd.
Dallas was within 16-15 early before the Celtics closed the first quarter on a 12-3 run that included eight combined points by Tatum and Brown.
The Celtics did it again in the second quarter when the Mavericks trimmed what had been a 15-point deficit to nine. Boston ended the period with a 19-7 spurt that was capped by a a half-court buzzer beater by Payton Pritchard – his second such shot of the series – to give Boston a 67-46 halftime lead.
Over the last two minutes of the first and second quarters, the Celtics outscored the Mavericks 22-4.
The Celtics never looked back.
Russell’s widow, Jeannine Russell, and his daughter Karen Russell were in TD Garden to salute the newest generation of Celtics champions.
They watched current Celtics stars Tatum and Brown earn their first rings. It was the trade that sent 2008 champions Kevin Garnett and Paul Pierce to Brooklyn in 2013 that netted Boston the draft picks it eventually used to select Brown and Tatum third overall in back-to-back drafts in 2016 and 2017.
The All-Stars came into their own this season, leading a Celtics team that built around taking and making a high number of 3-pointers, and a defense that rated as the league’s best during the regular season.
The duo made it to at least the Eastern Conference finals as teammates four previous times.
Their fifth deep playoff run together proved to be the charm.
After both struggling at times offensively in the series, Tatum and Brown hit a groove in Game 5, combining for 31 points and 11 assists in the first half.
It helped bring out all the attributes that made Boston the NBA’s most formidable team this postseason – spreading teams out, sharing the ball, and causing havoc on defense.
And it put a championship bow on dizzying two-year stretch for the Celtics, that saw them lose in the finals to the Golden State Warriors in 2022 and then fail to return last season after a Game 7 home loss to the Miami Heat in the conference finals.
___
AP NBA: https://apnews.com/hub/nba
veryGood! (78)
Related
- NFL Week 15 picks straight up and against spread: Bills, Lions put No. 1 seed hopes on line
- Heavy rains in northwestern Pakistan kill 8 people, mostly children
- Robots taking on tasks from mundane to dangerous: Police robot dog shot by suspect
- Oregon governor signs a bill recriminalizing drug possession into law
- 'We're reborn!' Gazans express joy at returning home to north
- Vermont advances bill requiring fossil fuel companies pay for damage caused by climate change
- Thinking about buying Truth Social stock? Trump's own filing offers these warnings.
- Watch as Oregon man narrowly escapes four-foot saw blade barreling toward him at high speed
- Scoot flight from Singapore to Wuhan turns back after 'technical issue' detected
- Uvalde mayor abruptly resigns, citing health concerns, ahead of City Council meeting
Ranking
- IRS recovers $4.7 billion in back taxes and braces for cuts with Trump and GOP in power
- Murder of LA man shot in front of granddaughter remains unsolved, $30k reward now offered
- Tesla sales fall nearly 9% to start the year as competition heats up and demand for EVs slows
- Atlantic City mayor says search warrants involve ‘private family issue,’ not corruption
- Macy's says employee who allegedly hid $150 million in expenses had no major 'impact'
- Motorists creep along 1 lane after part of California’s iconic Highway 1 collapses
- ‘It was the most unfair thing’: Disobedience, school discipline and racial disparity
- LSU's Angel Reese tearfully addresses critics postgame: 'I've been attacked so many times'
Recommendation
US wholesale inflation accelerated in November in sign that some price pressures remain elevated
Orlando city commissioner charged, accused of using 96-year-old's money on personal expenses
FBI says a driver rammed a vehicle into the front gate of its Atlanta office
Watch as Oregon man narrowly escapes four-foot saw blade barreling toward him at high speed
Macy's says employee who allegedly hid $150 million in expenses had no major 'impact'
Kylie Kelce dishes on Jason Kelce's retirement, increased spotlight with Taylor Swift
A Kansas paper and its publisher are suing over police raids. They say damages exceed $10M
Twin artists, and the healing power of art