The Brooklyn Nets had nowhere to go but up on Friday night. Not that it wasn’t obviously, but everyone knew it, and seemed focused on it.
“Just bounce back,” said Michael Porter Jr. at practice this afternoon. “Be ready to play tonight and move on.”
“It’s about how you respond,” Fernández added pregame. “Obviously you don’t like to feel embarrassed. It was a tough feeling, but we were out there together and the best thing you can do is yesterday, watch some film, talk to each other, get some work done this morning, do it again and go out there and respond as a group…Once again, how you respond is how you should be judged.”
Indeed, Brooklyn responded, and went up, but not past the visiting Boston Celtics.
The Nets began the game in a familiar position — down several possessions. Brooklyn started 1-6 from the field, seating us for what seemed like a sequel to the MSG Massacre. But thankfully, the Egor Dëmin x Drake Powell backcourt stepped in to cut the film’s funding. The rookie duo, starting together for the third time this season, put in 12 points in the first to give us our first quarter of competitive Nets basketball since Monday.
By the end of the night, everyone would be talking about Brooklyn’s third rookie guard, but more on that later…
Boston battled Brooklyn’s youth with their ball movement, assisting on seven of 10 made field goals in the first, but also spent much of the period hunting Nolan Traoré switches with Jaylen Brown. Brooklyn did a solid job timing their help to assist the rook, holding Brown to a 2-7 shooting start. However, they couldn’t win every battle against the recently donned All-Star starter, especially with the officials seemingly on his side…
That said, the Nets went into the second quarter tied with Boston and eventually leapt out to a 46-39 lead. Traoré had his “get back” with seven points in just under seven minutes during the period. The speedster’s aggression wore off on his teammates as well, as the Nets outscored their rival 8-0 on the break in the first half.
But in the second, all other Brooklyn highlights naturally belonged to the Junior. MPJ looked to respond tonight from a team and individual standpoint following a 4-14 shooting night from the field vs New York. In the subsequent period, he added six points while shooting 2-3 from the field. By halftime, he had already surpassed his scoring output from the Knick game, leading the Nets with 13 points while shooting 4-6 from the field and 2-3 from deep. He also dished three assists, including this magnet to Nic Claxton…
I’m hesitant to call third-year Claxton “prime” with him being just 26 years old, but he looked like that version of himself at the defensive end tonight. Clax showed little-to-no issue keeping up with guards after switching and could often be seen swatting at the ball like a that middle-aged guy at your local pickleball court who takes the game way too seriously. He went into the half with only six points, yet two assists and two blocks. He finished with an 18/9/4 line.
“They kept going at me,” Claxton said postgame. “They kept trying to isolate me, so that’s good. When a team was trying to isolate me, that’s good, and we just forced tough shots for him down the stretch.”
But in true Mazzulla Ball form, Boston shot 38.3% on field goals in the first, but 47.8% from three, and gave Brooklyn a 55-49 lead to start the third. The Nets maintained that advantage almost the entire period, running an offense on fumes such as Claxton iso attacks vs Neemias Queta (which rendered mixed results) and backdoor cuts from Ziaire Williams. The wheels momentarily fell off after Hugo Gonzalez picked Cam Thomas’ pocket and went coast to coast, putting Boston back in front 74-73 with 2:32 to go in the third, but the Nets rebounded to carry an 81-78 lead into the fourth.
There, neither team’s start looked like anything you’d build a highlight reel around, but would fire up a bipartisan crowd. Using that word to describe tonight’s fan attendance tonight is being generous, but that’s neither here nor there. Eight of the fourth period’s first 15 points were second chance, including all five of Brooklyn’s buckets.
Finding a Boston bunker with that grenade, Traoré finished the night with 21 points while shooting 7-13 from the field and 2-4 from deep, continuing his solid play since coming over from Long Island.
“His ability to touch the paint and how slippery he is, that was the reason why I put him there,” Fernández. “There’s some mistakes and we need him to be the floor general and talk and use his voice, but he’s going to grow that voice and I’m going to trust him.”
Traoré took a seat at the 4:41 mark of the fourth and Boston back ahead, but then reentered the game as the Nets closed with a rather curious lineup featuring him, Williams, Porter Jr., Clowney, and Claxton.
That gamble didn’t get Fernández back up on the Boston house by the end of the fourth, but it did get him even, and able to play another round…
Soon after coming in, Traoré hit another jumper, this one inside the arc, that made it a five point game with about a minute left in the fourth. Two stops and two made free throws from Clowney later, and the Nets had the ball down three with 27 seconds to play. Traoré again finished the next possession, though this time with an assist to Claxton, who made it a 103-102 game with 11 seconds to play.
That kicked off the foul game, and with Anfernee Simons splitting his attempts at the line, the Nets possessed the ball again down two. Porter Jr. clanked the potential game-winner, but once again, Claxton was there, cleaning up the possession and sending the Nets to their second overtime game this month.
The extra period was exactly as you’d expect one to look between two teams who just put in a gritty 48 minutes. Both squads combined to begin it 3-12 from the field. All seemed lost after the Nets missed four shots on one possession while down the same amount, but an ill-timed quick trigger three from Brown reopened the door, and the Nets crawled back through it.
The next two times down the floor, Claxton finished an alley-oop and Clowney splashed his third three of the ball game, miraculously giving the Nets a one point lead with under a minute to go.
Then, it was Brooklyn’s turn to play the foul game. They couldn’t do it cleanly either, and it bit them in the end.
Traoré took care of business first, nailing each of his attempts at the line. Ziaire Williams then appeared to close the client call, hitting both his shots to put the Nets up five with seven seconds to go.
However, next time down, Payton Pritchard hit a quick strike three to keep his team alive. Traoré again found himself at the line with a chance to extend the lead late, but went one of two, giving Boston the ball back, down three, and with 2.5 seconds to play with. Of course, Gonzalez used that final grain of sand in our second hourglass to tie things up again…
“He was just wide open,” a dumbfounded Claxton said postgame. “He was wide open. He hit the shot…I guess I’m confused. I gotta watch it. I’m confused. I don’t know how it got so open. That’s in the corner. I don’t know. I don’t know. I can’t give you an answer for that.”
Porter Jr. seemed to find an extra wind in our next five minutes of free hoops, dropping six in the frame, but Boston controlled it one nonetheless. Timely finishes from Pritchard and Brown, leveraging around an over-helping and understandably tired Net defense, kept Brooklyn apart until the closing seconds (we’re almost done, I promise).
Brooklyn had a shot to apply pressure one last time, with the ball and down four, but ran out of late game fairy dust. A final miss from Porter Jr. at long last introduced us to the end of the game, and perhaps Brooklyn’s best loss of the season. At least in this building, this year, those are of high value.
“I’m proud of the basketball we played, the competitiveness,” Fernández said. “We got better today, and that’s what’s most important.”
Heck, it sure was a fun ride too.
Final: Boston Celtics 130, Brooklyn Nets 126
Injury Report
Despite the extra run time, the Nets got away tonight relatively clean. However, Nic Claxton did sustain a pinky injury.
“It’s sore,” he said. “I really don’t know. I have to get X-rays and MRIs, so I don’t know. It is sore though. It was just locking up, so I just put some tape on it.”
We’ll make sure to update as we find out more.
Milestone Watch
- With his second 3-pointer in the first quarter against Boston, Egor Dëmin tied Bojan Bogdanović for the second most games with multiple 3PM by a rookie in franchise history (24). The franchise record is held by Kerry Kittles (50 such games in 1996-97).
- Traoré 21 points tonight are a career-high.
- This was Brooklyn’s first double-overtime game since January 20. 2021 at Cleveland and their first at Barclays Center since December 26, 2018 vs. Charlotte
Tank Watch
It was a good night for the tank … excuse me, playing the probabilities. Two teams above the Nets in the Tankathon rankings — the Pelicans (who owes their first to the Hawks) and the Pacers — both won as did the two teams below the Nets — the Jazz and the Hornets. The bottom line: Brooklyn is still in fifth and still a game and a half (and three games in the loss column) behind the Kings. They are closer to the third pick but still two and a half games back.
Next Up
No NBA team has a better record than the Los Angeles Clippers since December 23rd. No NBA team needed it more, with Los Angeles among the basement dwellers earlier in the year and in danger of giving the champs a lottery pick. They’ve still got a long way to go, but they’re back in the race at 20-24. Nets vs Clippers tips on Sunday at 9:00 p.m. ET.
- Boxscore: Boston Celtics 130, Brooklyn Nets 126 (2OT) – NBA
- Game Highlights: Boston Celtics 130, Brooklyn Nets 126 (Video) – NBA
- 2OT Thriller Celtics vs. Nets (Video) – NBA
- Jaylen Brown & Payton Pritchard go off in Brooklyn (Video) – NBA
- Jordi Fernandez PostGame Interview (Video) – YES Network
- Nic Claxton PostGame Interview (Video) – YES Network
- Nolan Traore PostGame Interview (Video) – YES Network
- Payton Pritchard scores 32 and Celtics outlast Nets 130-126 in double overtime – AP
- Fighting Nets run out of gas in heartbreaking double overtime loss to Celtics – Brian Lewis – New York Post
- Nets push Celtics to double overtime but fall 130-126 ($) – C.J. Holmes – New York Daily News
- What success looks like for the Nets over their final 40 games ($) – C.J. Holmes – New York Daily News
- Nets’ Michael Porter Jr. cracks top 50 of NBA player rankings amid breakout season – Erik Slater – Clutch Points
- Nets player grades after 130-126 double overtime loss to Celtics – Sharif Phillips-Keaton – USA TODAY