Yardbarker
x
Boston Celtics Hold Off Brooklyn Nets In 2OT Thriller
Brad Penner-Imagn Images

If you walked into the Barclays Center on Friday night, you were probably bracing for impact. After Wednesday’s 54-point catastrophic meltdown against the Knicks, a game that will unfortunately live in franchise infamy, the vibe in Brooklyn was somewhere between a funeral and an intervention. The last thing anyone expected was for the Nets (12-31) to look the Boston Celtics (28-16) in the eye and refuse to blink.

But sports are funny like that. Just when you think a team has packed it in for the season, they remind you why you watch.

In a game that felt more like a playoff brawl, the Nets went toe-to-toe with one of the league’s heavyweights. It took 58 minutes of basketball, huge momentum swings, and enough stress to age the coaching staff by a decade, but the Celtics eventually escaped with a 130-126 victory in double overtime.

The Nets Finally Found a Pulse Against the Celtics

Wednesday was embarrassing. Trailing by 22 at halftime against a division rival isn’t just bad basketball; it’s a lack of effort. Head Coach Jordi Fernandez clearly challenged the locker room before the Celtics arrived, because the team that took the floor Friday looked unrecognizable compared to the ghosts of two nights prior.

From the opening tip, Brooklyn played with a chip on their shoulder. They weren’t just going through the motions; they were flying around on defense, diving for loose balls, and actually communicating on switches. Taking a six-point lead into halftime against a juggernaut like the Celtics was a minor miracle considering the week they’d had.

It showed character. With the trade deadline looming like a storm cloud and rumors swirling about roster blowups, it would have been easy for these guys to check out. Instead, they bought in. That kind of resilience is exactly what you want to see during a rebuild.

The Rookie and the Bench Mob Steal the Show

You know it’s a wild night when the bench unit is outplaying the starters against a championship-caliber rotation. Brooklyn’s reserves were electric, outscoring the Celtics’ bench 51-40.

The headline here has to be Nolan Traore. The rookie guard has had a rough go of it lately. But against Boston, he looked like a seasoned vet. Traore dropped a career-high 21 points, and more importantly, Fernandez trusted him to run the point during the crucial overtime periods. Seeing a young guy shake off the “yips” and perform on a stage that big is huge for his development.

He wasn’t alone, though. Ziaire Williams chipped in a gritty 14 points, even when his jumper wasn’t falling, and Day’Ron Sharpe was a menace on the glass. This unit gave the starters the rest they desperately needed to survive a double-overtime marathon. If the bench can play with this kind of fire consistently, the Nets might actually steal a few games down the stretch.

Clutch Chaos: How the Nets Forced Double Overtime

This season, “clutch time” for the Nets has usually meant “time to turn off the TV.” They’ve found creative ways to lose tight games all year. But Friday night flipped the script.

Brooklyn executed down the stretch of regulation with a precision we haven’t seen in months. They needed stops? They got them. They needed buckets? Nic Claxton delivered crucial scores in the paint to keep hope alive.

The first overtime was a rollercoaster of emotion. Down four with a minute left, the “Same Old Nets” narrative started creeping in. But then, they ripped off a 9-0 run fueled by suffocating defense and clutch free-throw shooting. For a moment, it looked like they had the Celtics on the ropes.

Ultimately, talent usually wins out in a second overtime. The legs get heavy, the jumpers fall short, and the team with the deeper superstar roster finds a way. Boston made the plays when they absolutely had to, tying the game late in the first OT and closing the door in the second.

The Verdict

Nobody likes a moral victory, especially when you’re sitting at 12-31. But considering the 54-point disaster that preceded this game, pushing the Celtics to the absolute limit is a step in the right direction.

The Nets showed heart, they showed hustle, and for the first time in a while, they showed a future. Now, the trick is doing it again when the opponent isn’t wearing Boston green.

This article first appeared on Total Apex Sports and was syndicated with permission.

More must-reads:

Customize Your Newsletter

Yardbarker +

Get the latest news and rumors, customized to your favorite sports and teams. Emailed daily. Always free!