
The Philadelphia 76ers and Boston Celtics played in the first of what we can only hope is three Eastern Conference Game 7 thrillers on Saturday, a 109-100 76ers win.
Below are five remarkable facts from an historic victory.
Last Sunday, Boston blew out Philadelphia, 128-96, in Game 4 to move one win from the East semifinals. Joel Embiid struggled in his return from an appendectomy, scoring 26 points on 21 shots. It was only a matter of time before the Celtics, who were 32-0 with a 3-1 series lead, would advance, or so it seemed.
The Sixers had another idea, mounting the first comeback from a 3-1 deficit in franchise history after losing the series in the 18 previous instances.
Both records were bound to get broken eventually, but it's remarkable they were snapped against each other, adding another layer to a great NBA rivalry.
Prior to tonight, the Celtics were 32-0 in series with a 3-1 lead, the most wins without a loss in NBA history!
— ESPN Insights (@ESPNInsights) May 3, 2026
The 76ers were 0-18 when trailing a series 3-1, the most losses without a win in NBA history pic.twitter.com/2Yhc8JcBfL
The 2022-23 MVP responded from his Game 4 dud by helping lead Philly to its comeback series breakthrough, including with a pair of 30-point efforts in Games 5 and 7. On Saturday, he led the Sixers with 34 points on 12-of-26 shooting, while adding 10 rebounds and six assists. Per Stathead research, he became the first player since Giannis Antetokounmpo in 2021 — and just the seventh all-time — to have 30 points, 10 rebounds and five assists in a Game 7 road win.
Not only did Embiid exorcise playoff demons with the victory, but his performance was also arguably the main reason why Philly is advancing.
In 2024, Boston won an NBA title with a high-volume three-point offense. Two years later, it's exiting in the first round because of the reliance on an outside shot. As ESPN "SportsCenter" host Scott Van Pelt noted on social media, the Celtics shot an astoundingly poor 49-of-179 (27.4 percent) from deep in their four losses, which included three in a row to end the series.
Check my math, but in the four losses, I’ve got 49-179 from three in this series for Boston.
— Scott Van Pelt (@notthefakeSVP) May 3, 2026
That’s insane.
At some point during the cold streak, would it have hurt all that much to try another approach? In Game 7, for example, Boston trimmed a double-digit Philadelphia lead to one a couple of times in the fourth, but instead of attacking the basket to try to take the lead, it settled for jumpers and never once got over the hump. Some may argue that it's easy to question the C's strategy in hindsight, yet we could see in real time that it wasn't working.
Sixers forward Paul George celebrated his 36th birthday on Saturday and did so the way six others before him in NBA history have — with a Game 7 win.
Players celebrating a birthday with a win-or-go-home playoff game are now 7-0 after Philly's win over Boston, and George by no means road others' coattails to join the list.
Paul George could be the seventh player to get a game 7 win on his birthday
— FanDuel (@FanDuel) May 2, 2026
r/seankilpatrickfan | #NBA pic.twitter.com/6X2gmDxTFw
He was active early, cutting to the basket for a dunk to give the 76ers an early 6-0 lead.
Paul George with an EMPHATIC slam through contact pic.twitter.com/JqJT4bTGyc
— ClutchPoints (@ClutchPoints) May 2, 2026
Later, George, who scored 13 points on 5-of-10 shooting, including 3-of-5 from beyond the arc, activated from long rage, hitting a three with the shot-clock draining in the second quarter to push the lead to five, 50-45.
Target practice for Paul George
— NBA (@NBA) May 3, 2026
PG (10p, 4-5 fgm) and PHI lead by 5! pic.twitter.com/5oPMwVXixr
In the third, he drained another three over Celtics forward Sam Hauser, gaining separation off the dribble to extend the advantage to 13.
well damn Paul George pic.twitter.com/2Kv8ydDD53
— Steve Jones (@stevejones20) May 3, 2026
During the first-round series, George made 55 percent (22-of-40) of his threes. As a secondary scoring option on the Sixers, that kind of efficiency will be crucial to move past the New York Knicks in the semis.
With Jayson Tatum (left knee stiffness) out, coach Joe Mazzulla rolled the dice on a lineup without much experience together. Season-long starters Jaylen Brown and Derrick White were joined in the starting five by center Luka Garza, forward Ron Harper Jr. and guard Baylor Scheierman, who combined for 29 regular-season starts and no points in the Game 7 loss.
That made the Celtics the first team in NBA playoff history to have three scoreless starters in a game, helping undo the team's 41-3 bench scoring edge.
The Celtics are rolling out a stunning starters lineup:
— Noa Dalzell (@NoaDalzell) May 2, 2026
Jaylen Brown
Derrick White
Baylor Scheierman
Ron Harper Jr.
Luka Garza
The Celtics are the 1st team in NBA history with 3 scoreless starters in a playoff game. With Garza, Scheierman and Harper Jr on the floor together to start, the Celtics were outscored 11-3. Those three combined to shoot 0-7. Just an unnecessary Game 7 gamble by Mazzulla. (via Micah Adams) #NBA
— NBA Stat (@nbastat.bsky.social) 2026-05-03T02:06:25.893Z
Mazzulla, a 2025-26 Coach of the Year finalist, pushed all the right buttons during the regular season in coaching the Celtics, who missed Tatum for the majority of the year, to a 56-26 record. But his Game 7 starting rotation will be second-guessed all offseason. In his team's biggest game, Mazzulla got too cute, and it cost Boston dearly.
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