Celtics fend off Cavs, return to Eastern Conference finals.
BOSTON -- The
Boston Celtics, behind 25 points, 10 rebounds and 9 assists from
Jayson Tatum, defeated the
Cleveland Cavaliers 113-98 in Game 5 of their Eastern Conference semifinal series Wednesday night, advancing to the Eastern Conference finals for a third straight season.
The Celtics' secured their sixth trip to the East finals in eight years, marking the second time they have accomplished that feat (also 1980-88) and joining the
Philadelphia 76ers (1977-85),
Los Angeles Lakers (1980-91),
Chicago Bulls (1989-98),
Detroit Pistons (2003-08) and
Golden State Warriors (2015-22) in doing so since the NBA went to a two-conference format in the 1970-71 season.
Boston will now await the winner of the other Eastern Conference semifinal between the
New York Knicks and
Indiana Pacers, which New York leads 3-2 heading into Friday's Game 6 in Indianapolis, with the conference finals set to begin at TD Garden either Sunday afternoon or Tuesday night.
For much of the first half Wednesday night, however, it looked like that might not be the case, despite Cleveland playing without star guard
Donovan Mitchell (left calf strain); guard
Caris LeVert (left knee bone bruise), Mitchell's replacement in the starting lineup in Game 4; and starting center
Jarrett Allen, who missed his eighth straight game with a bruised rib.
Cleveland led for chunks of the first half -- mainly behind a red-hot shooting performance from former Celtic
Marcus Morris, who had 14 points on 6-for-8 shooting in the opening 24 minutes -- before Boston eventually took a 58-52 lead into half time.
It was the latest example of how the Celtics have played wildly differently at home compared to on the road over the past few playoffs. Entering Wednesday's action, Boston had gone 14-14 at TD Garden since the start of the 2022 playoffs -- the most games played (28) without a winning record at home over three postseasons in NBA history, per ESPN's Stats & Information. That includes dropping Game 2 of both Boston's first-round series against the
Miami Heat and this series against Cleveland despite both opponents missing key contributors because of injuries.
On the road, Boston is undefeated (4-0) in these playoffs and 18-7 overall over the past three postseasons.
After the sluggish start, Boston finally found some traction -- and some energy into its home crowd -- behind several hustle plays from
Al Horford, who is just a couple of weeks shy of his 38th birthday and in the middle of his 17th NBA season. After shooting 4-for-22 from 3-point range over the first four games of the series, including 0-for-10 in the two games in Cleveland, Horford hit six in Game 5, and he repeatedly kept plays alive with his energy.
Horford also frequently defended Cavaliers guard
Darius Garland in isolations, especially in the fourth quarter, playing a part in holding Garland -- who scored 30 points in Game 4 -- to 11 points on 4-for-17 shooting and 9 assists Wednesday. Horford was subbed out for the final time inside the final minute to massive standing ovation.
Cleveland hung around thanks to a stellar game from
Evan Mobley, who had his best offensive playoff game to date by scoring 33 points on 15-for-24 shooting, along with Morris, who after scoring seven total points across the first four games of the series finished Game 5 with 25 points on 10-for-13 shooting.
But after Morris hit a triple with 10:59 remaining in the fourth to cut the Celtics' lead to 86-83, Boston responded with a 15-4 run over the next four minutes, capped by a Tatum jumper with 6:45 remaining, that put the Celtics up by 14 and had the sellout crowd roaring.
From there, Boston's lead never got lower than nine, and the game was essentially over when Tatum hit
Jrue Holiday under the basket for a wide-open layup with 2:15 to go to push the lead back to 14, starting the party in Boston for yet another trip to the NBA's final four.