BOSTON (news agencies) — The Celtics entered the playoffs expecting to get everyone’s best shot.
The East’s top seed barely survived a tough one to open the Eastern Conference finals.
Jayson Tatum scored 36 points, including 10 in overtime after Jaylen Brown’s tying 3-pointer with 6.1 seconds remaining in regulation, and Boston rallied just in time for a 133-128 victory over the Indiana Pacers on Tuesday night.
Jrue Holiday added a season-high 28 points and Brown finished with 26.
“Welcome to the NBA playoffs. You’ve just got to manage your emotions. Anything can happen,” Brown said of his tying 3. “It’s not over until the final buzzer sounds. … It’s not over until it’s over. We found a way to win the game at the very end.”
It gave his team a new life and helped it hang on to home-court advantage with Game 2 set for Thursday in Boston.
But guarding against complacency was also on the mind of Tatum. The Celtics have lost Game 2 in each of their previous two series.
“It doesn’t prove anything,” Tatum said. “We won a big-time game. The series is far from over.”
Tyrese Haliburton had 25 points and 10 assists for the Pacers, who knocked down 13 3-pointers and scored 56 points in the paint against a Celtics team still playing without 7-footer Kristaps Porzingis.
But Boston dialed up its defense, finishing with 11 steals — three each by Brown, Tatum and Holiday. The Celtics become the first team in NBA playoff history to have three players record 25 points and three steals in a game.
The Celtics were cold for most of the game from 3-point range, but ended the night 15 of 45 from beyond the arc.
“We keep talking about protecting home court,” Celtics forward Al Horford said. “It’s whatever it takes.”
Pascal Siakam added 24 points and 12 rebounds. Myles Turner finished with 23 points and 10 rebounds for the sixth-seeded Pacers, who twice turned it over with a three-point lead in the final 30 seconds of regulation.
Brown made them pay for the second one, hitting a 3 from the corner with Siakam right in his face to tie it at 117.
“Jrue made a good pass, (Derrick White) set a great screen and the rest is history,” Brown said.
Celtics coach Joe Mazzulla like the poise Brown showed.
“Jaylen had great balance,” he said. “Great pass, great shot.”
Pacers coach Rick Carlisle said the loss was “totally on me” for not calling a timeout to advance the ball before their turnover that set up Brown’s shot.
Asked about the 21 turnovers Indiana committed, Haliburton said many of them were preventable.
“I think it’s more on us,” he said. “I just felt like more of them were probably on us than them forcing turnovers.”