Celtics fall to lowly Bobcats
Even Charlotte Bobcats rookie D.J. Augustin wasn’t intimidated by the suddenly tender Boston Celtics.
Raymond Felton scored 25 points and rookie Augustin added 11 of his 20 in overtime as the lowly Bobcats stunned Boston 114-106 Tuesday, sending the Celtics to their fifth loss in seven games.
After 19 straight wins and an NBA record 27-2 start, the Celtics have lost their swagger. The lockdown defence and the poise are missing, too, as teams line up to get a shot at the defending champions.
Augustin even talked some trash at the champs’ expense.
“They come in and intimidate you and try to punk you,” Augustin said. “But if you don’t back down from them, they kind of fold.”
Going from unbeatable to vulnerable in less than two weeks, the Celtics were searching for answers after being left battered, bruised and angry by Larry Brown’s upstart Bobcats.
“We told our team before the season it will be 82 Game 7s. Every time we play it’s a Game 7 for the other team,” coach Doc Rivers said. “On the nights we’re not ready mentally for that, we’re going to have to get lucky and play over our head to win.”
At Charlotte, N.C., Boston’s Paul Pierce scored 28 points, but had a key turnover in overtime. Ray Allen scored 20 points, but shot 7-for-20. Rajon Rondo committed nine turnovers. Kevin Garnett had 14 points and 13 rebounds, but shot only 7-of-18 and was called for travelling in Charlotte’s decisive spurt.
And the NBA’s worst offensive team had its second-best scoring night of the season. Gerald Wallace chipped in with 23 points, but it was Augustin who hit a three-pointer and two free throws in a 7-0 run that put Charlotte ahead 108-101.
That would have been laughable before Boston visited the Lakers on Christmas. But Boston was frustrated again at key times.
After Pierce dribbled the ball out of bounds with Charlotte leading by five in the final minute of OT, Pierce gave Augustin a slight shove, as the turnover ended Boston’s chances in a physical game that saw the Celtics continue their surprising struggles against one of the Eastern Conference’s worst teams.
The Bobcats, despite entering with a 44-72 record over the past two seasons, won in Boston last season. They lost on Allen’s buzzer-beater in another game, and dropped a close contest in the first meeting this season in November.
Tuesday was another thriller, as the Celtics rallied from a 10-point, third-quarter deficit, took 79-72 lead in the fourth quarter, then allowed the Bobcats to get back in it.
Felton’s fadeaway with 38 seconds left in regulation put Charlotte ahead 96-95. After Allen missed a jumper, Felton was fouled and hit only one free throw with 20 seconds left.
Pierce then dribbled off a screen and drilled a turnaround jumper with 3.4 seconds left to tie it. Felton missed a straightaway 20-footer at the buzzer to force OT.
But the Bobcats dominated the extra period, despite playing again without Raja Bell (groin), getting five straight defensive stops to pick up one of Brown’s biggest wins since taking over his record ninth NBA team.
“The one thing I always remember is when you’re a good team, every team you play against is trying to bring their best game,” Brown said. “That’s a pretty special group that Boston has. We’ve got to learn to bring it every night like that and not just against Boston.”
The Celtics were without reserve guard Tony Allen, who injured his right ankle in Sunday’s loss to New York, and again looked out of sync in a bruising game.
As Bobcats part-owner Michael Jordan sat courtside and spent much of the game barking at referee Dick Bavetta, there were angry words and blood on the court.
Charlotte’s Juwan Howard picked up a flagrant foul for levelling Glen Davis early in the fourth quarter, leading Davis to play with cotton in one nostril.
Technicals were called on Rivers and Felton, after he confronted Davis following a hard foul away from the ball.
“We’ll get better,” Garnett promised. “We’re a team of confidence, a team of character. We’re just getting everybody’s best shot right now.
Magic 89 Wizards 80
At Orlando, Fla., Hedo Turkoglu scored 22 points and the Magic held off a late scoring burst by Caron Butler to beat Washington.
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76ers 104 Rockets 96
At Philadelphia, Andre Iguodala scored 28 points and reeling the Sixers returned home from a dreadful road trip to beat Houston.
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Timberwolves 94 Grizzlies 87
At Memphis, Tenn., Randy Foye scored 23 points, including the go-ahead three-pointer with 40 seconds left, and Minnesota weathered a late rally to beat the Grizzlies.
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Thunder 107 Knicks 99
At Oklahoma City, Kevin Durant had 27 points and 12 rebounds, Jeff Green scored 27 points and the Thunder held off New York.
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Bulls 99 Kings 94
At Chicago, Ben Gordon scored 24 points and the Bulls beat Sacramento to snap a three-game losing streak.
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Mavericks 107 Clippers 102
At Dallas, Dirk Nowitzki scored 34 points, including the go-ahead jumper with 37 seconds left right after he blocked a shot, and the Mavericks held on to beat short-handed Los Angeles.
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Hornets 116 Lakers 105
At Los Angeles, David West scored 15 of his 40 points in the fourth quarter, Chris Paul added 32 points and 15 assists, and New Orleans snapped the Lakers’ 15-game home winning streak.

