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Kyrie Irving carries Boston Celtics with 43 in win over Toronto Raptors

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After scoring 23 of his 43 points in the fourth quarter and overtime Friday against the Raptors, Kyrie Irving stressed the need for the Celtics’ struggling offense to be more aggressive and attack the rim.
BOSTON — Before this season began, the Boston Celtics and Toronto Raptors were pegged as the teams most likely to square off in the Eastern Conference finals for the right to claim the throne left vacant by LeBron James moving West.
Then the season started. And while the Raptors looked every bit like the team they were supposed to be, the Celtics struggled out of the gate, with a wheezing offense weighing them down. It looked like that would be the case again Friday night, as the Raptors took control through the first three quarters at TD Garden.
Kyrie Irving, though, had other ideas.
Irving finished with 43 points — 23 of which came in the fourth quarter and overtime — to go with 11 assists to lift the Celtics to a thrilling 123-116 overtime win over the Raptors.
For Boston, it was a much-needed victory in a game that could easily have been mistaken for one in late-May rather than in mid-November.
“It’s just not too often during the regular season you get to have games like this,” Irving said. “So you want to take full advantage of them. They’re a great test for your team on both ends of the basketball floor. A great player in the other locker room. So you’ve just got to be on your P’s and Q’s for the unknown, and that’s the competition.
“The level of play raises, and you’ve just got to appreciate that.”
Irving certainly raised his level of play, and, in doing so, raised that of the Celtics as a whole.
Even with subtle improvements lately, Boston still entered the night ranked near the bottom of the league in offensive efficiency (23rd in the league), due in large part to its struggles getting to the basket.
Through much of Friday’s game, that was again the case. The Celtics settled for one jumper after another, failing to either get to the rim or to the foul line. After Raptors forward Pascal Siakam hit two of them to open the fourth quarter, Toronto had attempted 25 free throws, whereas Boston had taken only 12.
But then, it appeared a light finally went off for the Celtics, specifically for Irving. And once he and his teammates began attacking the rim, things finally began to open up for Boston offensively.
“We need to do a better job of attacking the paint, period,” Celtics head coach Brad Stevens said. “Kyrie’s ability to get in there is so unique…. We just need to be better at that.”
The Celtics looked like a completely different team in the fourth quarter and in overtime, finally playing with aggressiveness on offense.
Asked about the offense after the game, Irving repeatedly used the word “aggressive” to describe not only how Boston played late in Friday night’s game, but how it needed to play moving forward.
He scored 19 points in the fourth quarter, including 11 in a row for Boston in one stretch, and made a series of increasingly difficult layups in and around the rim to keep the Celtics in the game.
“It’s just a mindset,” Irving said. “It’s a mindset that we just have to ingrain in all of us.
“Just find that happy balance of the 3-point line as well as getting to the rim, and then not taking tough 2s, but taking 2s that are off the second-side action or just driving to the rim and being aggressive.”
Irving’s aggression was contagious Friday night, particularly for Jayson Tatum, whose performance late in the game was much more in line with how he played in his breakout rookie campaign last season.
Limited to two points on 1-of-5 shooting in the first half, Tatum had 21 points on 7-for-8 shooting in the second half and overtime.
More important, Tatum stopped settling for jumpers and attacked the rim. Early in the fourth quarter, he got to the rim for a layup; he had a massive dunk to pull Boston to within two with 48.7 seconds to go in regulation; and then he hit a floater in the lane midway through overtime that pushed Boston out to a multi-possession lead for the remainder of the game.
“I wasn’t playing well in the first half, and I just knew I had to be better,” Tatum said. “I had to do my part.”
Friday’s win also marked an important step for Gordon Hayward, who continues to recover from the gruesome injuries to his left leg and ankle he suffered in last year’s season opener. Hayward hit a season-high in minutes Friday night, playing 39:03, including virtually the entire fourth quarter and all of overtime, and he also had a significant impact on the game.
A successful boxout of Pascal Siakam allowed him to get an over-the-back call and make two free throws to tie the score at the end of regulation, and he then hit two free throws and a turnaround jumper on the baseline to open the scoring in overtime.
For someone still clearly working his way back into form, all of it was important. After finishing with 15 points, five rebounds and five assists, Hayward wore an ear-to-ear grin afterward in Boston’s locker room.
Hayward admitted he was surprised Stevens kept him out on the floor as long as he did.
“I’m happy he left me in,” Hayward said. “It felt good to play that many minutes. It’s been such a long time since I’ve done that, so it’s a good confidence booster.”
In order to beat the Raptors in the playoffs — let alone contend with the Golden State Warriors in the NBA finals — the Celtics will need the version of Hayward they signed in July 2017 to arrive. This performance was, in several ways, another step closer to that player returning.
With all that being said, Toronto still had their chances in this one. Kyle Lowry was dreadful, going 3-for-12 and committing four turnovers while finishing with 14 points and seven assists. OG Anunoby, meanwhile, left in the second quarter with a sprained wrist, though the Raptors didn’t seem overly concerned about the injury afterward. Danny Green was hit with a pair of questionable calls in a 35-second span to foul out with 3:43 to go in regulation, and his absence was a clear issue for the Raptors late in regulation and in overtime.
The same thing happened when a back issue forced Green out of Wednesday’s loss to the Detroit Pistons, another agonizingly close loss.

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