The Celtics can surpass both those marks when they host Philadelphia tomorrow night, though records seem to be low on the list of priorities.
"It's all good and well," captain Paul Pierce said. "The key is for us to play better and we're going to continue to say that, regardless of whether we're winning or losing. We feel like we still have a great upside. We're looking for the perfect game."
Indeed, the Celtics have been able to win despite their flaws - and there have been close calls along the way. Since early losses to Indiana and Denver, the Celtics have twice won in overtime and had other games go to the wire. Most of the time, though, they have set the tone with defense, dominating their opponents for long stretches and winning going away.
That was the formula for knocking off the Knicks in a game that turned the stats sheet upside down.
Rajon Rondo (26 points) had a Wilt-esque shooting night (12 for 14 from the field, 2 for 5 from the line). Eddie House grabbed six rebounds, tied for second on the Celtics and more than all but one Knick. Brian Scalabrine fouled out in 14 minutes of playing time. The Celtics had season highs for field goal percentage (.658), first-half points (66), and first-quarter points (40), and they tied their field goal mark of 50, set Friday in a 126-108 win over Chicago.
In the opening quarter, the Celtics were shooting 81.8 percent from the field when the Knicks allowed Rondo an opener jumper (he missed) just before the buzzer. Only one Knick (David Lee) grabbed a first-quarter rebound. And that set the stage for a rout, Leon Powe's dunk stretching the Celtic lead to 46-23 1:42 into the second quarter.
But the Knicks' offensive explosiveness took its toll on the Celtic reserves, who blew most of that advantage.
Chris Duhon's 3-pointer at the buzzer capped a 37-22 Knick run in the second quarter, cutting their deficit to 66-58 at halftime. That was the Knicks' seventh 3-point possession (plus a 4-point possession) of the quarter.