“I was like, ‘Aw, I don’t think I’m going to do it, I’m going to get somebody to take them to the airport,’ ’’ he said.
But he was up at that early hour, and being a creature of habit it threw a huge monkey wrench in his routine. When game day came, he wasn’t the only sluggish Celtic.
Both shootaround and practice were sloppy, an unwanted side effect of the holidays.
And once last night’s game began, things didn’t get a whole lot better. But the Celtics hung in and eventually beat the Sixers, 84-80, at the Garden, claiming their 14th straight victory.
“That’s one thing coaches have always said, going into the holiday, is keep your focus,’’ Allen said. “You’ve got a lot of family in town coming and going, you’re worried about holiday shopping, and rightfully so. You see teams losing games right around this time of year that they shouldn’t because their focus isn’t where it needs to be.’’
The Celtics didn’t have to look any farther than the night before when the Lakers — despite being warned by Kobe Bryant — got a bag of coal shoved down their throats by the Bucks. The Sixers nearly snapped the Celtics’ win streak in its early stages, and coach Doc Rivers warned his team that they easily could spoil their holiday.
For three quarters, the Celtics’ vital signs were low. They took all of seven free throws through three quarters, and were shooting just 42.2 percent. Paul Pierce missed eight of his first 10 shots. Glen Davis and Marquis Daniels were a combined 3 of 13. The rims seemed to shrink a couple inches every time they took a shot.
Rivers fired off all the things that were going wrong.
No transition baskets.
No ball movement offensively.
Pierce brought the ball up entirely too much.
The team wasn’t getting into sets until the shot clock had run down to eight seconds.
“It’s wasn’t about Philly,’’ Rivers said. “It’s the season. The holiday season, this is the stretch. It’s just a tough mental focus stretch. When you go home from practice, they [family] don’t want to hear about practice. The family wants to hear about, ‘Let’s go shopping,’ and all that other stuff. And it’s tough. This is a tough little stretch for every team.’’
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