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Home Blog Page 8610

Arizona State, Bobby Hurley agree on contract through 2025-26


Arizona State and head coach Bobby Hurley have agreed to a contract extension through the 2025-26 season.

The deal still requires the approval of the Arizona Board of Regents, which is scheduled to meet in executive session on Wednesday morning.

The school did not announce financial terms.

“Coach Hurley has made our program relevant nationally with many significant wins and an exciting style, along with a firm commitment to the academic success of our student-athletes,” athletic director Ray Anderson said in a news release. “He has made it clear to us that he wants to be here and we have done likewise with him. We share a strong confidence in the present and future state of Sun Devil Men’s Basketball.”

Under Hurley, the Sun Devils have won 20-plus games in four of the past six seasons, and they’ve made three NCAA Tournament appearances in Hurley’s eight seasons in Tempe. Hurley, 51, has a 141-113 record with the Sun Devils, including 23-13 (11-9 Pac-12) this season.

The Sun Devils defeated Nevada 98-73 last week in the First Four of the NCAA Tournament, then dropped their first-round game, 72-70, to TCU, the sixth seed in the West Region.

Hurley was 42-20 in two seasons at Buffalo before his appointment at Arizona State.

–Field Level Media

No. 15 Princeton unbowed by success, intends to scrap with No. 6 Creighton


For the third straight year, a No. 15 reached the Sweet 16. For the second straight season, a private school from New Jersey is the noisemaker in the NCAA Tournament.

Princeton coach Mitch Henderson said the Tigers received celebrity treatment since returning home from consecutive bracket-busting upsets of South No. 2 seed Arizona and No. 7 Missouri. Henderson and Princeton wade deeper into uncharted territory in a South Region semifinal game against sixth-seeded Creighton on Friday in Louisville.

“I was on a show today with Coach K (Mike Krzyzewski), and he asked me the same thing,” Henderson said. “I was like, ‘Well, you tell me. What do we do here?'”

It’s not a mystery for the Ivy League champions. Henderson intends for everyone to remember what got them to this point, to stay themselves while enjoying the moment.

The Tigers (23-8) haven’t played like a No. 15 seed in their two tournament wins. They never trailed after the opening minutes against Missouri, made twice as many 3-pointers (12 to six) as their opponent and dominated the boards 44-30, all while handling the Tigers’ pressure defense.

Princeton’s Ryan Langborg scored a game-high 22 points, adding six rebounds and four assists. Freshman Caden Pierce grabbed a career-high 16 rebounds — seven on the offensive glass — to go with nine points, and Tosan Evbuomwan finished with nine points, nine rebounds and five assists.

“We’re playing a brand of basketball that’s conducive to winning at the highest levels, and that’s rebounding,” Henderson said. “You’ve gotta be physical and you’ve got to go up there and get it, and you’ve got to play tough-nosed defense.”

But the rebound margin might not be so lopsided against Creighton (23-12), and Henderson knows it. Creighton hits the boards hard, with guard Baylor Scheierman an answer for Pierce with his team-leading 8.2 rebounds per game. Ryan Kalkbrenner, the Bluejays’ 7-foot-1 leading scorer (15.7 points per game), adds 6.2 rebounds per contest.

Creighton coach Greg McDermott praised Princeton for having a “very efficient” offense.

“This isn’t a true Princeton offense, but a lot of their characteristics are the same,” McDermott said Tuesday, referencing the traditional backdoor cut sets of a bygone era. “Their spacing’s great, their cutting’s elite, their ball security’s really good and they spread you out, space you out with their ability to shoot the basketball.”

While Princeton made its first Sweet 16 in program history, the Bluejays secured their second Sweet 16 appearance in three years by shooting down third-seeded Baylor in the second round, 85-76.

Ryan Nembhard scored a career-high 30 points for Creighton, which shot 45.8 percent from 3-point range (11 of 24) and 100 percent at the foul line (22 of 22).

Not unlike Princeton, Creighton has been on a mission to show it belongs with the best. The Bluejays were ranked as high as No. 7 in the country this season and may have been underseeded on the six line.

“We definitely don’t care who we’re going against,” Nembhard said after the win over Baylor. “We respect everybody. We give everybody the respect they’re due, but at the end of the day, we think we’re just as good as anybody in the country. We come into every game thinking that mentality.”

Princeton is 11th in the country in rebound margin at plus-6.6. Creighton ranks a respectable 62nd with a plus-3.7 margin.

Creighton and Princeton have met just once before, and the Bluejays won in Omaha, Neb., on Dec. 29, 1961.

The Tigers hope to emulate the success of last year’s No. 15 seed from New Jersey. St. Peter’s made it to the Elite Eight, beating Kentucky and Purdue in the process, before bowing out in the regional final to North Carolina.

–Field Level Media

Winding paths bring Texas, Xavier to redemption intersection in K.C.


Two wins shy of the Final Four, redemption stories intersect in Kansas City when the Texas Longhorns and Xavier Musketeers collide in the Sweet 16 on Friday.

The second-seeded Longhorns (28-8) are making their return to the regional semifinals for the first time since 2008, a long and winding pilgrimage that included firing head coach Chris Beard following his arrest on suspicion of domestic violence in December.

Xavier (27-9), the No. 3 seed in the Midwest Region, is returning to prominence under the direction of coach Sean Miller. Fired by Arizona in 2021, Miller returned to the Musketeers, the school he coached from 2004-09, one year and a few days ago.

Almost instantly, Miller restored the program’s contender status with a balanced attack that puts up 81.2 points per game and features five players averaging at least 10 points per game.

“We’re thrilled to be in the Sweet 16,” Miller said. “It’s a hard journey to get here, and I’m really thrilled for these guys, each of them, because it’s their first opportunity, and they’ll remember it forever.”

Texas interim coach Rodney Terry continues a fight that could help propel him into the permanent post, from Beard’s top assistant to successor. He led the Longhorns to the Big 12 conference tournament — in Kansas City — and now looks to continue the squad’s NCAA Tournament run. While he claims he is not thinking about titles or salaries in the moment, it’s clear his players are flexing on his behalf.

“I think he embodies what we are and what we try to be every day — tough,” Texas forward Timmy Allen said. “Someone who has been there before, never shakes at adversity, somebody who wakes up and tries to attack the day to be great. When I’ve got somebody like that in my corner, I’ll do anything for them.”

Miller bolted for Arizona in 2009 and went to the Elite Eight three times. However, he came under fire during an FBI investigation into a pay-for-play scheme that caused the program to self-impose a one year postseason ban. He has Xavier back in the Sweet 16 for the first time since 2017.

“I didn’t need a reminder,” Miller said of his ability to coach. “You know, I never lost belief. I really didn’t. I’m grateful for the opportunity, though.

“I have an amazing group to work with. There’s a lot of coaches that could win with this team, and I recognize that, but my hope is that we have more in us, that we’re able to have a great week and make what we already feel good about even better.”

Souley Boum said Xavier didn’t need a reminder Miller could coach, either.

“We’ve been talking about this all summer, all fall,” Boum said.

Boum had 14 points, all in the second half, for the Musketeers in their 84-73 win over Pitt in the second round. Xavier made eight 3-pointers, five by Adam Kunkel.

Texas has been getting the job done on defense in the tournament, sticking shooters around the 3-point arc and challenging with scorers inside and out on the offensive end.

New Mexico State transfer Sir’Jabari Rice had seven 3-pointers in the first-round win against Colgate. Forward Dylan Disu, the most outstanding player in the Big 12 conference tournament, continued his exceptional play with 28 points and 10 boards to lead Texas past Penn State, 71-66, in the second round.

Rice said the Final Four looms as a greater goal, but the Longhorns are taking the business of winning to a new level.

“It sounds representative, but it’s just preparation,” Rice said. “Every single time we are in practice, we’re locked in. Walkthroughs, we’re locked in. We know a time and place when to play and when not to. Obviously every team has a sense of urgency and seriousness because it’s do or die. With us, since the beginning of the season, we had a goal and we set out to complete that goal.

“When we get down and play teams like that that go on runs, I think it’s just a testament to who we are as, like, a culture and how together we are. Us sticking together is just, like I said, is a testimony to who we are and just preparation every day.”

–Field Level Media

Wolves’ Karl-Anthony Towns to return vs. Hawks


The Minnesota Timberwolves are expecting a boost to their playoff hopes on Wednesday as standouts Karl-Anthony Towns and Anthony Edwards might return to the lineup to face the visiting Atlanta Hawks.

Towns said he will be back for the game, his first since Nov. 28. He re-injured his right calf during rehab work in January.

Edwards, who averages 24.7 points, 5.9 rebounds and 4.4 assists, hurt his right ankle against the Chicago Bulls on Friday and had to be helped off the court. He missed the past two games.

Towns is averaging 20.8 points, 8.2 rebounds and 5.3 assists in 21 games this season.

Minnesota coach Chris Finch didn’t confirm he’d have both players on Wednesday, but Towns told multiple outlets he’s playing.

“They’re both in evaluation periods and they’re definitely on separate timelines,” he told WCCO-AM in Minneapolis. “Whether those timelines end up coming together at the same point, I’m not sure. They’re very different.

“Ant always wants to play. He never thinks he’s hurt, so hopefully it is feeling better, which he says it is. But in terms of pain tolerance, range of movement, stability, all those things, I think we’re trying to figure out where that really is with him.”

The team listed both players as questionable on the injury report filed Tuesday. Towns previously had been listed as out.

The Timberwolves won the first meeting of the season against Atlanta 136-115 on March 13. Atlanta’s Trae Young had 41 points, his third game with 40-plus points in this campaign. Edwards put up 32 points for Minnesota.

The Timberwolves dropped two of three on their just-completed road trip, closing it with a 140-134 win over the New York Knicks on Monday. After the home game against Atlanta, Minnesota heads back on the road to face the Golden State Warriors, Sacramento Kings and Phoenix Suns.

Minnesota (36-37) is tied for ninth place in the Western Conference but is only one game behind sixth-place Golden State, which occupies the final guaranteed playoff spot.

The Hawks (36-36) are coming off a 129-107 home win over the last-place Detroit Pistons on Tuesday.

All five starters scored in double figures as Atlanta scored 100-plus points for the 47th straight game, the second-longest streak in franchise history (behind a 53-game run in 1969-70) and the longest active streak in the NBA.

Atlanta is No. 8 in the East, three games behind No. 6 Brooklyn and one game ahead of No. 9 Toronto with 10 games left in the season.

“We knew we had to get the job done from the start (against Detroit),” said Atlanta’s Clint Capela, who logged 12 points and 16 rebounds. “They’re all big. We have to come up with urgency and energy, play good on defense and never get enough. There are 10 games left, and they’re going to go by quick.”

The Hawks are without reserve Jalen Johnson, who has missed three games with a left hamstring and groin sprain, and they may be missing Dejounte Murray, who sat out Tuesday due to a non-COVID illness. Bogdan Bogdanovic started in Murray’s spot and scored 18 points, hitting a team-high four 3-pointers.

Young, who put up just nine points Sunday in Atlanta’s loss to the San Antonio Spurs, scored 30 points and added 12 assists at Detroit for his 35th double-double. It was his 24th game with 30-plus points.

–Field Level Media

Bucks look to avenge November loss to Spurs


Two teams at opposite ends of the standings will meet Wednesday when the Milwaukee Bucks face the visiting San Antonio Spurs.

Milwaukee (51-20) has won 22 of its past 25 games and owns the NBA’s best record, while San Antonio (19-53) is battling with the Detroit Pistons and the Houston Rockets for the league’s worst record.

The Bucks are looking to split the season series after San Antonio won 111-93 at home on Nov. 11. Playing without injured stars Giannis Antetokounmpo, Jrue Holiday and Khris Middleton, the Bucks were held to 32.7 percent shooting in the loss. Keldon Johnson scored 29 points to lead the Spurs, while Jevon Carter paced Milwaukee with 21 points.

Milwaukee is in a much healthier place for the rematch. The Big Three are back, and Joe Ingles, who also was out for the November meeting, has become as a key cog in the Bucks’ charge toward the Eastern Conference’s top seed.

Middleton and Ingles combined for 26 points, 13 rebounds and 10 assists in Milwaukee’s 118-111 victory over the visiting Toronto Raptors on Sunday.

“It’s great to have two 6-8 wings — it makes a difference,” Bucks coach Mike Budenholzer said. “They’re long and can cover a lot of ground to some degree without moving. They’re both smart and have a toughness to them. Those guys are getting some minutes together, and it’s been great to watch.”

Over his past three games, Middleton is averaging 22.3 points, seven assists and four rebounds while shooting 51.2 percent overall and 47.6 percent from 3-point range.

Milwaukee also received another stellar effort from center Brook Lopez, who scored a team-high 26 points against the Raptors. Since the All-Star break, the veteran is averaging 20.8 points, 7.6 rebounds and 2.8 blocks while shooting 56.9 percent.

“He’s kind of the anchor of this team,” Holiday said. “He’s the guy that defends everybody. I know that if I get beat, I’m leaving him to Brook. And then offensively, man, it’s just like whenever we need him, he’ll always be there.”

Lopez has a favorable matchup against the short-handed Spurs, who have dropped six of their past nine games. San Antonio began a four-game road trip with a 119-84 loss to the New Orleans Pelicans on Tuesday.

The Spurs played without Johnson (neck), along with Charles Bassey, Khem Birch, Jeremy Sochan and Devin Vassell, who all sat out due to knee injuries. San Antonio was also minus center Zach Collins, who received a rest day.

“I knew it was going to be very difficult,” Spurs coach Gregg Popovich said. “We started off pretty well, but as the game went along, (New Orleans) did a great job. We didn’t have our best night. They played well. End of story.”

One bright spot was the play of forward Sandro Mamukelashvili, who scored a team-high 20 points on 7-of-14 shooting.

Guard Devonte’ Graham returned after missing two games due to left quad tendon soreness and scored 15 points in 24 minutes off the bench.

Acquired from the Pelicans on Feb. 9, Graham is averaging 17.6 points and 4.3 assists in seven games this month.

“He’s a professional,” Popovich said. “He knows his way around the court. He’s been a real joy to have.”

–Field Level Media

Nuggets aim to cap winning trip vs. Wizards


The Western Conference-leading Denver Nuggets aim to complete a five-game road swing with a winning record when they visit the slumping Washington Wizards on Wednesday.

Denver (48-24) alternated losses and wins through the first four games of the trip, most recently scoring a 108-102 victory over the Brooklyn Nets on Sunday.

The Nuggets saw a 20-point lead at the beginning of the fourth quarter reach 22 points, only for the advantage to be whittled down to six by the final buzzer, a result of scoring just 17 points in the period.

“Just told our players, ‘You’re up 22 points in the fourth quarter and you start messing around with the game and they cut a 22-point lead to seven and you’ve got to put all your starters back in to close the game, and that shouldn’t be the case,'” Denver coach Michael Malone said. “Now we’re 2-2 on this trip; we’ve got a chance to go 3-2. It’ll be a tough game down in D.C.”

Reigning two-time Most Valuable Player Nikola Jokic recorded his 28th triple-double of the season in the win, posting 22 points, 17 rebounds and 10 assists.

The Nuggets’ last meeting with Washington was not one of those 28 games, with a Jokic triple-double, but he did register his season high in scoring against the Wizards with 43 points on Dec. 14.

Jokic also grabbed 14 rebounds, dished eight assists and made a season-high five steals in the Nuggets’ 141-128 home win. Michael Porter Jr., who scored a game-high 28 points Sunday in Brooklyn, did not play the last time Denver faced Washington.

Washington (32-40) returns home for the Wednesday contest that will complete a back-to-back set. The Wizards ran out of steam in a 122-112 road loss to the Orlando Magic on Tuesday.

Kristaps Porzingis returned to the lineup after missing the Wizards’ previous outing Saturday against Sacramento because of an illness, and he scored a game-high 30 points. Washington was without Kyle Kuzma due to an ankle sprain, however, and the Wizards were outscored 35-24 in the fourth quarter after entering the period with a one-point lead.

“Just some of the detail stuff,” Washington coach Wes Unseld Jr. said of the difference down the stretch. “If there’s a 50-50 here. If there’s coverage confusion that leads to a 3. Our margin of error tonight was really thin. … Those little plays, they become magnified.”

Before Tuesday’s game, Unseld said Kuzma’s sprain was “pretty significant.” Kuzma’s potentially continued absence compounds a trying stretch for the Wizards.

The defeat against the Magic marked Washington’s third straight and sixth in the past seven games. It was the fifth time over that stretch in which the Wizards surrendered more than their season defensive scoring average of 113.6 points per game.

Washington is tied with the Indiana Pacers (32-40) for 11th place in the Eastern Conference, with both teams 2 1/2 games behind the 10th-place Chicago Bulls (34-37) in the chase for the final spot in the East’s play-in tournament.

“We’re playing the games we’re going to play and our best chance to win is by sticking together,” Wizards forward Corey Kispert said. “That’s simple math, and everybody around here knows that. As hard as it is sometimes, good teams come together when things get tough. … We’ve got to do everything we can to get out of this rut.”

–Field Level Media

NBA roundup: Paul George gets hurt in Clippers’ loss


Shai Gilgeous-Alexander scored 31 points against his former team and Jalen Williams added 20 as the Oklahoma City Thunder continued to solidify their playoff standing Tuesday with a 101-100 victory over the host Los Angeles Clippers.

Josh Giddey scored 13 points and Isaiah Joe added 12 as the Thunder won for the eighth time in their past 10 games.

Kawhi Leonard scored 21 points and Paul George added 18 against his former team before departing with a knee injury. George appeared to hyperextend his right knee after he was fouled by Luguentz Dort on a rebound attempt with 4:38 remaining. He did not return to the game.

Leonard had a chance to give the Clippers the victory on the last possession after a rebound of a Williams miss. However, after dribbling near the 3-point arc for 21 seconds, he was unable to get a shot off in time.

Celtics 132, Kings 109

Jayson Tatum scored 36 points, Jaylen Brown added 27 and Boston beat host Sacramento to finish 4-2 on a cross-country trek.

Derrick White added 20 points for the Celtics, and Marcus Smart scored 17. White completed a double-double with a team-high 11 assists, while Tatum was Boston’s leading rebounder with eight boards.

Domantas Sabonis tallied 16 points, 13 rebounds and 12 assists for the Kings, who lost their second straight. Sabonis’ triple-double was his 12th of the season. De’Aaron Fox led Sacramento with 18 points.

Cavaliers 115, Nets 109

Donovan Mitchell scored 31 points as Cleveland took control in the second quarter to beat Brooklyn in New York — the Cavaliers’ eighth win in 11 games.

Mitchell made 10 of 22 shots, including five of Cleveland’s 14 3-pointers. Former Net Caris LeVert added 18 points, while Darius Garland and Evan Mobley contributed 17 apiece for the Cavaliers, who shot 50.6 percent.

Day’Ron Sharpe scored 20 points to lead the Nets, who tied a season high with their fourth straight loss. Spencer Dinwiddie added 19 points and 11 assists, while Mikal Bridges contributed 18 points.

Hawks 129, Pistons 107

Trae Young bounced back from his second-worst scoring night of the season to score 30 points as Atlanta finished off a four-game season sweep of Detroit.

Young added 12 assists for his 35th double-double and 24th 30-point game of the season. Bogdan Bogdanovic started at guard in place of Dejounte Murray (illness) and scored 18 points. John Collins added 15 points and eight rebounds, and Clint Capela had 12 points and 16 rebounds.

Detroit’s Marvin Bagley III scored a season-high 31 points, including a career-high four 3-pointers. The Pistons also got 21 points from Killian Hayes and 17 from Jaden Ivey.

Magic 122, Wizards 112

Seven players scored at least 14 points, led by Gary Harris’ 22, and Orlando dealt a blow to visiting Washington’s play-in aspirations.

Paolo Banchero finished with 18 points for the Magic on 6-of-9 shooting from the floor and matched Carter’s team-high total of nine rebounds.

Kristaps Porzingis returned to the lineup after missing Washington’s Saturday loss to Sacramento due to an illness, and he scored a game-high 30 points. However, Kyle Kuzma was a late scratch because of an ankle sprain.

Pelicans 119, Spurs 84

Brandon Ingram scored 32 points to lead five players in double figures as host New Orleans routed short-handed San Antonio.

Jonas Valanciunas added 19 points and 15 rebounds and Trey Murphy III scored 17 points as the Pelicans completed a four-game sweep of the season series.

Sandro Mamukelashvili scored 20 points for the Spurs, who played without Keldon Johnson (neck), Devin Vassell (knee) and Zach Collins (rest). San Antonio lost for the third time in four games.

–Field Level Media

Clippers’ Paul George exits with apparent knee injury


Clippers guard Paul George was assisted off the floor and helped to the locker room after sustaining an apparent right knee injury during the fourth quarter of Los Angeles’ 101-100 loss to the visiting Oklahoma City Thunder on Tuesday.

George appeared to hyperextend his right knee after he was fouled by Luguentz Dort on a rebound attempt with 4:38 remaining. He did not return to the game.

After the contest, Clippers coach Tyronn Lue said the team was still checking on George’s status. George was seen on crutches postgame, according to The Athletic, and he exited the arena on a cart, according to ESPN.

Facing his former team, George put up 18 points, seven rebounds, five assists and three steals in 35 minutes.

For the season, he is averaging 23.8 points, 6.1 rebounds, 5.1 assists and 1.5 steals in 56 games.

George, 32, is an eight-time All-Star and four-time All-Defensive Team selection. He has career averages of 20.6 points, 6.4 rebounds, 3.7 assists and 1.7 steals.

The Clippers can’t afford to lose one of their stars for a significant period with just nine games left in the regular season. Los Angeles sits in fifth place in the Western Conference, just one game up on the Golden State Warriors and 1 1/2 games in front of both the Thunder and the Dallas Mavericks.

Only the top six teams automatically qualify for the postseason. The teams in seventh through 10th will compete for two playoff berths in the play-in tournament. Currently, the teams sitting in sixth through 12th place are all within 2 1/2 games of the Clippers.

–Field Level Media

Thunder sneak by Clippers after Paul George injury


Shai Gilgeous-Alexander scored 31 points against his former team and Jalen Williams added 20 as the Oklahoma City Thunder continued to solidify their playoff standing Tuesday with a 101-100 victory over the host Los Angeles Clippers.

Josh Giddey scored 13 points and Isaiah Joe added 12 as the Thunder won for the eighth time in their last 10 games.

Kawhi Leonard scored 21 points and Paul George added 18 against his former team before departing with a knee injury as the Clippers lost for the second time in their last seven games, while continuing to hold a top-six spot in the Western Conference.

George appeared to hyperextend his right knee after he was fouled by Luguentz Dort on a rebound attempt with 4:38 remaining. He did not return to the game.

Russell Westbrook scored 15 points and Ivica Zubac added 13 as the Clippers lost for the third time in three games against the Thunder this season. The teams complete their season series Thursday at Los Angeles.

Leonard had a chance to give the Clippers the victory on the last possession of the game after a rebound of a Williams miss. But after dribbling near the 3-point line for 21 seconds of the last possession, he was unable to get a shot off in time.

The game was tied 91-91 at the time of George’s injury, with the Clippers going up 93-91 on a jumper from Leonard with 4:22 remaining. The Thunder then went on a 6-0 run to take a 97-93 lead with 2:56 left after a layup from Gilgeous-Alexander.

The Clippers pulled within 99-98 with 1:23 remaining on a 3-pointer from Eric Gordon, but Gilgeous-Alexander followed with a shot from inside for a 101-98 lead with 1:05 left. Nicolas Batum got the Clippers within a point on a layup with just under a minute remaining.

In an eventful first half, the Clippers opened an 18-4 lead barely five minutes into the game before the Thunder rallied to take a 23-22 lead at the end of the first quarter.

With 4:24 remaining in the first half, Leonard was called for a technical foul for arguing a non-call. Los Angeles’ Terance Mann also protested and was ejected after receiving two quick technicals.

–Field Level Media

Celtics lean on All-Star duo to blast Kings


Jayson Tatum had 36 points, sidekick Jaylen Brown went for 27 and the Boston Celtics completed a successful late-season trip with a 132-109 victory over the host Sacramento Kings on Tuesday night.

Derrick White added 20 points for the Celtics, who bounced back from a loss at Utah to go 4-2 on their cross-country trek.

Domantas Sabonis had 16 points to go along with game highs of 13 rebounds and 12 assists for the Kings, who lost their second straight.

Boston trailed 54-51 before scoring the final nine points of the first half to take the lead for good. Al Horford and Brown had 3-pointers in the run, before Tatum sent the Celtics into the break up 60-54 with a three-point play on a layup.

The visitors then broke the game open with a 40-point third quarter, taking charge when Brown, Horford and Marcus Smart bombed in consecutive threes to open a 79-66 advantage in the third minute of the period.

Tatum shot just 2-for-7 on 3-pointers and 6-for-11 at the free-throw line, but managed his game-high total mostly on the strength of 12-for-18 shooting on 2-pointers. The 30-point game was his 39th of the season, matching Larry Bird’s franchise record for most 30-point games in a single season.

Boston outshot the hosts 53.3 percent to 48.1 percent and outscored them 54-51 from beyond the arc. White hit five 3-pointers and Brown added four to pace the Celtics in that department.

Smart (17 points) and Horford (11) assured that all five Celtics starters scored in double figures, helping Boston complete a two-game, season-series sweep.

White completed a double-double with a team-high 11 assists, while Tatum was Boston’s leading rebounder with eight boards.

Sabonis’ triple-double was his 12th of the season and came on a night when he also had a game-high six turnovers.

De’Aaron Fox paced Sacramento with 18 points, while Keegan Murray had 15, Davion Mitchell 13, Terence Davis 12 and Harrison Barnes 11.

–Field Level Media