Rajon Rondo had 16 points and 13 assists as the Boston Celtics knocked back the Philadelphia 76ers 99-82 at the TD Garden on Tuesday. Boston's starting five, in particular, had little trouble with the Sixers. Paul Pierce scored 18 points on 6-11 shooting, Kevin Garnett had 14 on 6-10 and Ray Allen had 13 on 5-7. The vaunted Philly defense couldn't slow a team that's had trouble getting points on the board lately.
76ers Vs. Celtics: Rajon Rondo Wins Point Guard Battle, Leads Boston To Smooth Victory
Evan Turner had a solid game off the bench for the Sixers, with 22 points on 9-14 shooting and five assists. But Philadelphia was in too deep a hole, thanks to lackluster performances from Jrue Holiday (11 points, 4-12 shooting) and Spencer Hawes (six points, 3-14 shooting). That Turner performed in the absence of Lou Williams, who is sidelined until the end of the regular season, is a positive, though.
In other action:
Clippers 82, Grizzlies 81: Zach Randolph and Blake Griffin played to a stalemate; Mo Williams took advantage of a late Z-Bo turnover to score six straight points and give L.A. the edge. Cheers to the Clippers for refusing to give up. There were post-game murmurs on the internet that perhaps Memphis would rather play San Antonio than L.A. in the first round. HMMM.
Kings 104, Rockets 101: Houston choked up an opportunity to put some pressure on New Orleans and Memphis by losing to the bad Kings at home. Marcus Thornton is a stone cold assassin; he hit a icy jumper with 30 seconds to go to freeze the game. Sacramento hasn't finished a season this strong since 2006.
Bulls 97, Suns 94: Derrick Rose (6-15 shooting) and Steve Nash (six points, 16 assists) didn't exactly set the floor on the fire. Vince Carter tried to, scoring 23 points and hitting three three-pointers. (A real Jason Richardson performance.) Rose was great late, though, hitting two buckets and a free throw in the final two minutes to clinch the victory.
Knicks 131, Raptors 118: More of the same for New York -- killer offense, absent defense. The Knicks scored 78 (!) in the first half to make life difficult for Toronto; Carmelo Anthony and Amar'e Stoudemire had 23 each, and Toney Douglas poured in 28. Ed Davis shredded Amar'e for 22 points, and DeMar DeRozan threw in 36. Offense!
Warriors 108, Blazers 87: Brandon Roy and Rudy Fernandez shot a combined 3-20 from the field off the bench. But Portland's starters were crummy on defense; Monta Ellis had 30 on 19 shots, Stephen Curry had 28 on 21 shots and David Lee thoroughly outplayed LaMarcus Aldridge with 29 points and 20 rebounds to LMA's 17 and 12.
Cavaliers 99, Bobcats 89: It's hard to discern whether Charlotte has given up or simply doesn't have the horses to compete. Maybe it's both? Boris Diaw's performance (three points in 38 minutes) was embarrassing.
Wizards 107, Pistons 105: John Wall attacked hard, and was rewarded with 16 free throws on his way to 26 points and 12 assists. Greg Monroe was a monster with 22 points, 14 rebounds, four assists and four steals. Two kids on the up-and-up.
Nets 107, Wolves 105: Brook Lopez and Deron Williams gave fans and opponents a glimpse of what's in store next season with great personal performances against an admittedly awful opponent. Lopez had 30 and 12; Williams had an incredible 21 assists to go with 18 points.











