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Jayson Tatum's 40-point night powers Celtics to road beatdown of Knicks

Zack Cox, Boston Herald on

Published in Basketball

The New York Knicks entered Saturday night’s showdown at Madison Square Garden just 1 1/2 games behind the Boston Celtics in the Eastern Conference standings. They were, it seemed, a different team than the one that lost to Boston by 23 points on opening night.

Evidently not.

Despite playing without two starters, the Celtics dealt their Atlantic Division rivals an even more emphatic beatdown, cruising to a 131-104 victory on the Knicks’ famed home floor.

Headlining the blowout win was one of Jayson Tatum’s finest performances of the season: 40 points on 13-of-26 shooting (7 of 14 from 3-point range), plus six assists and four rebounds. Nineteen of Tatum’s points came in the third quarter, and he moved past Jo Jo White and Dave Cowens and into ninth place on the Celtics’ all-time scoring list.

Payton Pritchard hit six of his eight 3s off the bench to finish with 25 pounds. Derrick White scored 17 and helped snuff out a third-quarter Knicks rally, and Luke Kornet, thrust into the starting lineup minutes before tipoff, turned in a 14-point, 12-rebound double-double with three blocks and one steal.

As a team, Boston outscored New York by 30 points on 3-point shots (19 makes to nine), and the Knicks’ lone reliable scorer was All-Star point guard Jalen Brunson, who finished with 36 points on 18 field-goal attempts.

Here are five takeaways from the win as Boston heads into its final two games before the All-Star break (at Miami on Monday, home vs. San Antonio on Wednesday):

Late lineup change

The Celtics expected to be without starting guard Jrue Holiday and newly signed reserve wing Torrey Craig against the Knicks. Holiday was ruled out for the second straight game due to a nagging shoulder injury, and Craig’s Boston debut was delayed as he continued to recover from an ankle sprain that’s sidelined him since Dec. 30.

Boston then learned after pregame warmups that it also would be without starting center Kristaps Porzingis, who was a late scratch with what the team called a non-COVID illness. It was the second time in three weeks that a starting Celtics big had been downgraded minutes before tipoff (Al Horford was the first, in a Jan. 18 loss to Atlanta).

Horford and Kornet started in place of Holiday and Porzingis.

Kornet stays ready

In that aforementioned Hawks game, Kornet stepped into the starting lineup and delivered one of his best outings of the season (17 points, seven rebounds, four steals, two blocks). The 7-footer was similarly impactful Saturday night. He blocked two shots in the opening five minutes and grabbed eight rebounds in the first half alone, including three offensive boards.

Even with Porzingis unavailable, Celtics coach Joe Mazzulla utilized double-big lineups for nearly the entire game, with Neemias Queta and Xavier Tillman also making appearances behind Kornet and Horford. In the first half, Kornet, Queta and Horford combined for four blocks and seven offensive rebounds and helped hold New York to 8-of-27 shooting inside the paint.

 

Kornet picked up his fourth foul early in the third quarter, however, and had to watch from the bench as New York ripped off a 12-2 run to cut a 13-point Celtics lead down to three. But the Knicks never closed the gap, and the Horford/Queta pairing eventually stabilized. By the time Kornet returned to the floor with 2:29 remaining in the third, Boston was back up by 17.

Queta finished with 11 points and eight rebounds in 26 minutes.

White stems the tide

Tatum’s 19 points were the story of the third quarter, but White’s 14 were just as important, if not more so.

The Celtics were trying to hold off the Knicks’ strongest surge of the night when White elevated for a 3 at the end of the shot clock and drew a foul on Miles McBride. After making all three free throws, White scored a backdoor layup on the ensuing possession, teamed up with Queta to block Towns under the basket and then hit a 3 less than a minute later. That flurry erased all of New York’s momentum and sparked a 19-3 Celtics run.

White also assisted on Tatum’s last two field goals of the quarter, which ended with Boston holding a 96-76 lead.

Pritchard can’t miss

After helping power an ill-fated fourth-quarter comeback against Dallas on Thursday, Pritchard was sensational in the second quarter at MSG. The Sixth Man of the Year favorite scored 14 points in the frame on 5-of-7 shooting — three 3-pointers, a jumper in the lane and a heads-up layup after salvaging what initially looked like a Brown turnover.

Pritchard added another 11 points in the fourth as the Celtics’ stretched their lead to 30. Boston was able to empty its bench with 4:31 to play.

Bounce-back Boston

The Celtics now are 15-1 in games after losses this season. They’re also 21-6 away from TD Garden, the best road record of any NBA team.

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©2025 The Boston Herald. Visit at bostonherald.com. Distributed by Tribune Content Agency, LLC.

 

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