The NBA playoffs continue Sunday with the other four first-round series tipping off. The No. 1 and No. 8 seeds will face each other, in addition to the No. 2 versus No. 7 seeds in each conference.
Check out Yahoo Sports’ predictions for each first-round series, in addition to Kevin O’Connor’s ranking of the top 40 players in the NBA postseason.
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Here are the results and key takeaways from Sunday’s games:
With 8:58 left in the fourth quarter on Sunday, the Miami Heat remained within striking distance with a 92-85 deficit against the top-seeded Cleveland Cavaliers.
Then Ty Jerome happened. The Cavs guard named on Sunday as a finalist for the Sixth Man of the Year award hit a 3-pointer to extend Cleveland’s lead to 10 and spark a Cavaliers surge to a 121-100 Game 1 win.
Jerome led the charge down the stretch while scoring 16 of his 28 points in the fourth quarter.
Jerome joined Donovan Mitchell (30 points) and Darius Garland (27 points) in standout efforts from the Cavaliers backcourt on a day in which Cleveland committed just seven turnovers.
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A Cavaliers offense that led the league in offensive rating during the regular season showed no signs of rust following a week-long layoff from the conclusion of the regular season. The Cavs look very much like contenders in the East.
This is a competitive Heat team
The 8th-seeded Grizzlies showed zero signs of life while on the wrong end of a historic beatdown by the Thunder earlier Sunday. This Heat team is not the East’s version of those Grizzlies, despite earning the No. 8 seed as the first-ever No. 10 seed to advance out of the play-in.
Eric Spoelstra is a champion coach, and Tyler Herro and Bam Adebayo are All-Stars and high-level competitors. The Heat are outmatched, but they didn’t wilt after digging a 55-40 deficit in the second quarter. They remained competitive and within single digits as late as the midpoint of the fourth quarter. Don’t expect the Heat to roll over because Sunday’s game got out of hand late.
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-Jason Owens
For a stretch in the second quarter on Sunday, Orlando’s lockdown defense gave Magic fans hope that they could compete with the reigning champs.
But the Boston Celtics opened things up in the third quarter and cruised to a 103-86 win to take a 1-0 lead over Orlando in their first-round playoff series.
The Celtics rode a 30-18 third-quarter surge to turn a 49-48 halftime deficit into a 17-point runaway win. But the Celtics don’t leave Sunday’s win without concern.
Jayson Tatum plays after late injury scare
With 8:28 remaining, Jayson Tatum took a hard fall after a foul by Kentavious Caldwell-Pope on a layup attempt that was upgraded to a flagrant 1.
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Caldwell-Pope hit Tatum’s right elbow as Tatum attempted to dunk, and Tatum fell hard on his right wrist.
Tatum remained sitting on the floor for several moments before walking to the Celtics bench. He received medical attention on the bench as officials reviewed the foul. He remained in the game and shot free throws after the review determined that Caldwell-Pope’s foul was flagrant.
An 81% free throw shooter, Tatum missed them both. But he continued to play down the stretch and hit his first 3-pointer of the game moments later, easing concern that he was dealing with any sort of impactful injury.
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Tatum remained in the game until the Celtics pulled their starters in the final two minutes. He finished with 17 points and 14 rebounds and was seen flexing his wrist on the bench late in the game.
Head coach Joe Mazzulla told reporters postgame that Tatum “is doing good.”
Tatum told reporters that X-rays came back negative.
Can Orlando’s defense impact this series?
Orlando’s offense is inconsistent and unlikely to keep pace with Boston’s firepower this series. If the Magic hope to steal a game or put pressure on the Celtics, they’ll need to lean on a unit that posted the NBA’s second-best defensive rating during the regular season.
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That defense showed up late in the second quarter as Orlando closed the half on a 25-12 run to take a one-point lead into the break. But Boston’s offense led by Derrick White (30 points) and its own top-five defense ultimately prevailed to put the game out of reach long before the final buzzer.
— Jason Owens
There are blowouts and then there’s what the No. 1 seed Thunder did to the No. 8 Grizzlies in their playoff opener Sunday. What was presumably a first-round NBA playoff game looked like a college basketball preseason matchup in which a national championship contender played a mid-major directional program. Maybe even a junior college.
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Reporters will have to check to see if Memphis’ players are OK after what transpired on the Paycom Center court. What was perpetrated will need to be cleaned up before these two teams play Game 2 on Tuesday.
Relentless onslaught from the start
Memphis never had a chance. The Thunder looked every bit the championship contender and well-rested with a week off after the regular season ended last Sunday. After the Grizzlies took a brief 9-8 lead five minutes into the first quarter, Oklahoma City unleashed hell, finishing the opening 12 minutes with a 32-20 lead and outscoring the Grizzlies 31-10 in the second quarter.
If the Grizzlies had any aspirations to be more competitive in the second half, the Thunder quickly smashed that notion with a 10-0 run that led to an eventual 44-point third quarter. If this was a boxing match, the corner would have thrown in the towel. A fighting referee probably wouldn’t have let the Grizzlies come out to play the second half. It was the fifth-biggest margin of victory in NBA postseason history.
Shai Gilgeous-Alexander only played 23 minutes and scored 15 points, nearly getting his Easter Sunday off.
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When asked postgame about Memphis’ performance, Ja Morant responded: “We will never play that bad again.”
In fairness, that would be pretty tough to do.
Thunder frontcourt dominates in total mismatch
Oklahoma City had a huge advantage on the frontline, led by 20 points from Jalen Williams and 19 from Chet Holmgren. On the other side, Jaren Jackson Jr. and Zach Edey each scored only four points.
The Thunder had eight blocks as a team, wiping out any attempts by the Grizzlies to take the ball to the basket. Settling for outside shots didn’t work either, with Memphis shooting 6-of-34 on 3-pointers and 34% overall.
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Yes, this was only one game in a best-of-seven series. But how do the Grizzlies recover to mount any sort of challenge? Game 2 tips off Tuesday at 7:30 p.m. ET.
— Ian Casselberry