Boston hits Milwaukee with a first-quarter avalanche and never lets the game back into reach.
| Team | Q1 | Q2 | Q3 | Q4 | Final |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| BOS | 43 | 32 | 30 | 28 | 133 |
| MIL | 26 | 29 | 21 | 25 | 101 |
Boston never gives Milwaukee a chance to breathe
The Celtics walk into Milwaukee and turn the opener into a sprint they control from the first few minutes. Boston scores 43 in the first quarter, then keeps stacking possessions and pressure until the game is functionally over before halftime. The Bucks never lead, never string together a real counterpunch, and never get closer than the scoreboard allows once the Celtics start landing clean looks and rim runs. By the time the final horn sounds, Boston has authored a 133-101 win that feels less like a road victory and more like a full-on statement.
What jumps out first is the pace of Boston’s start. The Celtics open on an 11-0 surge that becomes an 11-10 run and flips a 6-14 deficit into a 24-6 advantage. The key play in that stretch is Neemias Queta cutting to the rim for a dunk off a Jayson Tatum assist, and it says everything about the night: Boston is getting paint touches, easy finishes, and secondary creation without having to force anything. Milwaukee is suddenly on its heels, and the Celtics keep layering on the pressure. Jayson Tatum does a little of everything, Jaylen Brown gets downhill, and Derrick White and AJ Green both keep the floor spaced with timely threes. Boston’s 43-point first quarter effectively removes any suspense.
The second quarter doesn’t slow the Celtics down so much as it confirms the gap. Boston reaches 75 by halftime, and the lead keeps stretching as the Bucks try different looks without finding a durable answer. Tatum stays in orchestrator mode, finishing with 23 points, 11 rebounds, and 9 assists, and his fingerprints are all over Boston’s best possessions. He finds Queta again on a cutting dunk during a third-quarter 10-0 burst, with Queta finishing that run at 19 points and 10 rebounds. That sequence matters because it comes after Milwaukee had at least tried to settle the game down; instead, Boston rips off another decisive stretch, pushing the margin to 29 and putting the Bucks in pure chase mode.
Milwaukee’s offense has some moments, but not nearly enough to dent the structure Boston has built. Pete Nance does his part with a 14-point, 10-rebound double-double, and the late fourth quarter gives the home crowd a few isolated highlights — a P. Nance three, a C. Bassey putback, and a J. Walsh alley-oop dunk off another B. Scheierman assist. But those plays land in a game that’s already well out of reach. The most telling possessions come defensively: A. Jackson Jr. grabs a steal and immediately converts it into a driving dunk, then the Bucks tack on more pressure with late steals from T. Antetokounmpo and R. Harper Jr. Those flashes show hustle, but they arrive after Boston has already buried the result.
Boston’s supporting cast made the margin feel even harsher. Brown’s 26 points in 30 minutes came with the kind of downhill force Milwaukee couldn’t consistently contain. White drilled five threes on his way to 17 points and five assists, while AJ Green added 15 points and five more triples, punishing any slack in the Bucks’ rotations. Queta’s 19 points, 10 boards, and four blocks gave the Celtics a real edge around the rim, and the box score reflects a team that won the paint, the perimeter, and the possession game. This is the kind of road performance that travels in April: efficient, physical, and unsentimental.
For Milwaukee, this one is about recovery, not reflection. There was no lead change, no comeback window, and no stretch where the Bucks looked close to taking control. For Boston, it’s a clean tune-up that strengthens momentum and reinforces what matters entering the stretch run: when the Celtics move the ball, protect the rim, and hit threes in rhythm, they can put a game away before it ever becomes a contest.
Turning Point
Boston’s opening 11-0 surge, capped by Neemias Queta’s cutting dunk off a Jayson Tatum assist, immediately flipped the game from a Bucks lead to a Celtics avalanche.
Key Performers
Set the tone as Boston’s most explosive scorer, repeatedly getting to the rim and keeping the pressure on Milwaukee.
Stuffed the box score and powered Boston’s offensive flow, including multiple assists that turned into easy dunks.
Was a force inside on both ends, finishing cuts, cleaning the glass, and protecting the rim.
Knocked down five threes and kept Boston’s offense spaced and steady.
Added five triples and gave Boston another reliable perimeter weapon.
Posted a double-double for Milwaukee and provided some late interior activity in a tough loss.
Box Score Leaders
| Player | PTS | REB | AST | 3PM | Notable |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Jaylen Brown | 26 | 3 | 4 | 2 | |
| Jayson Tatum | 23 | 11 | 9 | 4 | DOUBLE-DOUBLE |
| Neemias Queta | 19 | 10 | 2 | 0 | 4 BLK |
| Derrick White | 17 | 3 | 5 | 5 |
How Our Predictions Held Up
Our model landed at 40-for-77 for the night, a 51.9% hit rate, so it was a mixed bag overall. The strongest calls came on Myles Turner unders, but the misses — including Turner blocks and a few Kyle Kuzma props — show there was still volatility in the card. The game itself was more lopsided than a lot of prop outcomes, which is a good reminder that team context and blowout flow can muddy individual projections.