Celtics overpower Cavs, Mavs edge closer after beating Thunder

Boston Celtics forward Jayson Tatum shoots for three points against Cleveland Cavaliers guard Darius Garland in the second quarter during Game 5 of the second round for the 2024 NBA playoffs at TD Garden Wednesday. (USA TODAY Sports)
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Updated 16 May 2024
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Celtics overpower Cavs, Mavs edge closer after beating Thunder

  • The Eastern Conference No.1 seeds will face either the Indiana Pacers or the New York Knicks for a place in the NBA Finals
  • Mavericks star Luka Doncic led from the front with a triple-double, finishing with 31 points, 10 rebounds and 11 assists

LOS ANGELES: The Boston Celtics overpowered the Cleveland Cavaliers 113-98 to reach a third straight Eastern Conference finals on Wednesday as Western Conference top seeds Oklahoma City moved to the brink of elimination after crashing 104-92 at home to Dallas.

In Boston, Jayson Tatum’s 25 points helped the Celtics subdue an injury-hit Cavs lineup to complete a 4-1 win in the best-of-seven series.

The Eastern Conference No.1 seeds will face either the Indiana Pacers or the New York Knicks for a place in the NBA Finals.

But while Boston continued their progress, Oklahoma City’s playoff campaign is hanging by a thread after their damaging defeat to Dallas.

Mavericks star Luka Doncic led from the front with a triple-double, finishing with 31 points, 10 rebounds and 11 assists.

The Mavs lead the series 3-2 and can clinch a place in the Western Conference finals with victory in game six back in Dallas on Saturday.

“We just got one more to win out of two games, and that’s it,” Doncic said. “It’s 3-2, but that’s nothing. We’ve got to finish it and go with the same mentality.”

Doncic had been furious after the Mavs surrendered the initiative in a game-four loss in Texas on Sunday, but said a more relaxed approach had been the key to Wednesday’s commanding effort.

“Sometimes I forget that I love to play basketball, it’s the thing I do,” Doncic said. “My mental focus was just to go out there with a smile on my face and play basketball.”

Doncic was given offensive support from Derrick Jones Jr. with 19 points while three other players made double figures.

Shai Gilgeous-Alexander led the Thunder scorers with 30 points, eight assists and six rebounds.

Earlier, Cleveland’s hopes of clawing their way back into their series with Boston were rocked before the game after confirmation that three of their top six players — Donovan Mitchell, Jarrett Allen and Caris LeVert — were out with injury.

But Cleveland shrugged off that setback to produce a battling performance that saw them get within three points of the Celtics midway through the fourth quarter.

Evan Mobley was superb for Cleveland, pouring in a game-high 33 points while Marcus Morris Sr. added 25 off the bench.

Yet just when Celtics fans at the TD Garden were nervously wondering if a shock defeat was on the cards, Boston stitched together a decisive 13-2 run — crowned by a three-pointer from Tatum — that left them ahead by 14 points at 101-87.

Tatum, who also added 10 rebounds and nine assists, said Boston had prepared for a dogfight despite Cleveland’s injury-stricken lineup.

“Anybody who’s played in this league understands what happens when somebody’s best players are out,” Tatum said. “The rest of the guys have more freedom, they play with a different level of confidence and they play different.

“Our mindset coming into this game was, ‘However long it takes, that’s how long it takes’. We didn’t expect to win the game in the first or second quarter. We grinded it out.”

Tatum said Boston were now determined to snap their dismal recent record in the Eastern Conference finals. Boston have lost in the Eastern Conference finals in four of five appearances since the 2016-2017 season.

“Each year presents different challenges,” Tatum said. “Myself and the rest of the crew have been to the conference finals something like four or five times.

“We’re battle-tested. We know what it takes. We just have to put the individual things aside and try and get over that hump.”

Tatum was one of six Boston players to finish in double figures on Wednesday, with Al Horford adding 22 points and Derrick White 18.

Jrue Holiday finished with 13 points while Jaylen Brown and Payton Pritchard had 11 apiece.

Boston coach Joe Mazzulla paid tribute to the contribution of Horford, who steadied the Celtics down the stretch to close out the win.

“Tonight you saw his gift, his gift is just passion, inspiration, toughness, competitive nature,” Mazzulla said.


The ‘Porsche of off-road’: Ford CEO Jim Farley unveils vision for global lineup forged in Saudi sands

Updated 8 sec ago
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The ‘Porsche of off-road’: Ford CEO Jim Farley unveils vision for global lineup forged in Saudi sands

  • Farley spoke to Arab News about creating a direct engagement between Ford and Dakar
  • He wants customers to feel like they are buying a piece of the world-famous rally with Ford vehicles

RIYADH: Ford’s leadership has signaled a new ambition to make the brand the “Porsche of off-road,” having used Saudi Arabia’s grueling Dakar Rally terrain to to hone their technology into a new lineup of off-road vehicles.

“Porsche has dominated the enthusiast automotive industry for a long time, and Ford, we have the ambition to be the Porsche of off-road,” Jim Farley, Ford Motor Company CEO, told Arab News. 

“There’s no more important off-road race in the world than Dakar,” he said, as the endurance event came to a close in Saudi Arabia at the weekend.

“We want to link the Dakar racing vehicles, our T1 Raptors to something that people can buy, not just a Raptor pickup truck, but a whole new lineup that people have not seen before. So, Dakar is really the inspiration for our future off-road lineup,” he added. 

Speaking on what the future holds for Ford racing and how Saudi Arabia’s terrain impacts vehicle innovation and engineering, Farley said: “I think it’s a story still playing out. The Baja race very much inspired the creation of a global Raptor brand.”

The CEO said that the company wants to create direct engagement between Ford and Dakar, so that consumers feel like they are purchasing a piece of Dakar when they buy a vehicle. 

“Toyota took the lead in off-road because the products were functional. And yes, they’ve been racing for a long time in Dakar. But I don’t think most people who buy the Toyota brand for off-road products imagine they’re buying a piece of Dakar.” 

The CEO highlighted the influential role Dakar plays in Ford’s future off-road lineup, describing the race as the Formula 1 and Le Mans of off-roading. 

“You’re going to see more and more products from Ford that are not utilitarian. Vehicles used to just get from point A to point B off road, but literally they’re designed to give people a piece of the racing technology similar to what portion Ferrari have done on the on road side.”

On the sidelines of the 2026 Dakar Rally, Farley reflected on what he called a “heartening” experience in the Saudi desert. After spending a night camping in a tent without electricity, he spoke of being moved by the profound solitude of the dunes and the deep dedication of the Saudi people to their cultural roots.

“I was very struck by the people I met in the desert the last couple of days. It’s just a sea of young people who kind of return to their roots as a culture out in the desert to enjoy this beautiful place as a social activity, and motorsports is that connection for them,” he said. 

“And I found that very appealing for me as an automobile executive that our industry is the kind of industry that can that can make a connection between the cultural, authentic cultural norms here in the Kingdom. 

“And it really struck me how interesting and important it is for the Saudi people to be connected to this beautiful desert, this beautiful resource you have, but doing so through motorsports, not necessarily through the traditional way of enjoying the desert. I found that very heartening in our world, where people had their shoes off, their feet in the sand and enjoying this beautiful place.”

Comparing a Dakar victory to winning Le Mans or a Formula 1 World Championship, Farley described the race as the “missing jewel” in its storied motorsports crown.

Highlighting why Dakar remains the most important off-road race in the world, the CEO said: “Because it’s global. If you go to Spain and Portugal, and Italy and France, and Thailand and South Africa, and around the world, people know what the Dakar race is.

“They know how difficult it is to win here. They understand the technology required to win here.

“It’s not something in North America. But if you want to create an off-road enthusiast brand for people who love the joy of driving off-road fast, there is no other event.

“But it’s equally compelling because it’s so difficult to win,” he said. 

Dakar came to a close on Saturday, after passing through AlUla, Hail, Wadi Ad-Dawasir, Bisha and Al-Henakiyah, and ending in Yanbu. 

Qatar’s Nasser Al-Attiyah won ​the Dakar Rally for the sixth time in the car category on Saturday as Argentina’s Luciano Benavides won by two seconds on two wheels, the narrowest margin ever.

Ford’s Nani Roma finished second, nine minutes and 42 seconds behind, and teammate Mattias Ekstrom was third after winning the final stage.

“There is an element about this race, like Le Mans, that comes down to kind of fortune and persistence. Do you try long enough and hard enough? Because it only takes one small mistake, one part to break, one driver error for navigation to lose the race,” Farley said.