Well, this is an interesting development. And I'm not talking "interesting" in a "It's interesting how the Boston Celtics shot 3-pointers last night the way Columbus discovered America" kind of way.
Well, OK. So maybe I am.
Maybe I am, because like Columbus got credit for discovering America even though he just blindly ran into an island a thousand miles away, the Celtics missed their target by about a thousand miles, too. Got up 60 attempts from the arc last night in Boston -- a ton even for a team as s shamelessly promiscuous from that locale as the C's -- and missed, um, 45 of them.
Fifteen-for-60, boys and girls. You could blindfold an 8-year-old, spin him around five times and point him in the wrong direction, and he'd still make at least 16.
Anyway, the Celtics foray to Brick City opened the door for the New York Knicks to steal Game 1 of the Eastern Conference semifinals on the Celtics' home floor, which is the interesting part of all this. You see, three conference semifinal series began in Boston, Cleveland and Oklahoma City in the last two days -- and the visitors won every Game 1.
Home cookin', meet home cooked.
First up, on Sunday, the Indiana Pacers racehorsed the East 1-seed Cavaliers into the floorboards, 121-112. Then, last night, the Knicks dispatched the Celts in overtime after being down 20 at one point, and the Denver Nuggets shocked the West 1-seed Thunder thanks to Nikola Jokic's monster 42-point, 22-rebound night and Aaron Gordon's game-winning three.
The Thunder were a league-best 68-14 in the regular season, including 35-6 at home. The Cavs were 64-18 and 34-7 in C-town. And the Celtics won 61 games including 28 on the home parquet.
So what does this mean, exactly?
Maybe something. Probably nothing.
Momentum, after all, is a chimera in sports, and in the NBA in particular. So look for the Cavaliers to wash the Pacers in Game 2, and the Celtics to bottom eleventy gazillion 3s and blow the Knicks into the Charles River, and the Thunder to hold Jokic to something reasonably sane -- say, 35 points and 17 boards, perhaps -- and even that series. And we'll be right back where we started before Game 1.
On the other hand ...
On the other hand, the Pacers, Knicks and Nuggets could rise up again. And then all of this would get really interesting.
Onward.