Kyrie Irving and Gordon Hayward returned as the Boston Celtics beat the Philadelphia 76ers in the NBA.

Celtics too good for 76ers in NBA opener


The Celtics beat the Philadelphia 76ers 105-87 on Tuesday to get the 2018-19 NBA season started with a statement win in Boston.

Kyrie Irving and Gordon Hayward both returned to the court after injuries derailed them last season. Hayward did not even make it out of the first quarter of the first game last year, but he returned to score 10 points with five rebounds and four steals.

Looking deep and dangerous, the Celtics claimed an early edge as the Eastern Conference favourites with this victory.

 

Celtics are the deepest team in the East

Few teams are going to be able to compete with Golden State's starting lineup this season, but Boston might have the league's best bench. Marcus Smart, Marcus Morris, Aron Baynes and Terry Rozier all provided solid minutes and production on Tuesday, building on last season's playoff success.

With Jayson Tatum, Irving, Al Horford, Hayward and Jaylen Brown in the starting lineup, Boston have two dangerous squads ready to jump on opposing teams' second units.

 

76ers need shooters

It is easy to hit them when down (39 per cent shooting, 19 per cent from three-point range), but the 76ers consistently proved last season that J.J. Redick was their only true deep threat. Ben Simmons has blossomed into a dangerous player, but he cannot shoot. Simmons had 19 points, 15 rebounds and eight assists, and Joel Embiid 23 points and 10 rebounds, but neither are threats from outside the free-throw line.

The NBA has become a shooter's league, with the best teams carrying multiple threats from beyond the arc. Philadelphia could struggle to win big games if they cannot find a couple more dangerous shooters.

 

Defense can still win games in the NBA

In an era of 'Big Threes' and collaborative superstars almost as famous off the court as they are on it, defense has lost a bit of its appeal over the past decade. But Brad Stevens has this Celtics team locked in on both ends of the court, something rarely seen in the NBA since the Detroit Pistons and San Antonio Spurs' dominant days in the early 2000s.

Brown and Tatum are rare young stars who get just as excited shutting their opponent down as they do scoring. That mentality could help Boston pull off some upsets when the games really start mattering.