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The Honolulu Advertiser
Posted on: Saturday, May 22, 2010

Magic seeking Garden party


By JIMMY GOLEN
Associated Press

Hawaii news photo - The Honolulu Advertiser

Boston, which was just 24-17 at home in the regular season, hosts Rashard Lewis and the Magic today.

JOHN RAOUX | Associated Press

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WALTHAM, Mass. — The original Boston Garden is long gone, and so is the fear in opponents' eyes when they play the Celtics on their home floor.

So don't expect the Orlando Magic to be too intimidated when they arrive for Games 3 and 4 of the best-of-seven Eastern Conference finals.

"We've won there before, and there's no reason we can't do it again," forward Rashard Lewis said yesterday as the Magic prepared for Game 3. "Boston came to us and beat us twice on our home court, so it's happened before. Why can't we do it? Why can't it happen again?"

The Celtics took the first two games in Orlando, stealing the home-court advantage and earning a chance to advance without having to leave town again. A victory at the new Boston Garden tonight would give them a chance to complete the sweep on Monday.

But home-court advantage doesn't mean what it used to for Boston.

The Celtics were 24-17 at home this year — tied for the worst of all the playoff teams. It's the first time the Celtics have had a better record on the road (26-15) than at home since 1974, and just the second time since 1955. Boston was one of just two NBA teams this season that was better on the road than at home.

For coach Doc Rivers, it's more reason to forget about a regular season in which, after beating Orlando on Christmas Day to improve to 23-5, the Celtics spent the next four months as a .500 team.

"During the season," he said before interrupting himself. "I don't want to go back to that. I will go back to pre-Christmas."

Forward Paul Pierce would also like to forget the regular season, and the Celtics' playoff run is making that easier.

After earning the No. 4 seed in the East and quickly dispatching the Miami Heat in the first round, Boston eliminated LeBron James and the top-seeded Cleveland Cavaliers in the conference semis. Against second-seeded Orlando, the Celtics have twice opened big leads and held on to take a 2-0 advantage.

Now they're back home, where they are 5-1 so far in the playoffs.

"I think our guys are getting comfortable playing at home again," Rivers said.

It doesn't hurt that they're playing better defense than they did during the long regular season, when the 2008 champions seemed uninterested. Veteran Rasheed Wallace has become a contributor off the bench. Point guard Rajon Rondo is blossoming into a star at both ends. And Kevin Garnett, who missed last year's playoffs because of a knee injury, seems to be responding to his restful regular season with the strong play that was a key to the team's 17th NBA title.

To Pierce, that's a sign that the regular-season struggles at home don't mean much any more.

"Yesterday already happened and tomorrow's going to come," he said. "We've turned a lot of things around."