BOSTON — The last time these teams met, the Miami Heat coughed up a 19-point lead in a loss to the Boston Celtics.
So this time, Erik Spoelstra’s team gave itself more of a buffer, going up 22 in the first half on Friday night in Boston.
It needed all of it.
And, in the end, even more.
With another third-quarter collapse ultimately making it the biggest of blown nights, the Heat again blew a massive lead to the Celtics, this time falling 98-96 Friday night at TD Garden at the start of a two-game trip that concludes Sunday against the Washington Wizards.
So, nothing accomplished at an idle Thursday NBA trading deadline.
Followed by additional questions of where this all is headed, the Heat now 27-26.
“If you just look at the big picture of it, defensively we were very good, very good,” Spoelstra said. “We made some mistakes in that, in the second half.”
With Norman Powell and Andrew Wiggins back from absences but Tyler Herro still out, the Heat this time also had to try to withstand the second-half absence of Pelle Larsson, ultimately unable.
Larsson was sidelined with an elbow contusion after taking a blow from Jaylen Brown, with Herro away from the team with his rib injury.
The Heat got 26 points from Andrew Wiggins, 24 from Norman Powell and 16 from Bam Adebayo. Brown led the Celtics with 29.
“Guys really competed hard,” Spoelstra said. “We’re not looking for a moral victory. It’s disappointing, but we’re going to get better from it. You know, as painful as this is, it’s going to drive us. And I feel we’re going to get there.”
Five Degrees of Heat from Friday night’s game:
1. Game flow: The Heat went up 19 early, taking a 29-15 lead into the second period. They then stretched their lead to 22 in the second period before taking a 59-38 advantage into halftime.
The Celtics were 1 of 20 on 3-pointers in the first half, with the lone conversion from Baylor Scheierman.
And then came the third quarter, the Heat’s period of downfall this season, with Boston finding its 3-point game and leaving it tied 74-74 going into the fourth — a 36-15 scoring edge in the period.
Spoelstra’s closing point during his morning media session at the gameday shootaround had been consistency.
“Having more consistent quarters all the way throughout the game,” he said. “First quarter, second quarter and then this third quarter that we have to do a much better job with.”
2. Closing time: The Celtics then went up five early in the fourth, before the Heat tied it 82-82.
After the Celtics scored the next four points, the Heat made a stand, going up 89-88 with 6:06 to play.
Both offenses stalled at that point, before a Wiggins 3-pointer gave the Heat a 94-91 lead with 3:58 to go.
Later, at 3 of 10 on 3-pointers to that stage, Derrick White converted from beyond the arc for a 98-96 Celtics lead with 1:31 left.
With 40.2 seconds left, the Celtics then unsuccessfully challenged an offensive foul call against Brown, leaving the score at 98-96.
Heat guard Davion Mitchell then was stopped on a drive on one end, with the Heat forcing a Celtics miss on the other.
That left the Heat in possession with 8 seconds remaining down two, with an errant Mitchell 3-point attempt sealing the misery, set up on that play with a perfect feed from the lane by Wiggins.
“I thought that was a beautiful play that Wiggs made,” Spoelstra said.
But not good enough.
“We start the game started with a lot of energy a lot of pace, getting stops, and we continue to fall short,” Adebayo said of being burned again. “I mean at some point we’re gonna get tired of putting our hand to that hot stove.”
3. Powell back: After missing the previous three games for the birth of his daughter, Powell marked his return by converting a 3-pointer on the game’s first shot attempt.
Powell was up to 15 points by the intermission, in his first action since being named an All-Star for the first time in his 11-season career.
He then left early in the third quarter for treatment on his hand, before returning later in the period.
“Just hyperextended,” he said of his right hand. “I thought it was dislocated, because of the way it was stiff and I couldn’t fully close my hand. So I just wanted to get it checked out.
“I got an X-ray done and then we tried a couple different ways to tape. They ruled out it being a fracture. It looked like there might have been a minor one in there. So it took a little longer for me to be able to come back out. But they ruled that out and then we just tried a few tape jobs to keep it stable in support.”
Powell closed 9 of 15 from the field, disappointed in the Heat again unable to sustain.
“We kind of relaxed defensively in terms of how physical we were and urgent we were,” he said.
4. Still valued: The Heat made clear through inaction at Thursday’s NBA trade deadline that Wiggins was considered a valued connector to the balance of the roster.
Wiggins then connected on plenty in the first half, with 17 points on 7-of-10 shooting over the opening two periods, including 3 of 4 on 3-pointers.
Wiggins sat out the Heat’s previous game with what was listed as hamstring tightness, Tuesday night’s home loss to the Atlanta Hawks, raising question about whether a trade was next. Instead, the next personnel decision with Wiggins will be his $30.2 million player option for next season.
5. Down goes Larsson: This time a blow to the face was more than cursory for Larsson, with an elbow from Jaylen Brown in the second quarter putting Larsson down and taking him off the court for the second half.
Asked what happened to Larsson, Spoelstra said, “About everything”
It turned out that even with a bloodied face, it was an elbow contusion that had Larsson out.
“I got a rebound, and then before I came out in the second quarter, I threw a pass and I felt something in my elbow, so I’m assuming I got hit with an elbow contusion or something that was connected to my finger,” Larsson said. ” was trying to warm up in halftime and was shooting and was struggling to get it to the rim.
“Someone kind of hit my funny bone a little too hard.”
Simone Fontecchio started the second half for Larsson, with Myron Gardner then entering moments later in place of Fontecchio, in Gardner’s first action of the night.
Larsson wound up playing 12 scoreless minutes, without a shot, closing with five rebounds and three assists.