IAMI  -- With seven minutes left in the Celtics' Game 2 of their  Eastern  Conference semifinal series with the Miami Heat, they had a  clean slate  and a chance to steal a difficult road win from the South  Beach  behemoth.                
It was 80-80. After all the minor injuries, all the scoreless stretches and all the explosions of athleticism and scoring from LeBron James and Dwyane Wade,   it was even-steven. All the Celtics needed was one last push to pull   off a comeback win, tie the series 1-1, and head home with a chance to   pull away.
Instead, they watched the Heat go off for a 14-0 run,  and they're  headed back to Boston with their tail between their legs,  down 2-0.
"They scored and we couldn't score," Doc Rivers said. "Honestly, let's just simplify it.
"I  always say that if we can't score down the stretch, that's always on   me. I've got to do something different. I've got to go to Paul [Pierce] more. I've got to get Ray [Allen] more shots. But I've got to tell you, for me today was tough, because I didn't know who the hell was healthy."
That's  pretty much where the Celtics stand right now -- aside from  being  defeated twice in Miami on the scoreboard, they're also looking  defeated  physically. Rajon Rondo battled back pain on  Tuesday  night, Pierce left early with a strained foot, and Allen  revealed  postgame that he needed medical attention Tuesday night after  taking a  hard elbow from James and feeling short of breath. Not to  mention a  certain 39-year-old Hall of Fame-bound big man.
The C's had been  through a lot in 41 minutes on Tuesday night. They  just didn't have  enough left in the tank for the final seven.
Between the 7:09 and  3:19 marks in the fourth quarter, the Celtics went  without a single  point. They tried to get the ball inside, but at a  certain point it just  wasn't happening for them. They started settling  for jumpers, they kept  missing, and the discouragement just kept  building.
Meanwhile,  LeBron and Wade were slicing and dicing the Celtics'  defense, cruising  late to a 102-91 win. This much has been proven -- if  the game is  reduced to a battle of individual scorers, then you might  as well anoint  the Heat now.
"We're not winning that way," Rivers said. "I told  you that before the  series started. We're not a one-on-one basketball  team. I think Paul  may be the only one, really, that can beat guys on  his own. But they're  going to send help, usually with Rondo's guy,  making it difficult for  him to do that. That's just not who we are."
The  Celtics' 2-0 deficit is no fluke. Through two games, they've been  the  far inferior team. They went into enemy territory and got outplayed  by  two fantastic players thriving in front of their home crowd. Wade  had 38  points in Game 1, James had 35 in Game 2. They haven't just been  hot,  right now, they're just better.
The C's have never been down 2-0  in the Big Three era. The last time  Boston trailed a postseason series  after two games, it was the first  round of the Eastern Conference  playoffs in 2004, against the Pacers.  Back before Jermaine O'Neal was a Celtic, James Jones was on the Heat and Reggie Miller was on TNT, they teamed up to sweep Boston in the playoffs.
For this group? This is a totally new situation. And it's one that they'll have to stew in for the next three days.
"I've  learned over the course of my life and my career that the  adversity  that we face is ultimately what makes us who we are," Allen  said.  "That's why we're all here. Being down 2-0 doesn't scare any of  us. It  doesn't make us nervous. It's just an opportunity to come out  and shine.  We have an opportunity to go home and play in front of our  crowd and  put some good basketball out there."
The layoff -- Game 3 isn't  until 8 p.m. Saturday -- couldn't possibly  come at a better time. The  Celtics need a few days to erase the effects  of these first two games,  both physically and mentally, and as luck  would have it those days are  on the schedule.
The Celtics are down. Soon, they might be out. But they have some time to refresh themselves and refocus for what's ahead.
"The  rest is good," Rivers said. "It's very good for us, because we are  a  little banged up. Tomorrow I told them to go golfing, go do whatever   they want to do. Stay away from each other, stay away from film, and   just stay away from basketball. Just relax. Then we'll get right back at   it on the next day and build up until Game 3. Game 3 will be in  Boston,  and we like being in Bosto

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