The crowd heartily booed Golden State’s players, beginning in their pregame warm-ups.
When Thompson appeared on the court an hour before the game, a group of fans in the lower bowl booed him. He acknowledged them with his arms and encouraged them to get louder. Draymond Green emerged a few minutes later and drew an even louder explosion of boos. Two nights before, Thompson had criticized the crowd for chanting obscenities at Green.
The Celtics entered the game with a 2-1 lead in the series and aspirations of handing Golden State its first back-to-back losses in this year’s playoffs. Before Friday’s game, Golden State had won all five games that followed losses this postseason.
But Boston understood the fierce grip that a 3-1 lead can hold in a best-of-seven series.
“We understand we have a chance to do something special, put some pressure on tonight,” Celtics Coach Ime Udoka said before the game. “You have to come out with the same mind-set, understand it’s a long series, long game, not try to get it all in the first quarter, basically.”
The Celtics gained confidence from the way they had played on Wednesday night.
“We have to replicate what we did in Game 3,” Celtics guard Marcus Smart said. “We reduced our turnovers. We reduced our second-chance points, offensive rebounds. We just controlled the game, the game that we wanted to play.”