Denver was on fire from mid-range, at least in the first half, which is what I watched. In fact, if you take out their lousy three-point shooting last night (8 for 31), they made 34 of 50 shots (68%) somewhere between the three-point line and the rim. If you're shooting that well on non three-pointers, you'd have to shoot 44%+ to make it worth your while to fire up three-pointers instead.
Jokic was really abusing KP at will, early on. Then Celts started throwing double teams at him in the second quarter, and that threw Denver off, and Jokic committed a couple of turnovers. I think the good news is that, in a seven-game series, the Celts would come in with a more effective strategy for guarding Jokic and Murray (maybe depending on who has the hot hand on a given night; of course the disadvantage last night was they both did).
While the Celtics can throw different defensive looks at Jokic and Murray, I think it's harder for Denver to guard our starting five, because everyone's an offensive threat. So in a series, I would put that in the ledger in our column.