DALLAS — Listen, it’s not the equivalent of Wade Boggs taking a victory lap around Yankee Stadium on a horse. That’s an image of betrayal Bostonians took about eight years to get over — until their Red Sox fell in a 3-0 series hole in the 2004 ALCS and … never mind, too soon.
But it’ll still be difficult for Knicks faithful to see (or at least imagine) Jeff Van Gundy, a main character of the Knicks’ last golden era, getting his first NBA title with the friggin’ Celtics.
Van Gundy was Van Gundy joined the Celtics as a senior consultant, labeled by coach Joe Mazzulla as “a huge weapon.”
And within his first season in Boston — after spending more than 12 years with the Knicks until 2001 — Van Gundy is a win away from receiving a ring. I’m guessing it will have a shamrock on it.
Doesn’t feel right.
The Celtics still have to win, of course. They had a chance to sweep the series Friday night in Dallas and laid a leprechaun egg. A 38-point defeat in the Finals isn’t supposed to happen, but the Celtics were flat, and Dallas was inspired at home.
Give credit to Mavericks coach Jason Kidd, who squeezed out his team’s best performance — especially defensively — while facing a 3-0 hole against a better team.
The Celtics hadn’t scored 84 points or fewer since last year’s Game 7 nightmare against the Heat. It was the worst Finals defeat in franchise history and the third-worst in league history.

