More talent, more buckets for the Brooklyn Nets, and Kevin Durant, Kyrie Irving, and James Harden have provided many of them.

In Game 4 of their first round series against the Boston Celtics on Sunday, the high-scoring three-headed monster combined for 104 points in their 141-126 victory to take a commanding 3-1 lead. That is tied for the most by a trio in a single game in NBA Playoffs history, according to ESPN Statistics and Information.

Durant top-scored for the Nets with 42 points on 14-20 shooting from the field. Irving chipped in 39 points, while Harden added 23 markers. The Nets also became only the second team in NBA history to have multiple 35-point scorers in back-to-back outings, joining the Los Angeles Lakers in 1962 with Elgin Baylor and Jerry West.

Harden and Durant exploded for 41 and 39 points, respectively in their loss in Game 3.

Durant, Harden, and Irving are averaging a combined 79.6 points per game against the Celtics. As a team, the Nets are averaging a ridiculous 123.5 points. It's as if the Celtics' defense has gone to the Bermuda Triangle in the series.

To be fair, preventing Durant, Irving, and Harden to score is like trying to prevent global warming. Or the arrival of tomorrow. Even if one of them gets into a terrible shooting slump, the Nets will still have a strong chance of winning the game.

The Celtics are as perplexed as a student in an algebra class and they have to find out answers soon if they want to resuscitate their flatlining hopes in Game 5.

Sad to say for the Leprechaun, up, up, down, down, left, right, left, right, B, A, Start doesn't work on Kevin Durant, Kyrie Irving, and James Harden.