1984 NBA Finals: KC Jones Starts Series with Gerald Henderson Guarding Magic

1984 NBA Finals

GAME 1

Larry v. Magic: Game-by-Game Summary

Larry v. Magic: Game-by-Game Media Coverage

Before, during and after yesterday's 115-109 Laker victory, everybody was talking matchups.

LA coach Pat Riley used the same starting five he used in Phoenix Friday night, going with James Worthy at forward and Michael Cooper in the backcourt. Worthy wound up guarding Dennis Johnson, with Cooper taking Bird.

"That threw them off a little," said Cooper, who held Bird to 42-percent shooting. "I saw the surprise in DJ's eyes when he saw James on him."

K.C. Jones played into Riley's hands by putting Gerald Henderson on Magic Johnson. On Saturday, when Jones told reporters he planned to put Henderson on Magic if Magic guarded Henderson, it was dismissed as a smokescreen. However, when Magic opened the game on Henderson, Gerald found himself looking at Magic's belly button for the rest of the day.

"That worked out really well," said Jones. "It's not really an important factor, unless I'm missing something."

If Jones lets the Lakers dictate Boston's defensive alignment, we can be certain that Magic will continue to cover Henderson. Meanwhile, veteran Laker- watchers wonder why the Celtics didn't pressure Magic from baseline to baseline. Philadelphia employed that tactic very effectively last spring.

AL Jefferson Arrested for DWI

Minnesota Timberwolves basketball player Al Jefferson was arrested and booked into jail early this morning for allegedly driving drunk, according to jail records. Jefferson was arrested by the State Patrol at 1:08 a.m., and was brought to the Hennepin County Jail shorty after 2 a.m., according to the State Patrol and jail records. He was released at 3:19 a.m.

LINK

1984 NBA Finals: 37-Year-Old Abdul-Jabbar Overcomes Migrane to Star in Game 1

1984 NBA Finals

GAME 1

Larry v. Magic: Game-by-Game Summary

Larry v. Magic: Game-by-Game Media Coverage

Kareem Abdul-Jabbar's headache gave Los Angeles Coach Pat Riley a stomachache, and Abdul-Jabbar's 32 points yesterday made the Boston Celtics hurt all over.

Abdul-Jabbar, who has had a long history of migraine problems but has not been troubled by them recently, shook off another attack and scored 23 points in the first half yesterday, leading the Lakers to a 115-109 victory and a 1-0 lead in the National Basketball Association Championship Series.

Game Two is Thursday in Boston.

"I had a very bad migraine headache this morning," said Abdul-Jabbar,

37, who hit 12 of 17 field goals in the game. "I've been getting adjusted regularly by a chiropractor, but I haven't had a migraine since last August.

"When I got this one, I knew what to do. It involves a neck adjustment. Once our trainer put my neck back in line, I was fine. It didn't bother me at all."
Abdul-Jabbar said he slept on the plane with his neck crooked Saturday, then woke up at 6 a.m. with the headache. He skipped a 9 a.m. team meeting and didn't arrive for the 1 p.m. game until noon.

"Kareem was phenomenal in the first quarter," said Riley, referring to Abdul-Jabbar's 13 points in the opening period, which helped the Lakers build an 18-point lead in the first eight minutes. "The headache was probably a blessing in disguise. It gave him three hours more sleep.

"He needed the rest. In my heart, I knew he'd play, but when I heard about it, it gave me indigestion."

"I'm a professional and you learn to play under adverse conditions," Abdul-Jabbar said. "This was a very important game for us to win because it puts something in the Celtics' minds. They must have felt they would win at home and would maintain their home court advantage."

The Celtics, who are seeking an unprecedented 15th NBA title, had won their first nine post-season games at home, including the last seven by an average margin of nearly 17 points. But the Celtics never came closer than four points after the initial Los Angeles spurt, disappointing a sellout crowd of 14,890.

Larry Bird, averaging 27.5 points in the playoffs, and Boston's leading scorer in each of its last 11 games, had only two field goals and 12 points midway through the third period, with Los Angeles ahead 83-64. But with AbdulJabbar and Earvin "Magic" Johnson on the bench with four fouls apiece, Bird led a 24-9 run with eight points in the final 1:22 of the quarter, including a three-pointer that made it 92-88 at the buzzer.

The game was close throughout the fourth period but the Celtics were never able to catch up.

James Worthy added 20 points and Johnson 18 for the Lakers. Kevin McHale led the Celtics with 25, Bird had 24 and Dennis Johnson 23.

The Lakers, overcoming the effects of a Friday night game and a fivehour plane flight Saturday, outscored the Celtics 25-6 during a seven-minute span to take a 28-10 lead with 3:59 left in the first quarter.

Boston cut the 18-point deficit to 3422 at the end of the first period as McHale hit eight points in the final 2:58, four of them on rebound-follow shots. Two more second-shot baskets early in the second quarter narrowed the deficit to 36-26, but another Boston cold spell allowed the Lakers to rebuild their advantage to 18, 48-30.

Nine straight Boston points, five by Johnson and four by McHale, made it 56-48. A three-point goal by Michael Cooper just before the buzzer left Los Angeles ahead 65-52 at halftime.

Both teams have won three NBA titles since 1974, but they have not faced each other in a Championship Series since 1969, when Boston beat Los Angeles in seven games. That victory was the seventh series triumph without a loss for the Celtics over the Lakers in the finals.

Overall, the Celtics are 14-1 in Championship Series appearances. The Lakers are 8-10 in the finals, including 5-1 when the franchise was in Minneapolis
from 1947-59.

1984 NBA Finals: Early Bulge Proples Purple to Game 1 Win

1984 NBA Finals

GAME 1

Larry v. Magic: Game-by-Game Summary

Larry v. Magic: Game-by-Game Media Coverage

The Lakers beat the Phoenix Suns in a sixth game Friday night, flew to Boston Saturday and within six minutes of Sunday's game led, 20-6.

They allowed no time to discuss the early strategy and suspense that would build through the seven games of this "dream" final series. Or to remember the seven Lakers-Celtics championship series (Boston won all, the last 15 years ago).

Trailing, 4-3, LA double-teamed Boston's front line as the Celtics' three other playoff opponents had, allowing the Celtic guards outside shots. The Celtic guards were 15 of 40. That was the first problem.

The Lakers rebounded their misses - the second problem. And then LA ran. Laker guard Magic Johnson (18 points, 10 assists) scored on a four-on-one for a 13-6 lead. Laker forward James Worthy (20 points) stole Larry Bird's pass and slammed alone for 15-6. Bird missed two baseline jumpers, and Rambis was fouled on a follow-up: 18-6. Celtic center Robert Parish missed a turnaround. Johnson sank a 19-footer (Magic's outside shooting was another problem) over Gerald Henderson (whose matchup with Johnson was a bigger problem). 20-6.

"I sat there wondering what the hell they'd be like Thursday with four days' rest," said Celtic forward Kevin McHale.

Parish made a free throw. Whoopee. Magic drove end-to-end. 22-7. Kareem Abdul-Jabbar - who had suffered a migraine until he asked someone to whip his head around (cracking his vertebrae into its proper places) - sky-hooked over Parish. And it was 30-12 with 39:16 to go.

Boston cut it to 34-22 by the end of the first quarter, but LA had made 16 of 22 (73 percent). "We made a statement," said Laker coach Pat Riley. "That was as good a period as we've ever played in a big game."

Dennis Johnson (23 points) and McHale helped cut it to 10, but Michael Cooper's three-pointer at 0:00 made it 65-52 at intermission.

The Celtics finally had time to decide what had happened.

One problem appeared obvious. Boston coach K.C. Jones had decided to let the Lakers to dictate the matchups. Magic Johnson was guarding Gerald Henderson, so Henderson would guard Johnson. This would make it easier for the Celtics to find their defensive assignments when the Lakers began their break. (It had no effect on the Lakers' break. What it did was allow Magic the freedom of running the offense without the pestering DJ. It also had to be a source of confidence - the Celtics were admitting they were scared of being beaten downcourt.)

But Henderson guarded Magic the rest of this game, and most of the next game, and some of even the next game.

Another problem was Parish: 2 of 7 from the floor, 1 of 4 free throws in the first half, 11.2-point average in this and the last four games against Bob Lanier. "We can't win without Robert Parish," said Boston forward Cedric Maxwell. "For us to win, we can't have a scoring difference of 23 to 5 (Abdul- Jabbar vs. Parish in the first half)." And when Parish earned his fourth foul early in the third quarter, Abdul-Jabbar helped the Lakers make it 73-54, their largest lead of the day.

Also, Boston hadn't played against a good running team in the playoffs.

None of these realizations could help the Celtics now. So they gave the ball to Bird (24 points, 14 rebounds).

He and DJ and Scott Wedman (three baskets in the third quarter) closed the quarter with a 14-3 run. Bird finished it with a buzzer three-pointer from Cooper's spot.

It was 92-88 with 12 minutes left. The Celtics went cold, LA scored on four straight fast breaks, and Parish fouled out with 7:23 left.

Trailing by five with two minutes left, Maxwell drove for a layin through Magic. The offensive foul nullified the basket, and the game was over. 115-109 was a respectable score - this could be a dream series after all - but the next day, the papers reported, "K.C. Jones is now 0-5 as a head coach in championship final competition."

1984 NBA Finals: Celtics Waste McHale's 25-Point Effort Off the Bench

1984 NBA Finals

GAME 1

Larry v. Magic: Game-by-Game Summary

Larry v. Magic: Game-by-Game Media Coverage

Bird had 24 points, one less than Kevin McHale, the Celtics' top scorer, but they came on 7-for-17 shooting. Bird had only two field goals in the first half; the Lakers shot 72 percent in the first quarter and 57 percent for the half.

Bird was at his best in the closing minutes of the third period, when he scored the Celtics' last 7 points that stirred hopes of a comeback

"In the first quarter," Jones said, "we couldn't hit from the outside at all, and in the second half we missed some key free throws and had no success with Larry Bird down low. They are going to make our guard hit from the outside. We tried to do the same thing to them, but Magic hit from the outside and fed Kareem. About the only thing I liked was the way we came back in the third period. It showed some determination."

"In the third quarter," said Dennis Johnson, the Celtic guard who scored 13 of his 23 points in the second half, "we began to do the things to them that they did to us in the third quarter. We rebounded, we played better defense and I penetrated more."

Strange Matchups There was some strange and unexpected matchups. Instead of the 6-foot-4-inch Dennis Johnson playing Magic Johnson, 6-9, as had been expected, Gerald Henderson, 6-2, was matched against him for a good part of the game. "Magic is our orchestra leader," Coach Pat Riley said. "He's not the guy that plays the tuba. We don't use him a lot in our offense, and we didn't try to take advantage of the mismatch by posting Magic down low against Henderson. . . . Riley also started James Worthy, 6-9, who scored 20 points at small forward and played defensively at big guard, matched against Dennis Johnson. "What we wanted to do was start Michael Cooper on Bird. He has played very well against him, and there is mutual respect there. It also allowed Worthy and Magic to play guard and crash the boards. It really set up our running game."

1984 NBA Finals: Celtics Closed 19-Point Gap, but Couldn't Finish the Job

1984 NBA Finals

GAME 1

Larry v. Magic: Game-by-Game Summary

Larry v. Magic: Game-by-Game Media Coverage

"We must stop them from running," Robert Parish said. "If we do a better job of rebounding, they don't get the ball, and without it they can't score. You saw what happened in the second half, when we rebounded and played better defense."

What happened was that, by the start of the fourth period, the Celtics, with 10 points each from Dennis Johnson and Bird, had closed to within 4, trailing the Lakers 92-88, after earlier trailing by 19, 81-62.

During the timeout between the periods, the message board flashed "IT'S NOISE TIME," and the capacity crowd of 14,890 responded. But the Celtics could do no better. Byron Scott, the Lakers' rookie guard, twice scored on fast-break layups to increase the lead to 8 points.

Boston cut the lead to 4 points several times, but, as Jones put it: "We just didn't have it. There was always something, a turnover here . . . We did not look like a playoff team in the championship round. Larry had one of his rare off days. But we'll discuss all that at practice tomorrow."

1984 NBA Finals: Parish in Foul Trouble Most of Game 1

1984 NBA Finals

GAME 1

Larry v. Magic: Game-by-Game Summary

Larry v. Magic: Game-by-Game Media Coverage

"When we shoot the ball as well as we did," Abdul-Jabbar said, "we're a very hard team to beat, because we have so many versatile players. But the Celtics showed their character by making a run at us, but we played good defense to hold them off."

Abdul-Jabbar's 13 first-quarter points powered his team to a 30-12 lead with 3 minutes 15 seconds left. He added 10 more in the second period.

Parish, in early foul trouble, offered Abdul-Jabbar little resistance defensively. Offensively, he shot 2 for 7 and scored only 5 points in the first half. Parish fouled out with 7:23 left after having shot 6 for 13 and scoring 13 points.

"Their game plan was to double- and triple-team me and the rest of our big guys," Parish said, "and force us to shoot from the outside. They achieved their goal today. They played a near-perfect first half. We allowed them the board in the first half, and they just ran away from us. I don't have the figures, but I'm sure they scored a dozen points on our offensive board. In addition, I don't think I ever saw the man shoot that well. The man was on fire."

Parish said the Celtics would have to rebound better in Thursday's game, and that he would have to stay out of foul trouble.

1984 NBA Finals: Celtics were Lethargic

1984 NBA Finals

GAME 1

Larry v. Magic: Game-by-Game Summary

Larry v. Magic: Game-by-Game Media Coverage

While the Celtics were sleep-walking through the first half and into the third period, the Lakers ran with ease, played aggressive defense and allowed the Celtics, who were shooting poorly, few second shots. By the time the Celtics awoke, the Lakers were enjoying their second 19-point advantage of the game at 81-62 midway in the third quarter.

"Maybe we were so happy to be here," said K. C. Jones, the Celtic coach, "that we came out awfully flat. L. A. probably set up their game plan and their defenses on their plane. They came here really ready to play, and I hate to see a team that is happy and enthusiastic."

Jones was alluding to the nine hours it took the Lakers to get to Boston from Phoenix, where they eliminated the Suns Friday night to win the Western Conference championship. During the trip, Abdul-Jabbar said his neck was twisted as he tried to sleep on the plane. Early this morning, he awoke with one of his troublesome migraine headaches that caused him to miss breakfast, the team bus and the pregame practice.

Abdul-Jabbar arrived by taxi one hour before the 1 P.M. start. After a neck manipulation by Jack Curran, the Laker trainer, the pain left the N.B.A.'s top scorer.

1984 NBA Finals: Game 1 Box Score

1984 NBA Finals

Larry v. Magic: Game-by-Game Summary

Larry v. Magic: Game-by-Game Media Coverage


Los Angeles 34 31 27 23-115

Boston 22 30 36 21-109

LOS ANGELES (115)

Rambis 3-3 1-1 7, Worthy 8-16 4-4 20, Abdul-Jabbar 12-17 8-9 32, Cooper 4-11 2-2 11, E. Johnson 7-11 4-4 18, Scott 5-7 4-4 14, McAdoo 2-12 3-4 7, Nater 1-2 1-2 3, Wilkes 1-4 1-2 3. Totals 43-83 28-32 115.

BOSTON (109)

Maxwell 3-8 0-0 6, Bird 7-17 9-11 24, Parish 6-13 1-4 13, D. Johnson 7-20 9-11 23, Henderson 5-12 2-2 12, McHale 10-16 5-6 25 Buckner 0-3 0-0 0, Ainge 0-0 0-0 0, Kite 0-0 0-0 0, Wedman 3-5 0-0 6. Totals 41-94 26-34 109.

Three-point goals-Cooper, Bird. Fouled out-Parish. Rebounds-Los Angeles 42 (Abdul-Jabbar 8), Boston 47 (Bird 14). Assists-Los Angeles 25 (E. Johnson 10), Boston 15 (Bird 5). Total fouls-Los Angeles 30, Boston 27. A-14,890.

1984 NBA Finals: Celtics Drop Game One at Home

1984 NBA Finals

Larry v. Magic: Game-by-Game Summary
Larry v. Magic: Game-by-Game Media Coverage


BOSTON

When he awoke yesterday, the pain was starting.

Kareem Abdul-Jabbar knew the feeling all too well because, over the years, recurring migraine headaches probably have done more than opposing players to hamper him.

But because Los Angeles Lakers trainer Jack Curran was able to snap Abdul Jabbar's neck back into alignment - the condition is spinal in nature - this migraine was stopped before the 7-foot, 4-inch, 37-year-old center was crippled by the pain.

Because of the headache, Abdul-Jabbar skipped a 9 a.m. team meeting. However, not only was he able to play, but he scored a game-high 32 points and dominated the floor in a stunning 115-109 victory over the Boston Celtics in Game 1 of the NBA Championship Series.

The Celtics' loss ended their streak of consecutive home-court playoff victories this season at nine and erased their home-court advantage in the best-of-seven series.

Shocking a packed house of 14,890 fans at Boston Garden, Abdul-Jabbar poured in 23 first-half points. Behind his hot shooting, the Lakers - who were coming off a tough sixth-game victory over the Suns in the Western Conference finals Friday night and a flight from Phoenix on Saturday - raced to an 18 point first-quarter lead and a 19-point lead in the third period.

After Boston center Robert Parish, who had vainly been trying to control him, fouled out of the game midway through the final period, Abdul-Jabbar anchored a tough defense that choked off the Celts when they made made a final, abortive charge.

"I'm a professional," Abdul-Jabbar said later, when asked about his having played despite his migraine. "This is what I do for a living, and even under adverse circumstances, I try to do a good job, and I usually do."

His numbers, in this case, spoke for themselves.

In addition to his 32 points and 12-for-17 shooting from the floor, he made five assists, grabbed a team-high eight rebounds, made two steals - one of them a crucial one on Boston guard Dennis Johnson late in the game - and blocked a pair of shots.

Combined with James Worthy's 20 points and Magic Johnson's 18 points and 10 assists, Abdul-Jabbar's performance was enough to offset a 25-point effort by Boston's Kevin McHale and a deceiving 24-point, five-assist outing by the Celtics' Larry Bird, who struggled for much of the afternoon.

"The man was on fire," Parish said afterward. "I'd like to say I could have played him differently, but he hasn't scored all those points in his career accidentally."

Still, there many of Abdul-Jabbar's efforts were pale in comparison to his H-bombing of the Celtics yesterday.

After the Lakers had spotted Boston a 2-0 lead to start the game, Magic Johnson connected on a pass to Abdul-Jabbar for a layup that became a three point play after Parish committed his first foul.

That was the story of the whole first quarter, because with that play, the Lakers were off and flying. After allowing the Celts to take a 4-3 lead - their last lead of the day - Los Angeles embarked on a 19-3 spree that not only resulted in a 22-7 lead, but also took the fire out of the zealots in the stands, who had turned the ancient and un-air-conditioned Garden into an oven even before the game had begun.

By the end of the first period, the Celts were down 34-22, had been on the short end of two 18-point margins and had seen the Lakers bury them with the fast break.

And, of course, they had witnessed the wrath of Abdul-Jabbar, who scored 13 points in the quarter as the Lakers shot an awesome 72.7 percent.

By the half, the Lakers had increased their lead by a point, to 65-52.

"They played a near-perfect half of basketball," said Parish, who had to sit down in the second quarter, after picking up his third personal foul.

"When we shoot the ball really well like that," Abdul-Jabbar said, "it's hard to beat us because we have so many versatile players."

Which is why, in the third period, no one should have been surprised when the Lakers went up by 19 points for the first time at 73-54. They were to lead by that many on three more occasions, the last at 83-64 with 5 minutes, 59 seconds remaining in the quarter.

Parish, by that time, had four fouls, and the Celtics had to go with McHale, who is far more effective at forward, in the middle.

The Celtics tried to come back. Their 24-9 period-ending rush cut the Los Angeles lead to 92-88, the final points coming on a three-point field goal by Bird at the buzzer.

"That Larry Bird three-pointer at the end of the quarter was like a dagger in the heart," L.A. coach Pat Riley said.

But the Celtics, despite creeping to within four points three more times - the last at 105-101 with 5:05 to go - could get no closer.

For a very good reason.

Parish, who ended the game with only 13 points, fouled out with 7:23 left, and Abdul-Jabbar reasserted himself. With time running out and the Lakers up by 111-105, Dennis Johnson went streaking downcourt on a break. Abdul-Jabbar stood in his way and then, on the fly-by, calmly plucked the ball out of
Johnson's hands.

And that was that - a triumphant ending to a day that began in pain.

1984 NBA Finals: Let the Greatest Spectacle on Earth Begin

1984 NBA Finals

Larry v. Magic: Game 8

Larry v. Magic: Game-by-Game Summary
Larry v. Magic: Game-by-Game Media Coverage


Celtics vs. Lakers!

One o'clock!

National Basketball Assn. finals!

No need for holding back. The winner receives the NBA championship trophy, the riches of mankind, pleasant words from Brent Musburger and the right to claim permanent possession of composer/maestro John Williams. The loser has to wear sack cloth or a hair shirt - whichever is worse - for an entire year.

Boston vs. Los Angeles!

East vs. West!

Atlantic Ocean vs. Pacific Ocean!

Time to talk about whether my dog's bigger than your dog, whether my father can punch out your father's flourescent lights, whether Larry Bird can shake a little and bake a little in Magic Johnson's face. Or vice-versa. Time to let your mouth run.

Robert (The Chief) Parish vs. Kareem Abdul-Jabbar!

Kevin McHale vs. James Worthy!

M.L. Carr vs. Dancing Barry!

Can The Chief run the old Sky Hooker silly? Is this going to be a Hollywoodesque finale to Kareem's record-setting season? Or is he going to be frustrated here,a sad chapter appended to his bestselling, as-told-to autobiography? Can McHale win the sixth-man, extra-starter sideshow? How about M.L. and Dancing Barry and crowd control? Can the Celtics' reserve forward whip the Garden crowd into the same noise-level excitement that the dancing man does with the people in LA? Can Barry come off the bench to hit a three- pointer and play a few minutes of karate defense as M.L. does in Boston?

The Grungy Garden vs. The Fabulous Forum!

Arnold (Red) Auerbach vs. (Dr.) Jerry Buss!

Johnny Most vs. Chick Hearn!

Is an old building with balconies, packed with pushed-together, overheated bodies, a more exciting place than a new building with air conditioning and sightlines that put the cheap tickets somewhere in the landing pattern for LA International Airport? Can the venerable Mr. Auerbach, who has built his teams with the shrewdness of a variety-store owner attacking a summer rec league championship, outwit the gold-card spending of a billionaire? (Remember the last time the Celts tried and failed to handle a Doctor J?) Can broadcaster Most outtalk broadcaster Chick? Put the two of them on a stage and let them argue out a game, one game at full volume, and the decision of a jury count in the best-of-seven series.

Bill Russell vs. Wilt (The Stilt) Chamberlain!

Bob Cousy vs. Jerry West!

Bob McAdoo vs. Bob McAdoo!

Take the films and action pictures of all the games from all the years. Put them on display. Argue about the characters. Wouldn't Russell step onto a court, any court, any time and still put Chamberlain away? Somehow? Wouldn't that happen forever? Wouldn't Cousy still be making those passes that even Magic, even Larry doesn't make? Wouldn't West, hair slicked on the sides, still be hitting that jumper? Wouldn't McAdoo still . . . wait a minute, is that the same Bob McAdoo, the one playing with the Lakers, who played with the Celtics?

Dan Shaughnessy vs. Jack Nicholson!

Bo Winiker vs. Johnny Mathis!

Tom Ellis vs. Johnny Carson!

Is it better to have a sportswriter from The Globe or an Academy Award winner at center court? Is it more inspiring to hear the national anthem played by a local trio of drum, trumpet and organ or by a ranking national celebrity? Is it better to have the results of your game - especially if you lose - discussed in chuckles by a local television anchorman or a man who knows Ed McMahon and Doc Severinsen personally? Local against national. What is the better perspective?

Spenser vs. Marlowe!

Beverly vs. Beverly Hills!

Rockwell vs. Rockwell!

Trouble. If a star is kidnaped, would it be better to have Spenser - that cool and detached modern Boston private eye - working the case than it would be to have Marlowe, that hard-boiled LA investigator? Spenser has the youth, but doesn't Marlowe have the experience? Fans. Is it better to have suburban fans from a normal, old New England city than a gold and pampered velvet pleasure village? Atmosphere. Is it better to come from the area of Norman Rockwell and his Saturday Evening Post vision of life? Or is it better to listen to the advice of Berry Gordy's son that "Somebody's watching me"?

Boston Spring vs. LA Perpetual Sun!

Boston Pollution vs. LA Smog!

Boston Fast Break vs. LA Fast Break!

Time to talk about all the far reaches of this series. Time to talk about the Kennedy Family and Hollywood celebs. Time to talk about fried clams and tacos. Time to wonder what would happen if Boston Mayor Ray Flynn tried to post up LA Mayor Tom Bradley. Time to talk about books against movies, Cape Cod against Malibu and Santa Monica, Maine against Tahoe. (Is that the lake the name "Lakers" means now?) Time to come back to the beginning. Which team is going to be able to run faster, better and more consistently in this track meet? Time to talk about basketball.

Celtics vs. Lakers!

Uh, time to begin.

Gone Fishin'

Short-handed Celtics Travel to Portland

Even at full-strength, the Celtics roster stands at a mere 13 players, and that includes Marcus Landry, who is now being called a practice player. However, Landry and fellow former Knick Nate Robinson are unlikely to be eligible to play tonight because of the logistics and timing of the trade. That leaves 11 Celtics to compete . . . except that Tony Allen hurt his leg last night, and Doc (see video below) pronounced him doubtful for tonight.

Which brings us down to 10 players.

That means extra PT for Marquis, right? Probably, but he was kinda, sorta AWOL last night, and, I thought, looked way skinnier than usual. Perhaps he's sick? In any event, look for some creative coaching to get around these hurdles.

I had a good feeling about last night's game, and do again for tonight's game. But we'll need everyone to contribute. NO 2-11s from Sheed, and no gooseggs from Squisy.


A little Godfather to celebrate the win.

Tony Allen Doubtful for Tonight

See Doc's prefatory comments in this video.



Nate not probable, either.

Rivers to Celtics Doubters: If you Jumped Off the Bandwagon, Stay Off

“We have not played with a great rhythm over the last 20 games. I get that, and that’s fine. Whoever’s jumped off the bandwagon, stay off. But I like this team. I’ve said it over and over again. I didn’t think we needed to make a lot of changes and we didn’t. We’ll see if that was the right decision or not.”

LINK

The challenge is clearly in the players' laps.

Can they rebound better as a team (we got beat 50-43 last night)? Can they execute better in crunch time (they went scoreless for long stretches of the 4th quarter last night)? Can they win a big game in a dominating fashion? Can Rasheed shut his trap and find ways to help when his shot isn't falling? Can KG work around his physical limitations?

Snarl, not Smack, Should be the Watchword

The Celtics didn’t clinch the title by acquiring Robinson, but they grabbed a boost of energy that a locker room filled with older guys sorely needed. And just as Robinson will learn from his new teammates, his energy and passion will spread to a team whose desire and chemistry has been questioned of late.

Ainge astutely did not break up the Big Three or execute a major deal just for the sake of making change. While there aren’t many miles left in these current Celtics, there’s enough for another journey to the title. It’s just a matter of the roster as a whole responding to Ainge’s challenge to improve
.

LINK

I can't find the story about the Big Bad Bruins of 1970, and how an opposing coach observed that Boston looked like a pack of hungry dogs just waiting for the ref to drop the puck to start the game. Still, that's exactly what I want to see, a little snarl return to the team. Keep your traps shut and your nostrils flared.

Doc to Nate: Go to the Rim, Young Man

“I want him to be free and I want him to be aggressive,’’ Rivers said. “That’s when he’s at his best, so there’s no reason for me to try to screw that up. “I do know he’s competitive, and hopefully that comes out. I can’t wait to get him and to get to work with him. I want him looking at the basket, I don’t want him thinking about the X2Z play. I want him to look at the rim, and that’s why we’re bringing him in here.’’

LINK

If we put aside our concerns about Nate for a moment, he could be a little like Rondo Gordon Orr, Jr. Nate might be a havoc-wreaking menace out there who creates opportunities for his teammates simply because the other team is so worried about him. The one thing about playing on a bad team is you never get an accurate feel for how good someone is.

Hence the need to keep an open mind about Nate and see if he can surpass our expectations. There's a decent chance he will.

Ainge Still has Holes to Fill

Ainge did not fill all of the Celtics’ needs with this deal. The team desperately needed a tougher rebounder, but he will depend on Glen Davis, Kendrick Perkins, and Wallace to increase their production. The team needed another perimeter shooter, but he will look for Ray Allen to snap his season-long 3-point slump and begin hitting open shots.

LINK

Just wait for buyout season to begin. Danny ain't done yet.
http://1.bp.blogspot.com/_42w5-R0zz2g/SU8W4cKKzLI/AAAAAAAAETk/2AQSgTdO0J8/s400/nate+robinson+on+leon+powe.jpg

Doc Plans to Play Rondo and Nate Together . . . for Defensive Purposes

“He knows that’s one of the main reason we wanted him,’’ Rivers said. “He gives us defense. He pressures the ball. We can use lineups with Rondo and Nate at times against certain teams and the ball pressure alone would be phenomenal.’’

LINK

I'm just going to keep banging the same drum:

Defense is part athleticism and part heart. Nate's a great athlete, and has the desire to score. If he can transfer some of his offensive intensity over to the other side of the ball, then the only thing lacking is height. Maybe Rondo defends the 2 Nate defends the 1. With Rondo's long arms, maybe that works out OK.

Relief from Trade Rumors may Give Team a Boost

Days before the All-Star break, Allen saw Glen Davis in the team hotel in New Orleans. Davis’s name, like several others, also had been mentioned in a possible trade, and Allen had no clue whether it was official or not. There was an awkwardness to the exchange.

“I didn’t say anything to him,’’ Allen said. “But I was like, ‘Is everything all right?’ He said, ‘Yeah, everything’s cool. I’m just about to go see some family.’ ’’

But it was like avoiding the elephant in the room.

“I’m sad to see Eddie go,’’ Allen said. “He was a brother of ours. We won a championship together, so we’ll be forever connected. “As a player, you feel a little more comfortable knowing you’re here for the rest of the season,’’ said Davis. “You’re not getting traded to another team, you’ve just got to keep playing, staying focused on what we have to do, staying focused on the main goal.’’ Said Allen, “We were saying how it’s a lot of guys in grocery carts this past month, because a couple of us have been shopped left and right.’’

LINK

It's hard enough to get on the same page and play like a team when you have players coming and going due to injuries. Throw in trade rumors involving rotational players, starters even, and the task grows more complicated.

Now the focus can return to where it should be--basketball and winning banner #18.

Smiles on My Face



Rondo two strips of Gasoft, one ending in a Ray Allen Dunk.

Jesus unconscious in quarters 1-3, hitting his first 10 of 11 shots and drilling threes in Fisher's face.

KG's two shake-and-bakes, including a dribble-drive-and-dunk past Gasoft.

KG's moonball bankshot over Wilt, Jr.

The Baby Davis fist pump after hitting a 20-footer.

The Final Score.

Finally


1 2 3 4 T
BOS 30 23 23 1187
LAL 27 21 21 1786

BOSTON CELTICS
STARTERS MIN FGM-A 3PM-A FTM-A OREB DREB REB AST STL BLK TO PF +/- PTS
Kevin Garnett, PF266-160-01-108820224+1613
Paul Pierce, SF414-91-42-406640012+1511
Kendrick Perkins, C335-70-13-43111400204+813
Ray Allen, SG3610-154-60-102220013+524
Rajon Rondo, PG446-170-12-2145115111+1014
BENCH MIN FGM-A 3PM-A FTM-A OREB DREB REB AST STL BLK TO PF +/- PTS
Rasheed Wallace, C202-110-30-103300211-104
Brian Scalabrine, PF20-00-00-000000000-50
Marquis Daniels, SG130-00-00-010100021-190
Tony Allen, SG72-50-00-010100020-34
Glen Davis, PF162-40-00-021320002-124
Shelden Williams, PFDNP COACH'S DECISION
TOTALS
FGM-A 3PM-A FTM-A OREB DREB REB AST STL BLK TO PF
PTS

37-845-158-138354321571018
87

44.0%33.3%61.5%
Fast break points: 11
Points in the paint: 40
Team TO ( points off ): 11 (16)
+/- denotes team's net points while the player is on the court.
LOS ANGELES LAKERS
STARTERS MIN FGM-A 3PM-A FTM-A OREB DREB REB AST STL BLK TO PF +/- PTS
Ron Artest, SF386-141-32-235831114-1315
Pau Gasol, PF377-120-08-834710332+222
Andrew Bynum, C287-150-00-236900014-1414
Derek Fisher, PG251-90-31-302211002-123
Shannon Brown, PG392-91-13-504441122+28
BENCH MIN FGM-A 3PM-A FTM-A OREB DREB REB AST STL BLK TO PF +/- PTS
Lamar Odom, PF345-91-22-32121432214+1413
Josh Powell, C30-10-00-001101000+10
Sasha Vujacic, SG143-60-20-013420112+46
Jordan Farmar, PG232-71-50-201100010+115
Kobe Bryant, SGDNP SPRAINED LEFT ANKLE
Adam Morrison, SFDNP COACH'S DECISION
D.J. Mbenga, CDNP COACH'S DECISION
TOTALS
FGM-A 3PM-A FTM-A OREB DREB REB AST STL BLK TO PF
PTS

33-824-1616-2512385014681020
86

40.2%25.0%64.0%
Fast break points: 14
Points in the paint: 42
Team TO ( points off ): 12 (15)
+/- denotes team's net points while the player is on the court.

Dimensions

House has been a huge help to the club, and his shooting was a key in the win over Sacramento Tuesday (the three second quarter treys helped open a 10-point lead). But the Celts see him as basically a spot-up shooter from the perimeter. Eddie catches; Eddie shoots.

And when he has room and time to set his feet, Eddie usually hits.But Robinson can score in more ways, and his offensive package could mean a great deal in spreading the threat through the rotation.His extra dimensions would make the Celts more difficult to defend.

Robinson’s abilities on the pick and roll will keep opponents more honest because he is just as likely to turn the corner and drive as he is to pull up for a jumper.And while Robinson isn’t the true point guard the Celtics have been seeking as a backup to Rajon Rondo he is a better ballhandler than House.

LINK

The Eddie House Luxury

The funny part of all this is that, for the past two trade deadlines, the Celtics have gone out to get someone to take House’s minutes. In 2008 it was Sam Cassell, and last year it was Marbury. In each case, House had the job back by the end of the year, most famously stepping out of the shadows and limited playing time in the ’08 postseason and playing a large role in the championship run.

LINK

At the beginning of 2008 playoffs, I distinctly remember writing a piece entitled Is Sam Cassell the new Eddie House? It did indeed appear that Eddie House had lost his job to the Alien. But when Cassell failed to perform consistently, Doc enjoyed the luxury of being able to call Eddie's number, and, as House would prove time and again, #50 rose to the occasion and played an indispensable role in helping Boston bring home banner 18. The same thing happened all over again last year with Stephon Marbury.

Who will Doc call on if the Nate Robinson experiment fails?

More Nate Shortcomings

NATE ROBINSON gives the Celtics electric scoring, a short-circuited understanding of the game, no defense, foolish decision-making in the clutch, and a profound lack of seriousness -- plus he's also not wired to pass the ball. He's at his best when his team is down by 20+ points and there's no pressure for him to make wise decisions.

LINK

The Celtics have been interested in Robinson for months, and the sparkplug guard has the ability to score 30 points in 20 minutes or on other nights go 2 for 15.

LINK

Trade Potentially Reduces Celtics Roster to 12

Army Update

Is this KG's Last Year?

Rage, rage against the dying of the light, Dylan Thomas wrote, and for nearly 60 years since then, sportswriters have applied that refrain to athletes nearing the end of their playing days. Because, y'know, it's so poetic. And it does seem to capture much of what happens as the gusts of time cause that competitive flame to flicker.

In Kevin Garnett's case, though, there's nothing wrong with his light. Burns as fierce and strong as ever. It's his lantern that isn't in very good shape.

To see Garnett at age 33, his right leg sheathed in a black support sleeve from kneecap to ankle, his gait noticeably slowed and flattened from what it had been only a couple years ago, is to see and feel with each stride most of the 40,861 minutes he already has logged in regular season games, along with 3,162 more in All-Star and postseason play. He isn't exactly High Priest Imhotep out on the hardwood, dragging the leg Mummy-style, but if you isolate on the Boston Celtics' 7-foot forward, you will see him hop every so often to keep up. Or slide. Or otherwise cut a corner or find an angle that gets him where he wants to be without the explosiveness he once took for granted
.

LINK

The rest of the world has finally joined us conspiracy theorists who long suspected that news about KG's knee wasn't lacking, it was just bad news and neither KG nor the Celtics brass cared to share it with the rest of us. It's hard to read a Celtics-related post anymore without seeing the phrase "shadow of his former self" when the Ticket is being discussed.

World class athletes have a couple of choices as Father Time exerts his limitations over youthful strength, speed, and agility. You can go the route of Rocky Marciano and Sandy Koufax, leave the game at the height of your powers or nearly so, or you can hang on and hang on and hang on. Kevin Garnett won't leave the game at the height of his powers, but he'll be damned if we seem him hanging on like Muhammad Ali or Michael Jordan.

So when will KG hang 'em up?

The answer depends in part on how much Garnett's game improves from here to April.

Say he doesn't improve at all.

Then the next question is how far do the Celtics get in the playoffs? If they get squashed in the first round with KG floundering, it says here KG is done, with Sheed following closely behind. Now suppose they get to the ECFs or NBA Finals but lose. Does he lace them up for another year? I don't know. He'd probably return for camp and see how it goes.

Either way, soak up what you can now, Celtics fans. The Big Fella may not be around these parts much longer.

Lakers Fan Loves the Celtics

Even though I hated the Celtics, I still dug Paul Pierce. Loved his game, loved his moxie, loved everything about him. I didn't necessarily think Doc Rivers was the greatest coach, but he was a likable man. Then they had to go and trade for Ray freaking Allen and Kevin fudging Garnett. Three of my favorite players in the league, and one of the more likable coaches, suddenly were rocking with the friggin' Celtics. This was bad news.

It took all the joy out of hating the Celtics. How am I going to "hate" a team with PP, Jesus Shuttlesworth, KG and Doc? Even when they completely bullied the Lakers in the 2008 Finals, I couldn't coax any loathing. On the real, deep down, I was kinda happy for them. I admired the way Boston played and wished the Lakers were more like them.

LINK

Lakers Favored by 3.5

LINK

If you want more info from Vegas, here you go:

Boston has been one of the biggest money burners in the NBA since the first of the year. They’ve only covered 4 of their L17 games and have been horrible against the Western Conference this season with a 4-13 ATS mark. And for all of the talk of a ‘revenge spot’, the Celtics have been lousy in them–they’re 1-5 ATS when trying to ‘avenge’ a home loss and 3-12 in revenge spots overall. Celtics are also 0-7 against the Pacific Division this year. Lakers aren’t a great spread team but the Celtics are strictly a ‘go against’ from a wagering standpoint at this juncture and that’s exactly what we’re going to do.

LINK

Done Deal (Giddens Likely Included)

A league souce close to negotiations just said the Celtics and Knicks have finalized a trade that will send Eddie House to the Knicks in exchange for guard Nate Robinson. A second source also confirmed that Celtics forward J.R. Giddens has likely been included in the deal. There is also still much that could happen, with the Knicks still attempting to send other players to other teams. “(Giddens) is probably going to be part of this,” said the source. “And at the end of the day Eddie is probably going to end up in New York. But there are so many moving parts to this, a number of things can still happen.”

LINK

Might Nate Surprise Us on Defense?

You may recall that sources had the Celtics turning their focus after missing out on Caron Butler toward improving on House’s defense. In this regard, some close to the Knicks did a double-take when told that was one of the reasons the Celts wanted Robinson. But he is seen by some as a pretty good defender on the ball, and some feel he can maintain at least to some smaller degree the type of pressure Rondo presents. And with the way the Celtics use rotations and schemes, it is hoped he will fit into the formula.

LINK

A huge part of defense is athletic ability. Just ask Dennis Rodman. Nate Robinson isn't lacking in this department. For NBA players, another component is height. Smaller players get shot over, passed over, and dunked over. Nate is 5'9", tiny by pro basketball standards, even for a point guard. So even if Nate had the will and desire to play defense, he's starting out with one sizable disadvantage.

The question then becomes how much he wants to play defense and how much his teammates coerce him into playing the defensive sets. At the very least, small point guards can be a pain in the ass defensively, when they wanna be. Hopefully, Nate wants to be.

It's Been Hell for KG

The power forward will turn 34 in May, and even teammates wonder how long he can continue doing the heavy lifting for a team that's also had its share of injuries. KG as in, this is KillinG him. "I don't have to watch him, I see him every day," said teammate Paul Pierce over All-Star weekend. "I'm aware it's definitely hell for him."

--Mark Heisler

Seems like old times, huh?

Celtics.

Lakers.

And our old friend Mr. Heisler weighing in. . .

The Predictive Power of Celtics-Lakers Regular Season Matchups

Season      Regular Season Result          NBA Champion
2008-09 Lakers Sweep Lakers defeat Magic
2007-08 Celtics Sweep Celtics defeat Lakers
2003-04 Lakers Sweep Pistons defeat Lakers
2001-02 Celtics Sweep Lakers defeat Nets
2000-01 Lakers Sweep Lakers defeat Nets
1999-00 Lakers Sweep Lakers defeat Pacers
1990-91 Split Bulls defeat Lakers
1988-89 Split Pistons Sweep Lakers
1987-88 Lakers Sweep Lakers defeat Pistons
1986-87 Lakers Sweep Lakers defeat Celtics
1985-86 Celtics Sweep Celtics defeat Rockets
1984-85 Split Lakers defeat Celtics
1983-84 Lakers Sweep Celtics defeat Lakers
1982-83 Celtics Sweep Sixers Sweep Lakers
1981-82 Split Lakers defeat Sixers
1980-81 Celtics Sweep Celtics defeat Rockets
1979-80 Lakers Sweep Lakers defeat Sixers
1975-76 Celtics Sweep Celtics defeat Suns
1973-74 Split Celtics defeat Bucks
1971-72 Celtics 4-0 Knicks defeat Lakers
1970-71 Lakers 4-1 Lakers defeat Knicks
1969-70 Lakers 4-2 Knicks defeat Lakers
1968-69 Lakers 4-2 Celtics defeat Lakers
1967-68 Lakers 4-3 Celtics defeat Lakers
1965-66 Celtics 7-3 Celtics defeat Lakers
1964-65 Celtics 7-3 Celtics defeat Lakers
1963-64 Celtics 6-3 Celtics defeat Warriors
1962-63 Lakers 5-4 Celtics defeat Lakers
1961-62 Celtics 6-3 Celtics defeat Lakers
1960-61 Celtics 8-2 Celtics defeat Hawks
Pre-1961 Data Not Aailable
When the Celtics and Lakers faced off in the 1984 NBA Finals, my brother, the Lakers' fan, fired this opening salvo: you know how it works. Whoever wins the season series wins the NBA championship. "Christ, I thought to myself. We're screwed." Turned out it wasn't true, even in the early days of the Magic v. Bird Era, which is the era my brother was talking about.

Still, it is interesting to see if there has been any karma-connection between the pre-season duels and the Finals victor. I'll let you make the call. But I would say that at least during the 1980s, a sweep by either team was reflective more often than not as to whom would take home the ring.

I JUST WANT TO SAY


Boston full timeout
7:05Eddie House enters the game for Rajon Rondo48-68
6:56Paul Pierce makes 3-foot jumper (Kevin Garnett assists)50-68
6:31
50-68Kobe Bryant misses 21-foot jumper
6:31Eddie House defensive rebound50-68
6:16James Posey misses 26-foot three point jumper50-68
6:15
50-68Pau Gasol defensive rebound
6:03Ray Allen shooting foul (Vladimir Radmanovic draws the foul)50-68
6:03
50-69Vladimir Radmanovic makes free throw 1 of 2
6:03
50-70Vladimir Radmanovic makes free throw 2 of 2
5:50Paul Pierce makes driving layup (Kevin Garnett assists)52-70
5:33
52-70Vladimir Radmanovic misses three point jumper
5:33Kevin Garnett defensive rebound52-70
5:24Eddie House makes 23-foot three point jumper (Paul Pierce assists)55-70
4:58
55-70Paul Pierce blocks Kobe Bryant's jumper
4:56Paul Pierce defensive rebound55-70
4:54
55-70Derek Fisher shooting foul (Ray Allen draws the foul)
4:54Ray Allen makes free throw 1 of 256-70
4:54Ray Allen makes free throw 2 of 257-70
4:33
57-72Pau Gasol makes two point shot (Kobe Bryant assists)
4:13James Posey misses three point jumper57-72
4:11
57-72Kobe Bryant defensive rebound
3:57James Posey personal foul (Lamar Odom draws the foul)57-72
3:42
57-72Derek Fisher misses 26-foot three point jumper
3:41Ray Allen defensive rebound57-72
3:30James Posey makes layup (Eddie House assists)59-72
3:09
59-72Pau Gasol misses 5-foot jumper
3:08
59-72Vladimir Radmanovic offensive rebound
3:03
59-72Derek Fisher bad pass (Ray Allen steals)
3:00Ray Allen makes driving layup61-72
2:58Los Angeles full timeout
2:58
61-72Trevor Ariza enters the game for Vladimir Radmanovic
2:58
61-72Sasha Vujacic enters the game for Lamar Odom
2:58
61-72Jordan Farmar enters the game for Derek Fisher
2:46
61-72Kobe Bryant misses 7-foot running jumper
2:43Kevin Garnett defensive rebound61-72
2:29Kevin Garnett offensive foul (Jordan Farmar draws the foul)61-72
2:29Kevin Garnett turnover61-72
2:15James Posey shooting foul (Pau Gasol draws the foul)61-72
2:15
61-73Pau Gasol makes free throw 1 of 2
2:15Tony Allen enters the game for James Posey61-73
2:15
61-73Pau Gasol misses free throw 2 of 2
2:14Kevin Garnett defensive rebound61-73
2:00Paul Pierce makes driving layup63-73
2:00
63-73Pau Gasol shooting foul (Paul Pierce draws the foul)
2:00Paul Pierce makes free throw 1 of 164-73
1:40
64-73Pau Gasol misses dunk
1:39Tony Allen defensive rebound64-73
1:34
64-73Pau Gasol personal foul (Kevin Garnett draws the foul)
1:23Eddie House makes 22-foot three point jumper (Kevin Garnett assists)67-73
0:59
67-73Kobe Bryant misses 23-foot jumper
0:58Ray Allen defensive rebound67-73
0:41
67-73Sasha Vujacic personal foul (Ray Allen draws the foul)
0:41Ray Allen makes free throw 1 of 268-73
0:41P.J. Brown enters the game for Kevin Garnett68-73
0:41Ray Allen makes free throw 2 of 269-73
0:16
69-73Jordan Farmar misses 30-foot three point jumper
0:16Ray Allen defensive rebound69-73
0:01P.J. Brown makes slam dunk (Paul Pierce assists)71-73
0:01
71-73Sasha Vujacic misses 63-foot three point jumper
0:00
71-73Los Angeles offensive rebound
0:00End of the 3rd Quarter
4th Quarter Summary
TIMEBOSTONSCORELOS ANGELES
12:00Start of the 4th Quarter
11:37P.J. Brown shooting foul (Ronny Turiaf draws the foul)71-73
11:37
71-73Ronny Turiaf misses free throw 1 of 2
11:37
71-73Los Angeles offensive rebound
11:37
71-73Ronny Turiaf misses free throw 2 of 2
11:36P.J. Brown defensive rebound71-73
11:23Paul Pierce misses 17-foot jumper71-73
11:23Boston offensive rebound71-73
11:23
71-73Ronny Turiaf loose ball foul (Leon Powe draws the foul)
11:15Paul Pierce offensive foul (Kobe Bryant draws the foul)71-73
11:15Paul Pierce turnover71-73
11:00
71-73Kobe Bryant misses 20-foot jumper
10:59
71-73Sasha Vujacic offensive rebound
10:47
71-73Sasha Vujacic misses 24-foot three point jumper
10:45Leon Powe defensive rebound71-73
10:30Eddie House misses 20-foot jumper71-73
10:30P.J. Brown offensive rebound71-73
10:25
71-73Sasha Vujacic personal foul (Ray Allen draws the foul)
10:12Leon Powe makes 7-foot jumper73-73
9:55
73-73Kobe Bryant misses 10-foot jumper
9:52Ray Allen defensive rebound73-73
9:42Leon Powe misses layup73-73
9:41Leon Powe misses tip shot73-73
9:41Leon Powe offensive rebound73-73
9:38
73-73Sasha Vujacic defensive rebound
9:32
73-75Kobe Bryant makes 2-foot two point shot
9:04Paul Pierce makes 18-foot jumper75-75
8:47Paul Pierce personal foul (Kobe Bryant draws the foul)75-75
8:47
75-75 Official timeout
8:47Kevin Garnett enters the game for Leon Powe75-75
8:33
75-75Lamar Odom misses 28-foot three point jumper
8:32Eddie House defensive rebound75-75
8:14Kevin Garnett misses 6-foot two point shot75-75
8:11
75-75Jordan Farmar defensive rebound
7:58
75-77Kobe Bryant makes 20-foot jumper
7:39Eddie House misses 17-foot jumper75-77
7:39
75-77Jordan Farmar defensive rebound
7:26
75-77Kobe Bryant misses jumper
7:24Kevin Garnett defensive rebound75-77
7:13Kevin Garnett makes 7-foot jumper77-77
6:52
77-77Ronny Turiaf misses 11-foot jumper
6:50Eddie House defensive rebound77-77
6:33Ronny Turiaf blocks P.J. Brown's 5-foot jumper77-77
6:31
77-77Sasha Vujacic defensive rebound
6:24
77-79Lamar Odom makes layup (Kobe Bryant assists)
6:05
77-79Ronny Turiaf personal foul (Paul Pierce draws the foul)
6:05James Posey enters the game for P.J. Brown77-79
6:05
77-79Pau Gasol enters the game for Ronny Turiaf
5:52Paul Pierce misses 17-foot jumper77-79
5:52
77-79Jordan Farmar defensive rebound
5:48
77-81Kobe Bryant makes slam dunk (Jordan Farmar assists)
5:47Boston full timeout
5:24James Posey makes 25-foot three point jumper (Ray Allen assists)80-81
5:03
80-81Kobe Bryant misses layup
5:01
80-81Los Angeles offensive rebound
4:54
80-83Pau Gasol makes jumper
4:45
80-83Pau Gasol shooting foul (Kevin Garnett draws the foul)
4:45Kevin Garnett makes free throw 1 of 281-83
4:45Kevin Garnett makes free throw 2 of 282-83
4:22
82-83Lamar Odom misses layup
4:20James Posey defensive rebound82-83
4:07Eddie House makes 18-foot jumper (Paul Pierce assists)84-83
3:47
84-83Pau Gasol bad pass (Ray Allen steals)
3:47Boston 20 Sec. timeout
3:31Paul Pierce misses 26-foot three point jumper84-83
3:31Ray Allen offensive rebound84-83
3:15Ray Allen makes two point shot (Paul Pierce assists)86-83
2:44
86-83Sasha Vujacic misses 19-foot jumper
2:43
86-83Lamar Odom offensive rebound
2:31
86-83Jordan Farmar misses 26-foot three point jumper
2:30Paul Pierce defensive rebound86-83
2:10Kevin Garnett makes 8-foot jumper88-83
2:10Los Angeles full timeout
2:10
88-83Derek Fisher enters the game for Lamar Odom
2:10
88-83Vladimir Radmanovic enters the game for Jordan Farmar
2:02Paul Pierce shooting foul (Kobe Bryant draws the foul)88-83
2:02
88-84Kobe Bryant makes free throw 1 of 2
2:02
88-85Kobe Bryant makes free throw 2 of 2
1:44
88-85Pau Gasol personal foul (Paul Pierce draws the foul)
1:44Paul Pierce misses free throw 1 of 288-85
1:44Boston offensive rebound88-85
1:44Paul Pierce makes free throw 2 of 289-85
1:38Paul Pierce personal foul (Kobe Bryant draws the foul)89-85
1:30
89-87Kobe Bryant makes driving layup
1:13James Posey makes 27-foot three point jumper (Ray Allen assists)92-87
1:04
92-89Derek Fisher makes 23-foot jumper (Kobe Bryant assists)
0:46
92-89Kobe Bryant personal foul (Paul Pierce draws the foul)
0:46Boston full timeout
0:46Paul Pierce makes free throw 1 of 293-89
0:46Paul Pierce makes free throw 2 of 294-89
0:40
94-91Pau Gasol makes dunk (Kobe Bryant assists)
0:16Ray Allen makes two point shot96-91
0:15Los Angeles full timeout
0:15Los Angeles 20 Sec. timeout
0:11
96-91Sasha Vujacic misses 21-foot jumper
0:10
96-91Pau Gasol offensive rebound
0:05
96-91Pau Gasol misses 22-foot jumper
0:03Kevin Garnett defensive rebound96-91
0:03
96-91Pau Gasol personal foul (Eddie House draws the foul)
0:03Eddie House makes free throw 1 of 297-91