April 27, 1980
No More Games.
There'll be none in Boston Garden, anyway, not until next October.
Philadelphia
put the struggling, squirming, Boston Celtics out of their collective
misery yesterday afternoon with a take-no-prisoners 105-94 triumph that
gave the streaking Sixers (who boast a 10-2 playoff record thus far) a
4-1 triumph in the Eastern Conference final.
The
76ers ended Boston's season by again stifling the Celtic offense. The
Sixers have become a great - indeed, almost frightening - defensive
team. They are playing with a purpose, and they are making a prophet of
Julius Erving, who declared before this series began: "The Celtics paid
the price all season, but we are ready to pay the price now."
It
takes tremendous desire to play the sort of swarming defense the 76ers
played in this series, and no one knew better than the Celtics
themselves what had happened to their offense.
"They played excellent basketball," said Chris Ford. "They deserved to beat us the way they played defense."
The
76ers totally controlled the last three games of this series. The
latest that Boston led in any of the three was at 60-59, in Game 3. The
Celtics' latest advantage in either of the last two games was 18-17 in
the first period yesterday. "We never got a chance to exploit their
weaknesses," said Dave Cowens. "We were always coming from behind, and
we never had a chance to break them down."
There were
two key junctures in yesterday's game. The first came in the final
minute of the second quarter, when a Celtic run of eight uninterrupted
points brought them within two at 54-52 with 57 seconds to play in the
half. First, Darryl Dawkins (18 points, 9 rebounds) sank two free
throws. On the subsequent Boston possession, Larry Bird (a frustrated
5-for-19 shooter) was nailed for an offensive foul. But that was a mild
hurt compared with the carpenter's nail the Sixers were about to drive
through Boston's heart. For when Caldwell Jones missed a jump shot with
16 seconds left, Maurice Cheeks somehow pulled down the rebound in a
forest of white jerseys and brought the ball back out. Bobby Jones
rewarded his little teammate's hustle with a corner jumper with one
second left to send the Sixers into the locker room leading by a 58-52
score.
The next big sequence occurred in the third
period. A beautiful Bird pass to Ford for a layup had pulled Boston
within five, 70-65, at the 4:54 mark. Cowens then blocked a Dawkins
shot, but the arrogant, omniscient Earl Strom, who had been attempting
to control the game like some sort of Third World power from the start,
called a foul on Cowens from his vantage point, 10 feet from midcourt
and approximately 30 feet from the play. Dawkins sank both shots.
Cowens
swung in for a hook. The shot missed, and there appeared to be contact.
No call. Dawkins countered with a 15-foot baseline turnaround, and the
Celtics called for a timeout. Cowens yelled one brief remark at Strom,
who immediately hit him with a technical. Steve Mix (who may be the most
productive short-term player in captivity) made the shot to give Philly
a 75-65 lead. The Celtics would cut the lead below double figures only
twice again, and the last such incursion was at 79-71 with 1:53 left in
the third quarter. The final 14 minutes, in fact, were a pleasure cruise
for the Sixers.
The 76ers won this game without much
tangible help from their spiritual leader, the renowned Julius Erving.
The Doctor never asserted himself in this one, but he didn't have to,
not with the standout efforts being submitted by Lionel Hollins (24
points, 7 assists and positively brilliant defense), Bobby Jones (19
points in 18 minutes, including 6-for-6 first-half shooting) and
Caldwell Jones, who was doing the defensive job on Bird. Dawkins also
came through when most needed, scoring 11 points in the crucial third
quarter.
There were two ties and 12 lead changes in the
first 9:15, but the game slowly tilted toward the visitors during a
seven-minute stretch of the second period, during which time the Sixers
went from a 32-31 lead to a 54-44 advantage. The Sixers reached a
defensive peak after the Celtics had scored twice to reduce a one-time
10-point deficit to six at 48-42. Philly harassed the Celtics into three
consecutive bad passes for turnovers, scoring on the first and third
steals. It may have been as bad as the Celtics looked offensively all
year.
Bird's problems were only partly the result of
the defense of Messrs. Jones and Jones. He also missed layups and open
jumpers that had nothing to do with defense. That was in addition to the
shots he was scared out of, or the up-and-down violation Caldwell
forced him into on one foul-line jumper. Cowens played his best
offensive game of the series, but with Bird firing blanks, the Celtics
still needed more. Fitch tried Pete Maravich, but it wasn't The Pistol's
day (2 for 8). Perhaps the best Boston offense was generated by the
quintet of Cowens, Bird, Cedric Maxwell, Tiny Archibald and Gerald
Henderson, who created that second-quarter minus-two situation, but they
were not seen together in the second half.
And so the
most surprising, enervating season in Celtic history is over. The Great
Overachievers went as far as their dedication and unity could carry
them, and that was a lot farther than anyone ever dreamed they would go
back in September. What Philadelphia did was reaffirm the oldest of NBA
maxims, which is that defense wins in the playoffs.
The Celtics were beaten by a good team playing its best ball. Should that be so hard to accept?
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