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duncan228
06-14-2010, 06:23 PM
Lakers down to last gasp against Celtics (http://sports.yahoo.com/nba/news?slug=ap-nbafinals)

Boston at Los Angeles (http://sports.yahoo.com/nba/preview?gid=2010061513)
Game info: 9:00 pm EDT Tue Jun 15, 2010
TV: ABC, TSN
By Greg Beacham

Down 3-2 in the NBA finals against an old foe that keeps finding new ways to beat them, the Los Angeles Lakers are going to need a big Hollywood ending to escape this jam with another championship.

That’s exactly where they’ll make their last stand against the Boston Celtics.

Game 6 is back home Tuesday night at Staples Center, where the Lakers are 9-1 in the postseason, with everybody from Kobe Bryant to the Lakers’ bedraggled bench playing with much more passion and confidence.

“If you look at it, they’ve come home and carried the 3-2 lead back,” Lakers coach Phil Jackson said. “It’s basically home court, home court. Now we’re going back to home court to win it. That’s the way it’s supposed to be, isn’t it?”

Sure, on paper. But two straight losses in Boston led to a dire series deficit for the Lakers, who hadn’t even trailed in any playoff series this season. The Celtics have won three of the last four games, and they’re responsible for Los Angeles’ only home loss of the playoffs.

So why didn’t Jackson or Bryant seem particularly worried before they headed out on their final cross country flight of the postseason? Throughout a trying season filled with injuries and big-game setbacks since a Christmas Day loss to Cleveland, the Lakers have always been able to rise when they absolutely needed to do it.

Jackson even described the Lakers’ locker room as “spirited” after losing Game 5 in their lowest-scoring performance of the postseason in the 92-86 loss. For all their struggles in Boston, the Lakers realize they only have to defend their home court to win their 16th title.

“We have a challenge, obviously, down 3-2,” said Bryant, who scored 38 points in Game 5 while his struggling teammates only managed 48. “We let a couple opportunities slip away, but it is what it is. Now you go home, you’ve got two games at home that you need to win, and you pull your boots up and get to work.”

If Los Angeles survives, a champion will be crowned Thursday in Game 7.

Heading into the finals, the Celtics believed they could beat the Lakers, even with Bryant at his spectacular best, if they shut down his teammates. After all, that’s what Boston did two years ago in the finals—and so far, it’s working splendidly again.

Bryant is averaging 30.2 points per game, while Pau Gasol averages 18.8 points and 10 rebounds despite glaring inconsistency in his game in Boston. That’s just about it: Nobody else in purple and gold is averaging more than Andrew Bynum’s 9.6 points per game.

Yet after losing Game 1 and only surviving Game 2 with Ray Allen’s 3-point shooting binge and Rajon Rondo’s late-game poise, the Celtics aren’t fooled into thinking they’ve got the Lakers on the run in Los Angeles. Boston’s current starting five has never lost a playoff series for reasons that go beyond their talent.

“They’re playing at home. Home is always where your heart is,” Boston’s Kevin Garnett said. “With the severity of the game, it’s all-out on both ends for both teams. This will probably be the hardest game of the season, if not of the series, if not of everybody’s career, this game coming up.”

Yet two straight losses undeniably have frazzled the Lakers a bit, with Bryant noticeably furious on the court while Game 5 slipped away. Even Jackson seemed a bit testier than his usual placid self, yelling at Bryant and Ron Artest during the game and later attempting to inspire his team in the fourth quarter with a false bit of information about the Celtics’ propensity for blowing late-game leads.

Jackson likely senses the biggest danger yet to his streak of 47 straight playoff series victories after winning Game 1. The Celtics sense a golden opportunity for their 18th championship and a chance to join the Boston greats who won multiple titles while repeatedly denying the Lakers nine previous times in the NBA finals.

“The Lakers … got homecourt advantage, but we’ve played the best all year on the road,” Boston coach Doc Rivers said. “We’re going to have to beat them at their best, because they’re going to be great there, and we can’t expect anything else.”

Los Angeles’ inside game has been its most decided advantage throughout the season, yet Boston largely has outplayed Gasol, the limping Bynum and Lamar Odom down low. The Celtics outscored Los Angeles in the paint 46-32 in Game 5, while the Lakers blocked just one shot—and Bryant did it.

Aside from Artest and his miserable series, the Lakers’ least effective regular has been Odom, the reserve dynamo who played a major role in their Western Conference finals victory over Phoenix. Odom, who said he had symptoms of the flu this weekend, had eight points and eight rebounds in Game 5, along with three turnovers in a fairly passive performance.

The rest of the Lakers’ reserves were even worse: Sasha Vujacic scored five points, Jordan Farmar had one, and formerly reliable Shannon Brown played just 19 seconds.

And then there’s Artest, the only newcomer to last season’s championship roster. With the Boston crowd vocally urging him to shoot, Artest went 2 for 9 in Game 5 to drop to 13 for 43 in the series.

His inconsistent offensive skills and shaky ball-handling abilities have abandoned him entirely in the finals, leaving only his defense—and he played precious little of it in Game 5, when Pierce scored 27 points with Artest and Bryant taking turns on him.

“The offensive part of (Artest’s) game kind of comes and goes,” Bryant said. “He does a great job giving us great production most nights. I just thought defensively we weren’t very good at all. We didn’t get any stops (in the third quarter of Game 5). They got layup after layup after layup, and you can’t survive a team that shoots 56 percent. We’re normally a great defensive team.”

*********************

Team Stat Leaders

Points
Paul Pierce Bos 18.3
Kobe Bryant LAL 27.0

Rebounds
Kendrick Perkins Bos 7.6
Pau Gasol LAL 11.3

Assists
Rajon Rondo Bos 9.8
Kobe Bryant LAL 5.0

*********************

Series Breakdown (http://sports.yahoo.com/nba/playoffs/2010/boslal;_ylt=AoGDDJHz3JQtufJlPSZycbiPvLYF)

Giuseppe
06-14-2010, 06:25 PM
It's fuck, or, walk time.

easy7
06-14-2010, 06:32 PM
Precious is getting ready to sing...

Giuseppe
06-14-2010, 06:37 PM
Precious is getting ready to sing...

So says a rabid San Antonio Celtics fan.

ChrisRichards
06-14-2010, 06:38 PM
Phil Jackson's undefeated in series when winning game 1 (47-0)


The team that wins game 3 of the series when it is tied in the 2-3-2 format is undefeated.


Boston 11-0 in series in the finals when up 3-2


Celtics are undefeated when Rondo, Pierce, Allen, KG and Perkins are in the starting lineup.


When Boston holds LA under 90 points they win the game. If LA scores 100+ against Boston they automatically wins.

Giuseppe
06-14-2010, 06:40 PM
Phil Jackson's undefeated in series when winning game 1 (47-0)


The team that wins game 3 of the series when it is tied in the 2-3-2 format is undefeated.


Boston 11-0 in series in the finals when up 3-2


Celtics are undefeated when Rondo, Pierce, Allen, KG and Perkins are in the starting lineup.


When Boston holds LA under 90 points they win the game. If LA scores 100+ against Boston they automatically wins.

The Celtics stomped a mudhole in the Heat's ass and walked it dry.

TheMACHINE
06-14-2010, 06:40 PM
ChrisR...do us a favor and create a thread in which you say that the Celtics will win game 6 guaranteed.

easy7
06-14-2010, 06:56 PM
So says a rabid San Antonio Celtics fan.

I just want for my bud to join me for a sandwich meal. Nothing wrong with that,,, :toast

NBA Fanatic
06-14-2010, 10:46 PM
Here is one that says that the Lakers have to get stops and then get out in transition.

"It will be important for the Lakers to convert stops into easy scoring opportunities. In order for Los Angeles to put some pressure on Boston's defense they will have to get out in transition and score some easy baskets."

It also says that the Lakers have to show some heart and determination if they are going to force a Game 7.

Here is the link if interested:

http://www.associatedcontent.com/article/5488478/2010_nba_finals_lakers_vs_celtics_game.html?cat=9

tdunk21
06-14-2010, 10:49 PM
hopefully this is the last game of this season....

duncan228
06-14-2010, 11:25 PM
A Lot On The Line For Lakers In L.A. (http://espn.go.com/nba/dailydime/_/page/dime-100615/daily-dime)
By Chris Broussard
ESPN The Magazine

One thing and one thing only should be on the Lakers' minds Tuesday: winning Game 6.

Don't think about Game 7, about how hard it will be to beat Boston twice. Don't think about history, about how a Finals loss to the hated Celtics would be worse than a loss to any other team. Don't think about the potential death of your potential dynasty, about how Phil Jackson might coach his last game for the Lakers.

Just think about avoiding elimination and leave the thoughts of what else is at stake to us. Because there is indeed a lot more than the 2010 NBA title on the line.

First of all, there's poor Ron Artest. He's already destined to go down as a woeful underachiever. Although he's had a very productive career, his bizarre, sometimes violent behavior has undoubtedly lessened his impact on the court. But if the Lakers lose this series, he'll have one more negative on his résumé, and he knows that better than anyone. Back in September, Artest told us to blame him if the Lakers don't repeat as champions.

"They won last year, and I'm the new addition," said Artest, who's averaging a mere 7.8 points on a sorry 30 percent shooting in the Finals. "The fans expect to repeat. Everybody in L.A. expects a second ring. And if we don't, then yeah, they should point it right at me, throwing tomatoes and everything."

From the looks of things, this could get messy, and Artest's struggles near the end of Game 5 won't compel vegetable-hurling fans to call off the dogs. With 43 seconds left and the Lakers having cut a 12-point deficit to five, Artest missed two free throws. Then, 15 seconds later, with the Lakers still within five, he failed to foul Rajon Rondo, who's shooting 27 percent from the line in this series. Artest's brain lock allowed 10 seconds to run off the clock before Derek Fisher was forced to foul sharpshooter Ray Allen, who sank both free throws to end all doubt.

Asked after the game whether he feels extra pressure because of his preseason declaration, Artest said:

"No. That's something you worry about afterwards. I'm not thinking about that right now."

Good.

Second, Kobe Bryant can never be Michael Jordan if the Lakers lose. But some coaches, executives and scouts within the league believe that Kobe is equal to if not better than Jordan. They say he's a better shooter and ball handler. One of Jordan's former teammates once strongly implied to me that Kobe was MJ's superior.

"All I know is Mike never scored 81 points in a game," he said. "And believe me, he tried."

But Mike also never lost in his six trips to the Finals. If Kobe fails to lead a Lakers comeback, his record will be 4-3 in the Finals, with his crew being the favorite in each of its three defeats. And although the Celtics are clearly the deeper team, the Lakers have the best player (Kobe), the best big man (Pau Gasol) and the best coach in league history on their side. The clubs are evenly matched, but if Kobe is to be Jordan-esque, he has to be the difference and get the Lakers over the top.

Some will say Kobe can't be even the greatest Laker if he falls short in this series because beating the dreaded Celtics is a prerequisite for that honor. Magic Johnson and Kareem Abdul-Jabbar won two titles at Boston's expense. Kobe, on the other hand, is on the verge of losing two.

I don't agree with that argument. I think Kobe is neck and neck with Magic as the greatest Laker of them all whether he wins or loses this series. After all, Magic never won any of his five rings without Kareem, but Kobe has one title sans Shaq. I'm not the ultimate judge, though, and I have a feeling that Los Angeles fans demand the blood of the Green from their all-time Super Laker.

Speaking of 7-foot teammates, Gasol could be branded as Mister Softee again if the Lakers go down. It's not fair because Gasol has been strong for most of this series, averaging 18.8 points and 10 rebounds on 52 percent shooting. And quite honestly, he hasn't gotten the touches he deserves, having taken fewer than 15 shots in each of the Finals' five games.

But history isn't always fair, and Gasol is likely to be one of the scapegoats if the purple-and-gold fold. In L.A.'s Game 2 loss, he scored just one of his 25 points in the fourth quarter. In the Game 4 loss, the ancient Celtic, 35-year-old Rasheed Wallace, locked him up in the fourth, holding him to just four points. And in Game 5, Gasol scored only 12 points overall.

With numbers like that, plus a lanky build and finesse game, being arguably the best big man in the league might not shield Gasol from wearing the "soft" tag in defeat.

Even the great Zen Master won't get away unscathed. Sure, with 10 titles he'll still be recognized as perhaps the greatest coach in NBA history, but a second loss to Doc Rivers definitely would be a chink in his armor. This also could be the first time in 48 tries that Jackson loses a playoff series after winning the first game. It's in an evenly matched series like this that a coach, especially an all-time great, is supposed to make the difference.

But Rivers, not Jackson, has pushed all the right buttons. Jackson hasn't gotten Gasol more shots. Jackson didn't make sure Artest fouled Rondo near the end of Game 5. Jackson hasn't found a way to crack Boston's airtight defense and push his high-scoring club past 94 points in the past four games.

So the Lakers stand to lose more than a game and a championship on Tuesday. Bryant, Jackson, Gasol and Artest could lose a slice of their reputations as well.

shelshor
06-15-2010, 01:11 PM
Referee Assignments
Tue. Jun 15
Boston @ L.A. Lakers: Monty McCutchen; Joe DeRosa; Ken Mauer

Mavs_man_41
06-15-2010, 01:14 PM
duncan, gettin her troll on

tee, hee

duncan228
06-15-2010, 03:16 PM
Game 6 offers Kobe & Co. shot at revenge for 2008 beating (http://sportsillustrated.cnn.com/2010/writers/ian_thomsen/06/15/game6.preview/index.html)
Ian Thomsen
SI.com

An opportunity.

You know that is how Kobe Bryant views Game 6 of the NBA Finals here Tuesday. You know because that's how he has always viewed the last-second shots that have defined him. He hasn't worried about missing them and he hasn't worried about losing the game. On the contrary, he has embraced the upside, the opportunity to accomplish something memorable.

His Lakers face elimination after losing the last two games in Boston to trail the Celtics 3-2. One more loss and he will have lost a Finals to the Celtics for the second time in three years. But Bryant didn't become the league's hungriest star on that kind of negative thinking.

He is focused on winning the next two games, a comeback that will earn him a fifth championship and repay Boston for the 39-point beating in Game 6 of the Finals two years ago. "You just go into the next game," he said after the Lakers' 92-86 loss in Game 5 Sunday. "We let a couple opportunities slip away. Now you go home, you've got two games at home that you need to win, and you pull your boots up and get to work."

There are reasons for worry. Andrew Bynum's swollen right knee has limited the Lakers 7-foot center to eight points, four rebounds and no blocks in 44 minutes over the last two losses. His inconsequential play enabled the Celtics to focus on limiting Pau Gasol to 12 points on 12 shots in Game 5, a decrease in production that the Lakers cannot survive Tuesday. "He's been consistent for us for a while now," said Bryant, taking the high road with his All-Star teammate, "so he can afford to have a bad game every once in a while."

That ineffectiveness convinced Bryant to attempt to take over Game 5 as he scored 23 straight Lakers points over 14 minutes of the second and third quarters. But the problem he needs to fix is at the defensive end, where the Celtics scored 35 points to pull away during his torrid streak on their way to shooting 56.3 percent overall. "They got all the hustle points in terms of loose balls and offensive rebounds down the stretch,'' said Bryant. "Defensively, we weren't very good at all. Last game it was the fourth quarter, this game it was the third quarter we didn't get any stops. They got layup after layup after layup. We're normally a great defensive team."

For their part, the Celtics will be seeking to build on their recent gains by Paul Pierce and Kevin Garnett, who each had his best game of the Finals Sunday. They will aim to control the boards (because that has been crucial throughout this series), to hold the Lakers under 42-percent shooting for a third straight game, to limit Rajon Rondo's turnovers after he was frustrated by committing seven Sunday, and to rediscover Ray Allen's range as he has missed 21 straight threes after draining a Finals record eight of them in Boston's Game 2 win in L.A.

Above all, the Celtics will try to convince themselves that Game 6 is a must-win opportunity for them as well. "When they won Game 3," said coach Doc Rivers of the Celtics' loss at home, "from that point on we felt every next game is a must game. Each game is Game 7. We said it in Game 4, we said it [in Game 5] and we'll say it again. That's how we have to approach the game. We lost our wiggle room by losing that home game. The Lakers played well enough to have homecourt advantage all year, and so it's to their advantage."

The Lakers responded to the '08 Finals loss by improving their toughness and grit. Now it's up to L.A. to treat Boston as the Lakers themselves were treated in Game 6 two years ago. Bryant does not plan on making any Rockne speeches.

"Just man up and play," he said. "What the hell is the big deal? If I have to say something to them, then we don't deserve to be champions. We're down 3 2, go home, win one game, go into the next one. Simple as that."

duncan228
06-15-2010, 03:28 PM
Lamar Odom, Andrew Bynum Ailing as Elimination Game Looms (http://nba.fanhouse.com/2010/06/15/lamar-odom-andrew-bynum-ailing-as-elimination-game-looms/)
By Chris Tomasson

The last thing the Lakers need is another front-line player hampered. But they're sure hoping that won't be the case.

Power forward Lamar Odom was limited in Tuesday morning's shoot-around with what the team called sinusitis. The Lakers already have center Andrew Bynum playing with a torn meniscus in his right knee.

"He's going to be all right, we hope,'' Lakers coach Phil Jackson said of Odom after the shoot-around. The Lakers were preparing for Thursday night's Game 6 of the Finals at the Staples Center, while down 3-2 to Boston. "He got out and tried to shoot with teammates a little.''

Odom, who will play in Game 6 coming off the bench, has had a mediocre Finals, averaging just 7.6 points and 5.8 rebounds. While Odom wasn't available after the shoot-around, Lakers guard Derek Fisher shrugged off any concern about his health.

"He has the sniffles,'' Fisher said. "Just bad timing. Allergies or whatever. But he'll be fine.''

The Lakers hope the same can be said about Bynum, who has played with a bad knee throughout the postseason and really has been hampered since tweaking it in Game 3. In the past two games, Bynum has averaged just 4.0 points and 2.0 rebounds.

"Andrew, he got out and looked at his teammates a little bit,'' Jackson said of what Bynum did during shoot-around.

Bynum, who will have surgery in early July, had six points and a rebound in the first half of the first quarter in the 92-86 Game 5 loss Sunday in Boston. But he didn't get a single point or rebound the rest of the game while playing a total of 32 minutes.

"We hope he can get together an extra couple of appearances on the floor and give us that kind of effort,'' Jackson said of Bynum trying to play more of the game the way he started Sunday.

Despite some players not at full strength, the Lakers don't seem overly worried. While they must win the final two games to take the title, both would be at home, with a possible Game 7 Thursday at the Staples Center.

"If somebody told you you could give yourself a chance to win a championship by winning one game on your homecourt and maybe setting up another opportunity two days later (at home) to win a championship, I think we'd all take that and we wouldn't run from that at all,'' said Fisher, who cautioned, though, the Lakers can't be thinking of Thursday during Tuesday's game.

Since the NBA began the 2-3-2 format in the 1985 Finals, only two of six home teams that trailed 3-2 entering Game 6 have come back to win the series. The Lakers did it against Detroit in 1988 and Houston against New York in 1994.

"I'm one of the few guys who was around or wasn't wearing diapers,'' Fisher said of 1988. "So I remember.''

The Lakers will try to do it again with Bynum hurting and their top post reserve also possibly not at full strength.