Celtics are old but good

The AP reports:

Celtics are old but good

Too old is a popular basketball criticism, the one used this season to discount the Celtics as a true title contender. Kevin Garnett and Ray Allen looked all of their 34 years in Boston’s 102-89 loss in Game 1, and Paul Pierce isn’t much younger.

”We’re not a young team. I can’t say that Ray is 29 and lie; he’s not. But it doesn’t affect how we play,” Celtics coach Doc Rivers said. ”I’m just stating a fact we are an older team, but we’re not too old. You know what I mean?

”We are an older team, we have experience. We have great experience, and there’s nothing wrong with that. I’m fine with that, and I have no problem with that. But I don’t run from that fact. But we’re not too old.”

In these finals between longtime rivals, the closest thing to trash talk so far was Pau Gasol’s misinterpreted comments which made it appear he was calling Garnett old. In fact, he was discussing how they were different players since Gasol entered the league nine years ago — and Gasol said it’s that age that’s made him a better player even as it’s diminished his physical skills.

Kobe does not care where LeBron signs

Marc Berman of the New York Post reports:

Kobe does not care where LeBron signs

“You’re asking me if LeBron is going to New York?” Kobe Bryant told The Post. “I’m trying to tell you in a polite way, I don’t give a [bleep]. “As a fan, it’s a big deal,” Kobe added. “You’re talking about LeBron and Dwyane Wade, it’s two huge names changing cities. It alters things drastically in the NBA. But I really don’t care about it.”

Byron Scott, now an ESPN broadcaster, was standing with Bryant and cracked up. “Why are people talking about LeBron anyway?” Scott said. “Let me tell you something. From me just knowing Kobe, he doesn’t give a [bleep] what everyone is talking about anyway.” “I couldn’t have said it better,” Bryant piped in…

During his formal interview session yesterday, Bryant said of the King James’ cloud over the Finals: “I don’t care about attention. It doesn’t mean anything to me.” Fact is, Bryant, despite a sore knee drained in April, despite a healing broken finger, is playing at the highest level he’s ever played. Historically speaking, Bryant is nearing Jordan’s plane of greatness. James is nowhere in that discussion, even if he has two MVPs to Bryant’s one.

Phil Jackson 47-0 in playoff series when his team wins Game 1

Ron Borges of the Boston Herald reports:

If you live in southern California and believe in numerology or history, the Los Angeles Lakers executed a one-game sweep of the Boston Celtics [team stats] Thursday night in Game 1 of the NBA Finals.

If you live in New England and believe in numerology or history, the Celtics clinched their 18th NBA title last night by losing in resounding fashion to the Lakers.

Phil Jackson 47-0 in playoffs when his team wins Game 1

That’s the beauty of statistics. You can make them say anything and they really mean nothing. Or so both sides have to hope this morning.

Between now and Sunday, when Game 2 finally arrives, much will be said about Lakers’ coach Phil Jackson’s eerie record of being 47-0 in playoff series in which his team wins Game 1.

Last night, Tony Allen grew tired of hearing about that in a hurry and countered those numbers with one of his own, a number that arguably has more bearing on these NBA Finals.

“If you want to bring that up, our starting five has never lost a (playoff) series,” Allen pointed out.

NBA Finals Game 1: Lakers beat Celtics 102-89

The AP reports:

Ron Artest and Paul Pierce went back-to-back with their elbows locked, both unwilling to yield even an inch underneath the hoop. The veteran forwards crashed to the court together and got up looking to rumble, earning double technical fouls.

And that was just in the first 27 seconds.

Lakers beat Celtics 102-89 in NBA Finals Game 1

This NBA finals rematch was rough from the opening tumble, but Kobe Bryant and Pau Gasol made sure the Los Angeles Lakers landed the first shot on the Boston Celtics.

Bryant scored 30 points, Gasol had 23 points and 14 rebounds, and defending champion Los Angeles got tough in a 102-89 victory over Boston in Game 1 on Thursday night.

Artest scored 15 points after his tangle with Pierce in the opening minute of the 12th finals meeting between the NBA’s most scintillating rivals. It was the opening salvo in a gritty physical effort against the Celtics, who memorably pushed around the Lakers while winning their 2008 finals matchup in six games.

The AP reports:

Pierce scored 24 points and Kevin Garnett added 16 after a slow start for the Celtics, who might not want to know Lakers coach Phil Jackson’s teams in Los Angeles and Chicago have won 47 straight playoff series after winning Game 1…

Ray Allen scored 12 points in just 27 minutes, saddled with constant foul trouble while trying to guard Bryant. Pierce also picked up early fouls, while Garnett simply struggled, going 7 for 16 from the field and grabbing just four rebounds—even inexplicably missing an open layup with 5 1/2 minutes to play.

The Los Angeles Times reports:

The Lakers’ 102-89 victory over the Celtics in Game 1 of the NBA Finals on Thursday night at Staples Center was not easy as the margin. Then again, after the third quarter it wasn’t that difficult. In the end the Lakers were able to win because of their ability to get the ball into the middle and, even more importantly, let Kobe Bryant shoot the ball.

Jackson dismissed the streak as any good coach would do.

“I wish I felt that way (confident),” Jackson said. “We have to play this out. We have a lot of work ahead of us. But ultimately it’s important but then the next game becomes the most important. But the first game sets the action and that is important.”

The Los Angeles Times reports:

The game was close through the first quarter, although the Lakers at one point had a six-point lead they seemed unwilling to keep. But with less than five minutes to play in the second quarter the Lakers went on a 11-4 streak to build an 11-point lead with less than a minute to play in the half.

But the Celtics cut their deficit to nine on a Rajon Rondo jumper and the Lakers had a 50-41 lead at halftime. There were two telling statistics, the Lakers had a 28-12 advantage in points in the paint and an impressive 16-0 on second-chance points.

“Sixteen-0 is pretty remarkable,” Jackson said. “That was a big part of the game.”

The New York Times reports:

On Thursday, Gasol amassed 23 points and 14 rebounds.

“I knew it was going to be physical, that’s a given,” Gasol said. “This being our third consecutive finals, we understand the nature of the game.”

In one telling sequence in the third quarter, Gasol turned around for a hook shot and bumped into Perkins, while the ball careered off the rim. Gasol grabbed the rebound and gained his composure before missing again and scooping up the shot and elegantly laying it in.

“If you heard what you couldn’t do for two years, you’re probably going to come in and try to prove that,” Celtics Coach Doc Rivers said.

The New York Times reports:

The Lakers surged to a 50-41 halftime lead, sliced into mildly when Rajon Rondo nailed a 22-foot buzzer-beater as the second quarter expired.

Rondo scored 10 of his points in the first half by sneaking through creases in the Lakers’ defense and mostly nullifying Jackson’s decision to initially defend him with Bryant.

It took only a few seconds for emotions to flare in one of the series’ most anticipating matchup between Pierce and Artest.

The Washington Post reports:

This was the matchup the Lakers really wanted, and they showed early on that they weren’t the same team. After Rajon Rondo made a layup to start the game, Ron Artest, a member of the Sacramento Kings when the Celtics won two years ago, collided backs with Pierce under the basket. Both players wrapped their arms behind each other, pulled themselves to the ground and charged each other after they got to their feet. Words were exchanged and Pierce and Artest both received technical fouls. Artest has historically caused problems for Pierce, and he spent the rest of the night harassing him and limiting him to 24 points and 13 field goal attempts.

In his Finals debut, Artest added 15 points and three three-pointers, including one that gave the Lakers an 84-64 lead at the end of the third period. Artest later riled the crowd when he blocked a shot by Glen “Big Baby” Davis, recovered the loose ball then whirled around, swinging his arm to celebrate as Pau Gasol raced down the floor for a breakaway dunk that gave the Lakers a 91-76 lead with 6 minutes 20 seconds left in the game. Celtics Coach Doc Rivers called timeout and Bryant ran over to hug Artest and tap him on the chest.

Andrew Bynum hurting as Finals begin

David Lassen, special to the Press-Enterprise, reports:

Andrew Bynum hurting as Finals begin

Andrew Bynum was limping, with his injured right knee heavily bandaged, after the Lakers’ practice Wednesday, raising new doubts that the procedure to drain fluid from the swollen joint would make a difference.

“Whether it was successful in keeping his knee not swollen over this period of time, you know, that may not happen,” Jackson said.

Bynum had limited participation in Wednesday’s practice, but said he can “do anything when it comes to a game. There’s nothing I physically can’t do; it’s just the pain level and the muscle shutting down. But come game time, all that goes out the window.

“In practice, it’s more just preventing a major injury.”

Lakers driven by memories of 2008 NBA Finals loss to Celtics

David Lassen, special to the Press-Enterprise, reports:

As the Lakers open the NBA Finals against the Boston Celtics tonight at Staples Center, they are driven by the memory of their six-game loss to the Celtics in the 2008 Finals, yet careful to note these teams — winners of the past two NBA championships — are not the same ones that squared off two years ago.

Lakers driven by memories of 2008 Finals loss to Celtics

“That thought of defeat is the first thing that comes to your mind,” said Pau Gasol, looking back to 2008, “so that triggers a point that is sore, and should get us going.”

Kobe Bryant casts the memories of 2008 less in terms of the pain of defeat and more as the lesson that helped propel the Lakers to their success against Orlando last year.

“It’s things that we’ve carried with us from the series,” Bryant says, “in terms of how to play as a unit at both ends of the floor, the kind of tenacity you need to play with.

“Those are the kind of things that we learned from there that we still carry with us.”

Kobe has extra motivation to beat Celtics

Mitch Lawrence of the New York Daily News reports:

Kobe has extra motivation to beat Celtics

Kobe Bryant should be motivated more than any Laker in the series that tips off Thursday in L.A., since he missed 15 of 22 shots in that Game 6. From then until the Lakers defeated Orlando last June, Bryant heard that he could not carry a team to a title without Shaquille O’Neal.

“The Celtics challenged us two years ago,” Bryant said. “Now it’s a test to see how much we’ve grown.”

But this is a much different Laker team. To counter the Celtics’ frontcourt size, they’ll need center Andrew Bynum, who has been slowed by a knee injury and did not play in the playoffs in ’08.

Game 6: Lakers eliminate Suns

The AP reports:

Get ready, Boston, for a rematch with Kobe Bryant and his Los Angeles Lakers.

Game 6: Lakers eliminate Suns

Bryant wrapped up a magnificent series with 37 points, Ron Artest added 25 and the Lakers held off the Phoenix Suns 111-103 on Saturday night to win the Western Conference finals…

Bryant scored nine points in the final 2 minutes, including what looked like an impossible 23-footer with Grant Hill in his face and 34 seconds to play. The basket put Los Angeles up 107-100 and the scrappy Suns were finished…

Amare Stoudemire, in what may have been his last game with the Suns, scored 27 points but struggled to a 7-of-20 shooting night. He can opt out of the final year of his contract and has said chances are “50-50” that he will play elsewhere next season.

Steve Nash added 21 points and nine assists in his 118th playoff game, the most for anyone who has never reached the finals…

Channing Frye had 12 points and 13 rebounds for the Suns, who have reached the finals only twice in their history and never have won a championship. Goran Dragic scored 10 of his 12 points in a fourth-quarter rally that got Phoenix within three points…

Phoenix cut the lead to single digits only once in the third quarter, 74-65 on Stoudemire’s two free throws with 5:38 left. The Lakers responded with an 11-2 run, Artest’s layup in traffic making it 85-67 with 2 1/2 minutes remaining in the quarter.

The AP reports:

Los Angeles will be going for its second straight title and No. 16 overall. The Celtics still have the edge, hanging their 17th banner with their victory two years ago in six games.

“We remember more than anything losing on our home court, a situation where we had some defensive lapses and they took advantage of it,” Lakers coach Phil Jackson said. “This year we have homecourt advantage, and we look forward to the rematch with great intensity.”

The AP reports:

The Suns trailed by 18 in the second half and 17 going into the final quarter. An offensive outburst by Goran Dragic and strong play by Amare Stoudemire in the fourth helped Phoenix pull to within three with just over two minutes to play, but it couldn’t get any closer.

Phoenix hurt itself in the second quarter when it shot 38.9 percent and scored only 19 points, the fewest it has put up in any quarter this series. After trailing by only three after the first quarter, the Suns went into halftime down 65-53.

Phoenix trailed by at least nine the entire third, and its deficit ballooned to 18 on Ron Artest’s hook shot with 2:24 left in the quarter.

Fans discussed this game live as it happened in this forum topic.

Dragic vs. Vujacic: Slovenian grudge-match

Paul Coro of the Arizona Republic reports (via blog):

It did not take some Slovenian smack talk to tell Goran Dragic that he and Sasha Vujacic inexplicably have something going.

Before this conference finals series started, Dragic said there was something “personal” between the countrymen who did not know each other until the first Suns-Lakers game last season in Dragic’s rookie year.

But the tension was clear in Game 5’s fourth quarter, when Vujacic marched toward Dragic on a dead ball and Dragic shoved him away for a double technical foul. It was Dragic’s first NBA technical foul.

“He pushed me but he was talking trash to me,” Dragic said. “It’s a long story. At that moment, I was calm but I saw that he was walking toward me and he was talking to me and I just reacted like that.

“I don’t know why he walked toward me. I watched the replay. I didn’t push him or nothing. He’s the kind of player that gets into your skin, like two years ago it happened with Raja (Bell) the same. He’s just so annoying on defense. Maybe that’s the main reason. In the regular season, he did the same thing but I was more calm. But that’s playoffs.”

Matt Barnes now rooting for Celtics to win championship

Dan Duggan of the Boston Herald reports:

Matt Barnes now rooting for Celtics to win championship

This may come as a surprise to Celtics fans, but Matt Barnes wants your team to win the championship.

The Magic forward, who seemed to thrive on getting under the skin of the Celtics during the Eastern Conference finals, is expecting his rivals to continue their run in the NBA Finals.

“After they beat us, you definitely wish everybody good luck and you want them to win the championship because at least you got beat by the team who won it,” Barnes said after the C’s closed out the Magic with a 96-84 Game 6 win at the Garden last night. “They definitely got everything it takes and we wish them good luck.”

The physical nature of the series got plenty of attention, but after last night’s game there was a clear display of mutual respect between the teams.

“You know it’s a war while you’re out there, but I got friends on that team,” Barnes said. “But while we’re playing, we’re playing for our lives.”