Live blog of Lakers Game 5 victory over Celtics

These are raw, unedited notes of NBA Finals Game 5, taken live as the game happened. Check our site’s front page for the usual recap page.

Starting Celtics center Kendrick Perkins isn’t playing. Leon Powe started in his place. Celtics point guard Rajon Rondo is playing, but hurt, and will probably have limited minutes.

First Quarter

The Lakers have come out like they did in Game 4 and have an 18-5 lead at 6:27 in the first quarter. No Celtics did much of everything, and virtually every Laker did what they do when playing well.

Rajon Rondo passed up an open layup for no reason.

At 2:40 the Lakers lead 29-15. Kobe Bryant (5-of-8) had 15 points.

At 1:08 Kevin Garnett got his second foul. PJ Brown enters for him.

Celtics turnover resulted in open Sasha Vujacic dunk.

End of first quarter: Lakers 39, Celtics 22.

Second Quarter

Chris Mihm is playing! And gets two quick fouls and then shoots an airball.

Paul Pierce has 11. Lakers lead 43-28.

Why is Mihm playing over Ronny Turiaf?

Lakers bench is blowing it. Fueled by Pierce blowing by every defender, Celtics cut 19 point lead to 11 at 9:10.

Tony Allen is in and hits a short flip-in shot.

At 7:37 Gasol shot, KG reached, appeared to get all ball, but got called for his 3rd foul.

Pierce is owning whoever guards him. And then hits a three to cut the Lakers lead to 4. Celtics on 15-0 run.

Celtics have totally turned their defense up, Lakers are rattled.

PJ Brown, James Posey doing good dirty work.

Tony Allen, who does still exist, has 6.

Lakers finally score at 4:03, take a 45-39 lead.

Kobe isn’t creating for teammates. Gasol is, these last few minutes.

Jordan Farmar airball three. But swishes a three seconds later.

Ray Allen looks slow, even when he scores.

Odom scoring, with help from Gasol.

Pierce, who played every first half minute, hits a three for 21 points.

Halftime

Lakers 55, Celtics 52 at the half.

The Lakers, for the second game in a row, started great, then proceeded to just stand around as the Celtics stepped up their defense. The Celtics had the better bench this half. And Rajon Rondo is still limited by injury.

First half stats: Both teams shot around 50% but the Celtics were more efficient from three-point range. Very few free throws for either team. The Lakers grabbed 5 more rebounds. Assists and turnovers were close.

For the Lakers: Kobe took 12 shots for 15 points, Lamar Odom shot 5-of-6 for 11 with 7 rebounds but 3 turnovers, Pau Gasol shot 3-of-4 for 9 points, 7 rebounds and 4 assists, and Jordan Farmar on 6 shots had 7.

For the Celtics: Pierce on just 12 shots had 21 points, 4 rebounds and 4 assists, Ray Allen on 5 shots had 9, Kevin Garnett, in foul trouble and only playing 11 minutes, had 8 points and almost nothing else.

Third Quarter

PJ Brown started in the third quarter for the Celtics, with Leon Powe on the bench. I agree with this move. Powe’s good for scoring punch off the bench. Brown is better as a role player alongside starters. And, Garnett, playing with 3 fouls, is finally back in.

Ray Allen missed a three, Vladimir Radmanovic got the rebound, but Rondo stripped it, giving the Celtics another possession that eventually resulted in an Allen three, tying the game at 57 all.

Guarded by Kobe, Pierce draws a foul from the right elbow. Paul’s been awesome. And a free throw of his puts the Celtics up one.

A scramble resulted in Kobe getting a loose offensive rebound and scoring in the paint, plus a reach-in foul on Pierce.

KG scores down low in isolation against Gasol.

At 8:46 Pierce draw an offensive foul on Kobe. It’s Bryant’s 3rd foul. Score is tied at 60.

PJ Brown is doing nice hustle-work for Boston.

Rondo hit a deep, wide open left-corner two, but then was just as open a minute later and missed it.

Pierce continues to drive past whoever pretends to guard him. This time he went past Radmanovic just like I go past my ex girlfriend Angelina Jolie when she begs with me to get back together. Sorry, I’m with Victoria’s Secrets models now.

At 6:04 Ray Allen was guarding Kobe, who went right past him but crashed into Pierce. That’s Kobe’s 4th foul. He’s taken 15 shots for 18 points and not much else.

The Lakers offense sometimes seem to stop when Odom gets the ball. He hesitates more than desired.

At 5:17 Kobe tossed it to Derek Fisher in the right corner, who faked Rondo, took a step in, drew contact from Rondo and hit the shot, plus a free throw, putting the Lakers up 4. Next play, Radmanovic hit an open three from the left corner, resulting in a Celtics timeout.

Sam Cassell, hitting his first shot, pulls the Celtics to within 4 at 2:45. But then he misses yet again, as he was doing earlier.

At 2:35 Gasol caught a pass right under the basket, spun to put it in, and KG swooped in to block it, but he got wrist. That’ Garnett’s 4th foul.

Fisher had a wide open three from the left corner that would have put the Lakers up 9, but he missed.

Luke Walton comes in, flips it to Odom, who scores in the paint.

Eddie House drives, then fires it up top to no one, resulting in a turnover and an annoyed Pierce.

Luke Walton can’t even pretend to guard Pierce.

End of third quarter: 79, Celtics 70.

The Lakers finally won a third quarter, outscoring the Celtics 24-18.

For the game, the Lakers are shooting 48.3%, the Celtics 43.3%. Threes and free throws are almost even. The Lakers are rebounding a bit better. Both teams are throwing the ball away. Pierce has 26 points and 6 assists on 18 shots. Ray Allen has 16, Garnett 10. For the Lakers, four players have between 11 and 18 points.

Fourth Quarter

This is it. The Lakers must win or watch a championship trophy be handed to the Celtics in Los Angeles.

The Lakers start the quarter strong. An Odom three put them up 12, resulting in a Celtics timeout.

Pierce drives on Kobe, uses his body well, and puts in a layup.

At 10:00 Gasol blocked a Ray Allen driving layup, secured the loose ball, but then started falling out of bounds and it appeared Ray Allen grabbed the ball, but a foul was called on Allen. The excited crowd has no complaint. I saw no foul being committed.

And then a play later, Gasol came up with a loose ball. Back down the court, Walton hit an open short jumper, putting the Lakers up 88-74 at 9:05.

Sam Cassell posts up against Farmar and hits a cool short-range turnaround J. It was sweet.

A few plays later, Cassell, up top, faked, got Farmar to leave his feet, but then as Farmar landed Cassell jumped into him, drawing a foul plus the shot. Lakers lead by 9.

Kobe, creating his own shot, nails a jumper from inside the top of the key.

Cassell misses a shot, KG gets an offensive rebound, gives it back to Cassell, who drives for a layup. He’s on fire!

Kobe again forces a shot on his own, over Pierce, missing it. Then Walton pressures Pierce around halfcourt, falls down, Pierce trips over him, and a foul is called on Walton, putting Pierce on the line. Phil Jackson takes Walton out. And now at 6:22 the Lakers lead 90-83.

The Celtics are guarding Kobe extremely well. He isn’t creating much of anything.

At 5:47 Pierce drives, falls down, holds on, and flips it out to James Posey, who nails a three from the left corner. Celtics on a 12-2 run. It’s a 4-point game.

At 4:34 Pierce drives, gets close to the rim, and flips it back to Garnett, who swishes a free throw area jumper, tying the game. Next play, Gasol, operating alone inside against KG, bangs a bit and uses his height to flip it in. Next play, KG gets fouled and will attempt his first free throws of the night.

At 3:38, Gasol and Garnett were bumping, and Garnett’s arms were around Gasol for a second, though it didn’t look like a real hold. But KG got called for foul. It was away from the ball.

Kobe finally does something, dishing nicely to Odom inside, who gets fouled.

At 2:52 the Lakers are up 2. And Gasol drew a foul, but blew the free throws.

Kobe penetrated, got fouled on the drive, but dished to Odom, who was fouled after the whistle by Posey, angering Lamar a bit. Nothing happened, though. Kobe’s free throws put the Lakers up 4 with 2:15 to go in the game.

Pierce goes inside, misses, Celtics get some tips, but Odom comes away with the rebound. Fans rise to their feet.

Kobe, guarded by Ray Allen, forces a tough contested shot, misses, but Gasol keeps it alive. Kobe dribbles for a while and again forces a tough contested shot, from outside against Posey, missing it. And then Odom got called for the foul as Pierce was trying to secure the defensive rebound, sending Paul to the line. Pierce hits both. Lakers up two, 1:08 left.

Kobe drives, is again well-guarded, ball goes to Derek Fisher, who misses.

Pierce handles the ball up top, but Kobe tips it from behind then takes off, catches a long pass, and slams it with two hands, making it 99-95 with 37 seconds left. That’s Bryant’s 5th steal of the game.

Ray Allen drives, misses, Garnett tips but misses, and the Lakers get control, up 4, with 25 seconds left.

The Lakers inbound to Derek Fisher, who the Celtics foul. But Fisher misses the first. Celtics insert PJ Brown. Fisher hits the second. Lakers up 5.

Eddie House misses a very open shot. Ray Allen fouls out. Kobe at the line. Lakers now up 6. Timeout.

House fires again and this time nails a wild three, making it a three-point game. Then the Lakers almost turn it over, but get lucky and recover. Fisher gets fouled. He hits both, making it 103-98 Lakers. And then Fisher steals the inbounds pass, ending it.

Final score: Lakers 103, Celtics 98.

Pierce finished with 38 in the loss.

The Celtics now lead the Finals 3 games to 2. The series now moves to Boston for Game 6. And if there’s a Game 7 it’ll also be in Boston.

Final recap and final stats coming later tonight.

InsideHoops.com rules. Go Inside Hoops every day.

Matt Harpring has right ankle surgery

Utah Jazz forward Matt Harpring underwent successful scope surgery Thursday to remove two bone spurs from his right ankle, Jazz general manager Kevin O’Connor announced today.

The out-patient procedure was performed by Dr. R. Marvin Royster in Atlanta.

Further information on Harpring’s recovery timeline will be provided once it is available.

In his 10th NBA season and sixth with the Jazz, Harpring appeared in 76 regular season games (all as a reserve) in 2007-08, averaging 8.2 points and 3.2 rebounds and 1.1 assists in 18.1 minutes per game.  He also saw action in all 12 playoff games for the Jazz, averaging 6.6 points and 2.8 rebounds in 17.4 minutes per game. 

Heat hire David Fizdale as assistant coach

The Miami HEAT announced today that they have hired David Fizdale as an assistant coach, returning the Los Angeles native to where he began his NBA career. Fizdale, who has served as an assistant coach for the past five seasons in Golden State and Atlanta, began his professional career assisting in the HEAT’s video room during the 1997-98 season. Among his responsibilities in his new role he will be assisting in the areas of player development, scouting, game preparation and other duties assigned by Head Coach Erik Spolestra.

“We’re excited to welcome David back to the HEAT organization,” said Spoelstra. “He has proven to be a great teacher and has helped developed a number of young players in his 10 years of coaching on the professional and collegiate level. Additionally, his belief and familiarity with our culture is an added bonus.”

The 34-year old Fizdale returns to Miami after spending the past four seasons (2004-08) as an assistant coach with the Atlanta Hawks where he played an instrumental role in the development of their young players. He helped the Hawks increase their win total in each of the past three seasons and this year earn the franchise’s first postseason appearance since 1999, before being eliminated in seven games in the opening round by the eventual Eastern Conference champion Boston Celtics. He began his NBA coaching career as an assistant coach with the Golden State Warriors for one season (2003-04).

Directly before joining the Warriors, Fizdale worked as an assistant coach for one season at Fresno State University (2002-03) where his responsibilities included player development and serving as the school’s recruiting coordinator. After concluding his collegiate playing career and spending one year as the HEAT’s video intern in 1997-98, he began his coaching career with a four-year stint (1998-2002) as an assistant coach at his alma mater, the University of San Diego.

Jose Calderon fires his agent

The Toronto Sun reports: The Raptors reiterated last week that though offers are constantly being made for point guard Jose Calderon, the odds of him moving are nil since the club can match any offer. Now comes word that Calderon recently fired his American agent, while maintaining his European representation. Connecting the dots, it appears Calderon, a restricted free agent, likely realized he would be returning to the Raptors, so paying considerable cash to a North American agent to promote him around the league made little sense.

June 12: Celtics 97, Lakers 91

Ticker reports: Paul Pierce scored 20 points as the Celtics used one of the most remarkable turnarounds in league history to come away with a 97-91 victory over the Lakers in Game Four of the NBA Finals on Thursday night. Kevin Garnett added 16 points and 11 rebounds for Boston, which climbed out of a 24-point, first-quarter hole to take a commanding 3-1 lead in the best-of-seven series. No team in Finals history has recovered from such a deficit, making the Celtics an odds-on favorite to hoist its NBA-best 17th championship trophy.

InsideHoops.com reports: James Posey was a huge star for the Celtics, nailing big buckets, including 4-of-8 threes, for 18 off the bench and providing tons of great hustle plays, as he’s known to do. Also, aside from Kobe not stepping up on offense, the Lakers bench was terrible: Sasha Vujacic and Jordan Farmar combined to shoot 2-of-15.

The AP reports: The Celtics rallied from a 24-point deficit and beat the Los Angeles Lakers 97-91 on Thursday night to take a commanding 3-1 lead in this history-rich series and move within one victory of a 17th championship that seemed impossible a year ago… No team had ever overcome more than a 15-point deficit after the first quarter, and Elias Sports Bureau said it was the largest comeback in the finals since 1971. One thing’s for sure, it will forever be remembered in the annals of Celtics-Lakers lore… Kobe Bryant scored 19 points on 6-of-19 shooting but the league’s MVP couldn’t rescue the Lakers when they needed him most. Lamar Odom had 19 points— 15 in the first half—and Pau Gasol, whose addition in a midseason trade was supposed to give the Lakers their final piece to complement Bryant, had 17 points and 10 rebounds… Trailing by 18 points at halftime and seemingly done when they fell behind by 20 with 6:04 left in the third quarter, the Celtics outscored the Lakers 31-15 in the third quarter to pull within 73-71 going into the fourth.

Ticker reports: Boston took its first lead of the game at 84-83 on reserve Eddie House’s jumper with 4:05 remaining. Less than two minutes later, Garnett’s short jumper completed an 8-0 run and gave the Celtics a five-point advantage with 2:11 to go. After Pierce went 1-of-2 from the line, Bryant hit two free throws and a jumper to cut the Lakers’ deficit to two with 1:30 left, setting up the wild final sequence. Los Angeles came out flying after a sluggish Game Three for both teams, running out to a 26-7 lead with 3:15 left in the first quarter on a 20-foot jumper by the slumping Odom, who had an extraordinary opening period.

InsideHoops.com Stat Notes: The Celtics shot 45.2%, the Lakers 41.6%. The Celtics hit 8-of-22 three-pointers (James Posey hit 4), the Lakers just 6-of-21. Both teams shot just under 30 free throws, but Boston was a bit better. Rebounding was close. The Lakers had 23 assists, the Celtics 15. Turnovers and steals were close.

For the Celtics: Pierce (6-of-13) had 20 points, 4 rebounds and 7 assists (4 turnovers). Ray Allen (6-of-11) had 19 points, 9 rebounds and 3 steals. James Posey (5-of-10, 4-of-8 threes) had 18 points and very few other stats but did far more than just score. Kevin Garnett (7-of-14) had 16 points, 11 rebounds and 2 steals. Eddie House on 9 shots scored 11. Rajon Rondo played little and did little.

For the Lakers: Lamar Odom (8-of-11) had 19 points, 10 rebounds and 4 assists. Kobe Bryant (just 6-of-19) had 17 points, 10 assists and 4 steals. Pau Gasol (6-of-13) had 17 points, 10 rebounds but more turnovers than assists. Derek Fisher (4-of-5) had 13 points but equal turnovers/assists. Vladimir Radmanovic (3-of-8) had 10 points and 5 rebounds. Sasha Vujacic and Jordan Farmar combined to shoot 2-of-15 off the bench.

Entire NBL Australia league in trouble

The Herald Sun (Tim Morrissey) reports: The damaging fallout from the death of the Sydney Kings and likely demise of the Brisbane Bullets could drag the National Basketball League into insolvency. If the NBL is not able to renew its naming rights sponsorship deal with Hummer and negotiate a new TV broadcast deal with Fox Sports, the league will not have the funds to run its competition next season. Hummer reportedly paid the NBL between $800,000 and $1 million for the naming rights last season.

Sydney Kings of NBL Australia stripped of licence

The Herald Sun reports: “The termination of the team’s licence is the most extreme action the league can take when a club is placed in default but, in the current circumstances, it was quite simply the only course available to us,” NBL chief executive Chuck Harmison said in a statement. Harmison said club owner Tim Johnston had failed to pay outstanding money owed to players by yesterday’s 5pm deadline. The licence will now be returned to the NBL office. The seven contracted Kings players, some with families and mortgages, new coach Bill Tomlinson and his assistants will have to find new teams.

InsideHoops.com says: The Sydney Kings are the most famous team in Australia’s NBL, the main league there. But they’ve apparently been mismanaged so badly they can’t afford to pay their players and, for now, are out of the league. We’ll have more on this later today or tomorrow, on our blog or on the InsideHoops front page.

Byron Scott hopes CP3 makes Team USA

The New Orleans Times-Picayune (John Reid) reports: One day after it was announced that there won’t be tryouts for the U.S. Olympic men’s basketball team, Hornets Coach Byron Scott said he can’t see a team without his star guard, Chris Paul, on it. “I think if they are going to make a team, then he (Paul) should definitely be on it,” Scott said Wednesday. “If they are going to try out guys, that’s a different story. I don’t see how you’ll leave out a guy that was runner-up to the MVP. “I just don’t see how you do it. But I don’t know what the criteria is, but Chris is the ultimate point guard as far as making people around him better. He is very unselfish, and he is a true point guard.” … Jason Kidd appears to be a lock to make the team.

Mark Madsen cannot believe Flip Saunders was fired

Mark Madsen writing on his own blog: “I cannot believe that Flip Saunders was fired.  I cannot believe it.  This man can flat out coach and while I hope that the Pistons have success in the future, let’s not forget that Flips tenure as head coach of Detroit took the Pistons deep into the playoffs every year.  Coaching is not an exact science and it’s not easy at the NBA level with mature and grown men all of whom have strong competitive natures.  I wish Detroit well, but they lost a gem with Flip.”