Calvin Booth exercises player option

Philadelphia 76ers President and General Manager Ed Stefanski announced today that Calvin Booth has exercised the player option on his contract.  Per team policy, terms of the contract are not disclosed.

The Penn State product signed as a free agent with the Sixers on September 11, 2007.  He appeared in 31 games last season, averaging 0.8 points, 1.2 rebounds and 0.58 blocks in 6.6 minutes per game.  Booth averaged 4.24 blocks per 48 minutes played last season, which was the 11th highest average by any player in the league.  He recorded four of his season-high five blocks in the first quarter vs. Miami on December 12, 2007.  Booth is approaching his 10th season in the NBA.

Doug Collins will not be next Bulls coach

The Chicago Tribune (K.C. Johnson) reports: Doug Collins will not be returning for a second coaching stint with the Bulls. Collins and team Chairman Jerry Reinsdorf mutually agreed during a Friday-afternoon phone conversation that the Bulls’ coaching search, now more than seven weeks old, would continue without Collins. “I just knew over the last few days that Jerry was really struggling over whether or not to do this, and I didn’t want Jerry to have those struggles,” Collins told the Tribune. “I love him. And I didn’t want him feeling that kind of angst.

No Varejao for Brazil this summer

The Akron Beacon Journal (Brian Windhorst) reports: Anderson Varejao’s season with the Cleveland Cavaliers dramatically was altered by one false step. Now it is affecting his summer plans, too. A Cavaliers’ official confirmed Thursday that Varejao has informed Cleveland he has decided not to play this summer for the Brazilian National Team. Varejao will devote the offseason to rehabbing his left ankle instead.

Sonics work out Kevin Love

The Seattle Times (Percy Allen) reports: UCLA forward/center Kevin Love highlighted a quartet of draft hopefuls that began workouts for the Sonics on Thursday. Love was joined at the Furtado Center by Ohio State 7-foot center Kostas Koufos, North Carolina State 6-9 forward J.J. Hickson and 6-10 Australian Nathan Jawai. Today the Sonics will bring in Georgetown center Roy Hibbert, UCLA 6-4 guard Russell Westbrook, Illinois 6-9 forward Shaun Pruitt and George Hill, a 6-2 guard out of Indiana University-Purdue University Indianapolis.

June 5: Celtics 98, Lakers 88

The AP reports: Paul Pierce, who as a kid growing up in Los Angeles used to sneak into Lakers games, returned from a knee injury to inspire and lead Boston to an emotional and tense 98-88 victory on Thursday night in Game 1 of these tradition-soaked NBA finals… Kevin Garnett scored 24 points, Pierce finished with 22—11 after going down—and Ray Allen, the third member of Boston’s Big Three, added 19 for the Celtics, who are chasing a 17th NBA championship. The trio was making its first finals appearance, and for a short time it appeared only two of them would finish their long-awaited debut. With 6:49 left in the third quarter, Pierce was deep in the lane when teammate Kendrick Perkins crashed into him from behind, crumpling Boston’s No. 34 to the court. The 10-year veteran, who last summer thought his days with Boston might be nearing an end, had to be carried from the court in extreme pain and was taken to Boston’s locker room in a wheelchair… Kobe Bryant led the Lakers with 24 points, but the regular-season MVP was just 9-of-26 from the field as the league’s top defensive team kept close tabs on him. Bryant, attempting to win a fourth NBA title—and first without Shaquille O’Neal—had numerous shots rattle out and spent most of his 42 minutes in the game searching for a rhythm.

Ticker reports: And it was most evident late in the first half, when Bryant – who is known for hoisting up shots in bunches – passed up a wide-open 3-pointer, drew Garnett out to him and dished off to Gasol, who was fouled. The ensuing two free throws gave Los Angeles a 49-44 lead with 1:36 left before halftime, when the Lakers held a 51-46 lead. But Bryant, who scored 24 points on 9-of-26 shooting, was forced to be a one-man show by the Celtics’ defense in the second half. “We got a little stagnant,” Bryant said. “I think our rhythm wasn’t there, wasn’t what we like it to be. Still, we played well enough to almost steal the game – some balls bounced their way tonight. They scrapped and they clawed their way to this victory.” Boston also was buoyed by Allen, who scored 19 points to help his team to its fourth straight Game One victory this postseason.

InsideHoops.com Stat Notes: Both teams shot around 42%, and both struggled from three-point range, but Boston fared a bit better from outside. The Celtics also hit 28-of-35 free throws, the Lakers 21-of-28. The Celtics won the rebounds category, 46-33. Assists were close. The Celtics committed 7 more turnovers.

For the Celtics, Kevin Garnett (just 9-of-22) had 24 points and 13 rebounds. Paul Pierce (7-of-10, 3 threes) had 22 points and not too much else. Ray Allen on 13 shots had 19 points, 8 rebounds and 5 assists (but 4 turnovers). Rajon Rondo had 15 points, 5 rebounds and 7 assists. Off the bench, James Posey and PJ Brown combined for 2-of-10 shooting.

For the Lakers, Kobe Bryant (just 9-of-26) had 24 points, just 3 rebounds, 6 assists but 4 turnovers. Derek Fisher on just 9 shots had 15 points, 4 rebounds, 6 assists and 3 steals. Pau gasol (6-of-11) had 15 points, 8 rebounds and 4 assists. Lamar Odom (6-of-11) had 14 points, just 6 rebounds, and little else. No other Lakers were particularly good.

Game 2 is Sunday in Boston. The next three games (if Game 5 happens) are in los Angeles. Games 6 and 7, if they happen, are in Boston.

Rowan Barrett to play for Canada in Olympics

The Canadian Press via canoe.ca reports: Veteran guard Rowan Barrett said Thursday that he’s rejoining the Canadian men’s squad after a five-year absence in its quest for a spot in this summer’s Beijing Olympics. The six-foot-five native of Mississauga, Ont., has played in 115 games for Canada and captained the team to a seventh-place finish at the 2000 Sydney Olympics.

Useful Finals notes

Phil Jackson-coached teams are 41-0 when winning Game 1 of a playoff series. Overall, Jackson’s 190 playoff victories make him the winningest coach in NBA postseason history. Jackson’s nine titles (in 10 Finals appearances) as a coach, tie him with Boston’s legendary Red Auerbach for most all-time.
During the 2007-08 season, the Celtics swept the season series with the Lakers 2-0. Both games, however, were played in December prior to the Lakers dealing for Pau Gasol.

This is the 11th time the Celtics and Lakers are meeting in The Finals, the most time two teams have met in the championship series. (The second-most meetings belong to the Lakers and 76ers, who have met in The Finals six times.) Below are the outcomes of the Celtics and Lakers’ previous 10 meetings and each team’s leading scorer in the series.

1958-1959: Boston Celtics defeat Minneapolis Lakers 4-0. Leading scorers: BOS – Tom Heinsohn 24.3 ppg; MIN – Elgin Baylor 22.8 ppg.
1961-1962: Boston Celtics defeat Los Angeles Lakers 4-3. Leading scorers: BOS – Bill Russell 22.9 ppg; L.A. Elgin Baylor 40.6 ppg.
1962-1963: Boston Celtics defeat Los Angeles Lakers 4-2. Leading scorers: BOS – Sam Jones 24.7 ppg; L.A. Elgin Baylor 33.8 ppg.
1964-1965: Boston Celtics defeat Los Angeles Lakers 4-1. Leading scorers: BOS – Sam Jones 27.8 ppg; L.A. Jerry West 33.8 ppg.
1965-1966: Boston Celtics defeat Los Angeles Lakers 4-3. Leading scorers: BOS – Bill Russell 23.6 ppg; L.A. Jerry West 33.9 ppg.
1967-1968: Boston Celtics defeat Los Angeles Lakers 4-2. Leading scorers: BOS – John Havlicek 27.3 ppg; L.A. – Jerry West 31.3 ppg.
1968-1969: Boston Celtics defeat Los Angeles Lakers 4-3. Leading scorers: BOS – John Havlicek 28.3 ppg; L.A. – Jerry West 37.9 ppg.
1983-1984: Boston Celtics defeat Los Angeles Lakers 4-3. Leading scorers: BOS – Larry Bird 27.4 ppg; L.A. Kareem Abdul-Jabbar 26.6 ppg.
1984-1985: Los Angeles Lakers defeat Boston Celtics 4-2. Leading scorers: L.A. – Kareem Abdul-Jabbar 25.7 ppg; BOS – Kevin Mc Hale 26.0 ppg.
1986-1987: Los Angeles Lakers defeat Boston Celtics 4-2. Leading scorers: L.A. ? Magic Johnson 26.2 ppg; BOS ? Larry Bird 24.2 ppg.

The last time these two storied franchises met in The Finals was 1987. Finals MVP Magic Johnson’s 16-point, 19-assist, eight-rebound effort helped the Lakers claim their fourth title of the decade with a 106-93 Game 6 win over the Celtics.

All time in The Finals, the Celtics are 70-46 (.603); the Lakers are 79-82 (.491). The Celtics have won 16 of 19 championship series; the Lakers 14 of 28.
Click here for significant dates from previous Celtics-Lakers Finals.

The Celtics are only the 11th team — the first since the Nets in 2001-02 — to advance to The Finals a season after missing the playoffs:

1948-49 Washington Capitols
1955-56 Philadelphia Warriors*
1958-59 Minneapolis Lakers
1963-64 San Francisco Warriors
1966-67 San Francisco Warriors
1974-75 Golden State Warriors*
1975-76 Phoenix Suns
1976-77 Portland Trail Blazers*
1977-78 Seattle SuperSonics
2001-02 New Jersey Nets
2007-08 Boston Celtics
* Indicates teams that won title

All time in The Finals, the Celtics are 70-46 (.603); the Lakers are 79-82 (.491). The Celtics have won 16 of 19 championship series; the Lakers 14 of 28.

– NBA News

Andray Blatche arrested yet again

The Washington Post reports: Washington Wizards forward Andray Blatche was arrested Wednesday in south-central Virginia on charges of reckless driving and driving on a suspended license for the third time, authorities said. Blatche, who is entering his fourth season with the Wizards and signed a five-year contract worth around $15 million last summer, was clocked going 86 mph in a 70 mph zone on Interstate 85, said Brunswick County 1st Sgt. Dwyane Jones. In Virginia, anyone driving faster than 80 mph can be charged with reckless driving said Jones, who was the arresting officer… Blatche has been involved in other notable off-court incidents.

InsideHoops.com says: Blatche is apparently a mental midget. But one who makes so much money, if he loses his license he can just pay people to drive him around, so to him it probably doesn’t matter.

Lakers bring Finals TV ratings

The AP reports: The NBA finals’ television ratings for the last eight years fall into two unmistakable categories: series with the Los Angeles Lakers, and series without them. The four times that the Lakers—with their large market, big stars and storied tradition—reached the sport’s grandest stage, the finals’ average rating was never lower than a 10.2. The four times they weren’t involved, the number was never above an 8.5. But none of the Lakers’ opponents during that span had the fan base, history and star power to rival their own. That changes this week, as ABC gets a glamour matchup overflowing with story lines when Los Angeles faces its old nemesis, the Boston Celtics.

Pistons may want Mike Woodson

The Atlanta Journal-Constitution (Sekou Smith) reports the following via blog: According to my spy the Detroit Pistons have asked for permission to speak with Hawks coach Mike Woodson (that’s his title for at least the next 26 days or so unless something breaks before the end of the month) about their vacant coaching position. Solid reports out of Detroit have Pistons assistant Michael Curry lined up for the job. But the Pistons have apparently covered their bases if that doesn’t work out by contacting the representative of Woodson, who was the lead assistant on Larry Brown’s staff when the Pistons won the NBA title in 2004.