Games

Recap
 
Celtics edge Lakers, take Game One of NBA Finals
BOSTON 98, LA LAKERS 88
 

BOSTON (Ticker) -- Paul Pierce made a miraculous recovery, and
so did Kevin Garnett.

Pierce gave his team an emotional lift after returning from an
injury and Garnett was uncharacteristically huge down the
stretch as the Boston Celtics surged to an emotional 98-88
victory over the Los Angeles Lakers in Game One of the NBA
Finals at TD Banknorth Garden on Thursday night.

After being carted off in a wheelchair with a sprained right
knee midway through the third quarter, Pierce returned moments
later and scored 15 of his 22 points in the third to help the
Celtics outscore the Lakers, 31-22, in that period.

"The thing about it, a lot of it was going through my mind, and
I was like, 'It can't be over like this,'" Pierce said. "I
think God just sent this angel down and said, 'Hey, you're going
to be all right. You need to get back out there, show them what
you've got."

Garnett had 24 points and 13 rebounds for Boston, which will
host Game Two here on Sunday.

"We have to obviously make some adjustments and make plans to
win Game Two from here," Lakers guard Derek Fisher said. "I
don't know if we really get too caught up in the final result in
terms of losing the game as opposed to looking at some of the
things that we can drastically improve in."

Pierce fell to the floor after banging into teammate Kendrick
Perkins while the pair was trying to defend a fadeaway jumper by
Lakers superstar Kobe Bryant. Pierce had to be carried off the
floor and was taken to the locker room in a wheelchair.

"When I first fell to the ground, I heard a pop in my knee, and
all I felt was pain when I grabbed it," Pierce said. "And at
that point, I thought ... I tore something. That's the way I
felt at the time. Usually when I go down, I'm getting right
back up, but it was an instance where I turned my knee, and it
popped, heard it pop, and I was just in pain where I just
couldn't move."

But Pierce, sporting a sleeve on the injured knee, came running
out as the crowd cheered wildly and checked back into the game
with 5:04 left in third.

"We saw him being carried off and we didn't know what the
situation was," Garnett said. "We kept asking, was he all
right? (Coach Doc Rivers) was trying to get us back to the
huddle. One thing we know about (Pierce) is, he's very tough,
and we've seen him play through numerous injuries throughout the
season."

He rode that adrenaline and made an immediate impact, drilling
back-to-back 3-pointers to give the Celtics a 75-71 lead with
1:04 left in third.

"Well, obviously it was great to see him come back, and
obviously we were concerned when he went down," Rivers said. "A
guy grabs his knee, you know, there's no good thoughts. I was
really proud, honestly, of our team during the stretch when he
was in the locker room.

"I thought that was the biggest part of the game. We could have
easily felt sorry for ourselves. We actually made a little run
there. But then when he came out, he was big for us. Obviously
him coming back lifted us up. But I thought the stretch where
he was out, we didn't show any panic ... was really good for our
team."

But it was Garnett's play in the fourth that sealed the win for
Boston.

Clinging to a tenuous six-point lead late in the fourth, the
Celtics swung the ball into the left corner to James Posey, who
misfired on a 3-pointer, setting up Garnett's high-flying
putback dunk over Pau Gasol to give his team a 94-86 advantage
with 1:32 left.

Bryant added two free throws, but Garnett came back aggressively
on the ensuing possession, forcing the ball to the right
baseline, drawing a foul and converting two free throws to make
it 96-88 with 1:01 to go.

It was an important stretch for Garnett, who has been maligned
for his inability to come through late in big games. He added
to that reputation in this one, missing eight straight shots at
one point in the fourth quarter before the strong finish.

Garnett was hard on himself after the game.

"Terrible," Garnett said of his performance. "My fourth quarter
was plain out terrible, I'll be honest. I thought I got my
hands on loose balls, a lot of shots I knew I could make, rhythm
shots, and I just missed them. I thought I was active, I was
talkative, but I could be better, and I will be."

But the most memorable part of the game was Pierce's return,
which evoked memories of the New York Knicks' Willis Reed
limping onto the court at Madison Square Garden before Game
Seven of the 1970 NBA Finals.

In that one, Reed hit his first two shots but was not heard from
again. Pierce, on the other hand, took off after the injury,
finishing with 15 points in the third quarter and giving the
home crowd a reason to get riled up.

"I wasn't trying to imitate him," Pierce said of Reed. "It was
a situation where that's where I was. I got hurt, came back,
jumped out there. I don't know what to say, just glad that I
was able to get back out there.

Boston carried that momentum into the final period, taking its
largest lead of the game to that point on a shot from the arc by
Posey, which made it 86-78 with 8:44 left.

It was the Celtics' first Finals game since 1987, when these
teams last met on the NBA's biggest stage.

Los Angeles, which has won three titles earlier this decade, had
tasted success since hoisting the trophy five times in the
1980s. But it always seemed to be a sweeter victory against its
hated rival.

The two historic franchises had met 10 times in the Finals
entering this season, with Boston emerging victorious eight
times. In fact, prior to the Lakers' emotional wins in 1985 and
1987, the Celtics won the first eight times the teams squared
off in the championship series.

But all the history, old footage and aging legends mattered
little when the teams took the court on Thursday. It was about
the new generation of stars for each club - most notably
Boston's "Big Three" and Los Angeles' Bryant.

Bryant, for his part, did not want to talk much about the hype
surrounding this series after the loss.

"Just do what we normally do, come back and practice the next
couple days, tweak some things, get ready for Game Two," Bryant
said of the team's plans heading into Sunday's contest.

The Celtics' star trio of Garnett, Pierce and Ray Allen each
played in their first Finals game, while Bryant competed in his
first without Shaquille O'Neal by his side.

Bryant, who scored just eight points on 3-of-10 shooting in the
first half, tried to get his teammates involved from the outset.

That unselfish attitude is part of what earned him his first
league Most Valuable Player Award this season despite it not
being his best statistical campaign. It also seems to have
forged a bond among the Lakers - at least on the court.

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.

Gasol and Fisher scored 15 points apiece for the Lakers, who
were outrebounded, 46-33.

"They finished the game strong and they rebounded the ball
better than we did tonight," Lakers coach Phil Jackson said of
the Celtics. "We'll have to do a better job there."

 
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