LOS ANGELES — At this point it is almost impossible to write about this series without lapsing into overwrought hyperbole filled with nostalgic asides.
All around us are the living ghosts of Bill Russell and Jerry West. Kareem and Cowens. Bird and Magic. KG and Kobe. It’s the Celtics and Lakers in Game 7 of the NBA finals, and there is no possible way to hype this any more than it has already been hyped.
But here’s the thing: None of that will matter at 9 p.m. Thursday night. What we have here are two teams that have beaten and battered each other through six grueling games where momentum lasts only as long as the post-game interviews.
Someone’s legacy will be enhanced when this is all decided, but that’s for Friday and beyond. All we have now is the game and while the Lakers are the favorites based on the location, the simple fact is no one knows how this is going to play out.
We have very few trends to grasp on to for support except that the team that has won the rebounding battle has won the game. Beyond that, there have been adjustments and tweaks, but they too seem to last only as long as the respective coaching braintrusts can come up with a counter move.
“It’s the ultimate players game,” Doc Rivers said. “It’s the game that all the things you’ve worked on all year, you have to do it and execute it and trust and play. You know, there’s going to come a time maybe where a timeout is important and an adjustment may be important.
“Chuck Daly always said it’s the make-miss game. The league is a make-miss league. But especially Game 7. It comes down to makes and misses. And on the misses, on their misses, make sure they don’t get another opportunity to have a make, and that’s what they come down to.”
For the Celtics, Kendrick Perkins will not play after injuring his knee in Game 6. For the Lakers, Andrew Bynum may be only able to give his team 10-20 minutes, if that. The superstars will be vital. The benches will be important and the coaching decisions will be scrutinized.
We have seen just about everything we can see in this series and the possibility exists that we may see something else entirely in Game 7. With that in mind, here are five things to watch as the Celtics and Lakers meet their fate in Game 7
ENERGY, EFFORT AND EXECUTION
For starters, the Celtics know that they have to play better in the first quarter. They also know that they can’t afford to let the game come to them.
“I think when we get off to good starts, it carries over for the rest of the game,” Paul Pierce said. “We’ve got to rebound a lot better. They dominated us on the glass. Also keep our turnovers down. If we can do those things, I think we play our best basketball and we give ourselves a chance at winning.”
The Celtics have shown that they can win when they don’t do one of those things, but when they do none of those things they get blown out of the gym, as in Game 6.
We should know by the end of the first quarter if both teams have come to play. Once that becomes clear, the Celtics have to do a better job of running their offense.
The Lakers made them play in a crowd in Game 6. Every drive was met by resistance and force. Instead of making them pay for their over-commitment, the Celtics too often allowed themselves to get sucked into trying to make the play themselves.
They have talked all postseason about trust. Now, they have to apply it.
“It really is the game where the players have to get back to remembering all the things they’ve worked on,” Rivers said. “And then, execute it.”
REBOUNDING, REBOUDNING, REBOUNDING
It really is this simple: In their three wins, the Celtics held the Lakers to 10 offensive rebounds or less. When they haven’t taken care of the defensive boards, they’ve lost.
The Celtics will be without Perkins, which changes the dynamics of their interior defense. He is their best rebounder and their best interior defender, and he is also their most physical player.
Without him, Rasheed Wallace and Glen Davis will have to step up their games and that means getting a body on Pau Gasol and Lamar Odom and keeping them out of the paint.
The Celtics also have to do a better job of keeping the Laker guards out of the paint. Once again, Jordan Farmar and Shannon Brown were able to get past the first defender and cause the Celtics defense to react.
The offensive rebounds are really a function of defensive breakdowns, and so it will have to start at the beginning if they are going to get a different result at the end. This leads us to Rajon Rondo…
C’S NEED A RONDO REVIVAL
Rondo’s entire season has been one long quest for respect. He achieved a measure of that with his first All-Star appearance and then he rocketed into superstardom during the playoffs.
The Lakers have succeeded into making him ordinary, and in truth Rondo has played the willing accomplice. In the finals, he has made only 4-of-17 free throws, and that has seemed to cut down on his aggressiveness. He has also not been able to stick the mid-range jumper with consistency.
Both teams know that if he gets out in transition, he can completely change the game and the Lakers have made a concerted effort to not let that happen.
“He’s a problem,” Bryant said. “He creates a lot of havoc and gets out in transition and crashes the boards extremely well and gives them second opportunities. He’s a problem. If we can do a pretty good job on him, it helps our chances.”
The Celtics were able to spring Rondo free on high pick and rolls with Garnett late in Game 6, and you may see a steady diet of that in Game 7. Phil Jackson noted after the game that the Lakers were fortunate, in his words, that Rondo didn’t do any more damage.
“He has to create a pace,” Rivers said. “I thought he was looking for too much stuff instead of being aggressive. One of the things we told him — Rondo has the best instincts that I’ve ever coached in the open court, and he has to allow those instincts to take over [Thursday]. I thought he allowed his thinking to take over [Tuesday night]. He was trying to run stuff, trying to get guys in stuff.”
Rondo came into this series as the Celtics best MVP candidate. He has to play like one in Game 7.
ALL HANDS ON DECK
Here’s a thought: Given the Celtics depleted frontcourt, and given Shelden Williams ineffectiveness, would a lineup that included Marquis Daniels and Pierce as the forwards work?
It might, and Rivers said he would spend part of practice Wednesday working on a different lineup, just in case.
The only thing we can expect in a Game 7 is the unexpected — especially in this series — and Rivers is going to have to find a way to rest Garnett and get major minutes out of Davis and Wallace.
Beyond Rondo, Ray Allen, Pierce and Garnett the Celtics are going to have to get an unexpected contribution from somewhere, be it from Nate Robinson or Williams or Daniels. Farmar, Brown, Sasha Vujacic and Luke Walton are all candidates for the Lakers.
The only thing we do know is that someone is going to emerge Thursday night.
THE KOBE FACTOR
Kobe Bryant has been short and terse with the media throughout the finals, insisting that nothing matters in the big picture beyond winning this series. He’s too smart and calculating not to know what’s at stake, however.
But Bryant has also shown an ability to change up. With the world expecting him to continue his Game 5 outburst, he instead playing a patient, efficient Game 6. He has studied Tom Thibodeau and the Celtics defense for the past two years and he may know it as well as anyone not named Kevin Garnett.
This is his moment and how he reacts may be the most compelling subplot of the entire game and series.
“He’s their life,” Garnett said. “Every times you speak of Kobe you speak of excellence. Class act, plays with a vengeance and tenaciousness. Well-respected around the league. I can keep going and going.”
Oddly enough, the Celtics may wants Kobe to keep going and going, because every time he has tried to completely dominate a game he has unwittingly played right into their hands.
It is the ultimate conundrum for the ultimate player in the ultimate game: Try and do too much and he may end up leaving Gasol out of the game. Leave anything on the table and he will live with a lifetime of regret.
“Ain’t got nothing to do with me right now,” Bryant said. “It’s got nothing to do with me. I look back, years from now or even when I was a kid, you talk about being in this situation, I’d be really excited. But when I’m in the moment right now, I’ve got to play. I’ve got to focus on that. I can’t focus on the hype about it.”
He may even believe that, but it is his reality.
The Celtics have their own legacies on the line. This might be their final game together, depending on how things work out this summer.
Given all that, and given the stakes, the history and yes the hype it would be a galvanizing moment if Game 7 lived up to all of that. History has shown us that it rarely does, but in a series that has given us a little bit of everything, we have yet to see the one brilliantly-played game that goes down to the wire.
After all this, is that too much to ask?
PAUL FLANNERY
Matt joined the program to discuss his first ever cornhole contest and to break down the Patriots offseason. He told the guys that he was upset that the Pats were unable to bring Wes Welker back to the team.
Tom Brady joined the program to discuss his upcoming charitable event supporting Best Buddies and his off-season. Tom said that he has learned not to worry about free agency decisions since he cant control any of them. Lastly he defended his over the top celebration at the Kentucky Derby.
In the latest edition of the "It Is What It Is" podcast, Chris Price and CSNNE's Mike Giardi take a look at the Patriots offseason on both sides of the ball, try and get a handle on which new guys will make an impact first, and whether or not the Patriots have altered their style when it comes to drafting and developing wide receivers.
We check in with Danny Ainge for our first talk to him since the Celtics season ended last weekend. We talk about the future of the team, KG, Pierce, Doc Rivers and more, as Danny directly answers the rumors being floated by ESPN's Stephen A. Smith.
Jackie Mac joins the show to discuss the trade rumors swirling around Paul Pierce, KG, Doc Rivers and the Celtics. She also discusses the future of the Celtics head coach.
Stephen A. joined the program to discuss the trade rumors he has reported regarding a possible trade including Doc Rivers and the Clippers. Stephen A. also told the guys that he has heard that Danny and Doc may be tiring of working together.
Ben joined the program to discuss the return of Terry Francona and said that he always had a good relationship with the former manager. Ben added that he thinks Ellsbury is in a slump due in part to the amount of left handed pitchers the team has faced.
Salty spoke with Joe Castiglione & Dave O'Brien after he helped his team to a 6-2 victory over the Chicago White Sox tonight. The Red Sox return to Fenway after going 6-3 on the road trip.
We check in with Red Sox Manager John Farrell live from Chicago and get his take on a good week for the Sox, a tough series since then in Chicago, and other team related notes.
McGuire joins Mut and Merloni to discuss the Bruins game 3 win, the Rangers awful power play, and the Shawn Thornton Derek Dorsett altercation.
Shawn joined the program to discuss his big night at MSG. He told the guys that it is not Marchand's job to fight and that he needs to be on the ice and out of the penalty box.
Cleveland Indians hottest team in baseball, yet remain last in attendance May 19, 2013 By AJ Kaufman 6 Comments There’s a scene in Major League where Bob Uecker, portraying the radio voice of the Indians, bemoans, “In case you haven’t noticed, and judging by the attendance you haven’t, the Indians have managed to win a few here and there, and are threatening to climb out of the cellar.” Well, that was nearly 25 years ago and fictional, but today’s reality is that Cleveland has won 17 of its last 21, and currently tops the AL Central with a mark of 25-17. No one in the majors is better than the Indians in the past month (20-7). That’s great news. The bad news, however, is the Tribe somehow remain in the MLB cellar when it comes to attendance. How can this be? The fact that I wrote on this same topic almost to the day last year – when only Tampa Bay drew fewer fans than Cleveland - may be even more troubling. Though roughly 34,000 watched a walk-off win Friday night against Seattle, perfect weather and free caps weren’t enough to draw more than 36,000 Saturday and Sunday combined. What did the Indians do in those tilts? They nabbed another walk-off win on Saturday, then the Indians crushed the great Felix Hernandez Sunday behind Justin Masterson, arguably the AL’s best pitcher right now. Fun fact: The Indians have already faced eight Cy Young Award winners in 2013: Bartolo Colon, R.A. Dickey, Roy Halladay, Cliff Lee, Jake Peavy, David Price, Justin Verlander and Hernandez. They have won seven out those eight matchups. Simply astounding. This offseason, the much-maligned Indians front office finally made a legitimate attempt to improve the team through free agency. I’m not talking an Ubaldo Jimenez-like trade, but rather smart acquisitions that brought veterans Mike Aviles, Michael Bourn, Jason Giambi, Scott Kazmir, Brett Myers, Mark Reynolds, Drew Stubbs and Nick Swisher to Cleveland. In addition to being a fantastic place to watch a game due to great egress and ingress, with extremely affordable tickets, the best promo lineup anywhere, Jacobs Field boasts overall, cooler, less muggy summer weather than most Midwestern locales. The team also lowered beer and hot dog prices to $4 and $3 respectively. What other professional stadium in any sport offers that? I have visited 28 of the 30 current Major League Baseball stadia, and few top The Jake when all angles are considered. I say that as a baseball fan, not an Indians fan. As for the putative “economic” angle, these are the same people who spend insane amounts of money to watch terrible football every fall and show up in decent numbers for putrid basketball in the winter. Irrespective of season length, those sports charge up to 10 times the price for a ticket, and the atmosphere isn’t half as fan-friendly as baseball. I understand fans’ lack of willingness to get on board to some degree. A decent recap of Cleveland’s decade of “rebuilding” can be read here and the team suffered a horrific collapse last August. However, in addition to all the benefits of attending games at Jacobs (now Progressive) Field, fans should also realize the team has potential and often exceeds preseason aspirations at any point without warning. Cleveland hosts the rival Detroit Tigers — heavy favorites to repeat as AL Central champs — Tuesday and Wednesday nights before hitting the road. The temperature should be pleasant at first pitch each evening so you’d expect The Jake to be full to watch the best hitter on the planet right now — but don’t count on it.
Ben joined the program to discuss the return of Terry Francona and said that he always had a good relationship with the former manager. Ben added that he thinks Ellsbury is in a slump due in part to the amount of left handed pitchers the team has faced.
Matt joined the program to discuss his first ever cornhole contest and to break down the Patriots offseason. He told the guys that he was upset that the Pats were unable to bring Wes Welker back to the team.
Tom Brady joined the program to discuss his upcoming charitable event supporting Best Buddies and his off-season. Tom said that he has learned not to worry about free agency decisions since he cant control any of them. Lastly he defended his over the top celebration at the Kentucky Derby.
McGuire joins Mut and Merloni to discuss the Bruins game 3 win, the Rangers awful power play, and the Shawn Thornton Derek Dorsett altercation.
Buster Olney joins Mut and Merloni to talk about the struggling Ellsbury and what that is doing to his contract value when he becomes a free agent.
Mut and Merloni discuss the Derek Dorsett, Brad Marchand, and Shawn Thornton altercation and how great it was.
With the Bruins up 3-0 in the series, we talk to Jack Edwards and take your calls. We touch on all things B's-Rangers and also focus on the future of the Bruins three promising young defensemen.
We touch on four topics we haven't talked about today... topics today include: Brian Urlacher retires, NFL schedule expansion, Sergio Garcia and more...
We discuss Spain's Sergio Garcia and his ignorant, racist comments against Tiger Woods.
The Bruins look to take a 3-0 series lead, Jon Lester gets his first loss, Dwight Howard has options in free agency.
Today on the Daily Planet the Bruins have a 2-0 lead over the New york Rangers, the Red Sox are back on the winning sde of things, and the noteable birthdays of the day.
The Bruins have almost finished raking the Leafs, the Red Sox struggle from the mound, Miami Heat fans show their level of class.
The Jerks are joined by another, Jerk Minihane.
They're like a ray of morning sunshine on an otherwise gloomy day.
....uhhhh.....a bunch of bombs over there....
Linda explains how the shootout transpired in Watertown during the early morning hours. She saw the first suspect mortally wounded and police beginning the manhunt for the second suspect.
More from this showJeff Bauman, a victim of the Boston Marathon bombing, joined the show to give the guys an update of his condition and a first-hand account of that terrible day. Jeff told the guys how he wrote the description of the bomber as soon as he could. Mr. Bauman added that he is aided every day with the knowledge that he is alive and the terrorist that detonated the bomb is dead.
More from this showTerry Francona joins the Dennis and Callahan Show to discuss his first-place Indians team as well as his time in Boston. The former Boston manager also touches on his recent book co-authored by Dan Shaughnessy and Shaughnessy's recent dust-up with David Ortiz.
More from this showTom Brady joined the program to discuss his upcoming charitable event supporting Best Buddies and his off-season. Tom said that he has learned not to worry about free agency decisions since he cant control any of them. Lastly he defended his over the top celebration at the Kentucky Derby.
More from this showElliotte Friedman joined the show to discuss the Bruins domination of the series thus far. He said that while nothing is certain he cannot see a way in which the Rangers come back and win the series.
More from this show