Celtics hope to wrap up Finals in Boston

Boston Celtics coach Doc Rivers talks with Kevin Garnett during play against the Los Angeles Lakers in the second half of Game 5 of the NBA basketball finals Sunday in Los Angeles. Kevork Djansezian, The Associated Press

AP

Boston Celtics coach Doc Rivers talks with Kevin Garnett during play against the Los Angeles Lakers in the second half of Game 5 of the NBA basketball finals Sunday in Los Angeles. Kevork Djansezian, The Associated Press

By Tom Withers

The Boston Celtics are home, not home free.

Unable to put the finishing touches on the Los Angeles Lakers and wrap up their first championship since 1986, the NBA’s best team since November flew back across three time zones Monday for a Game 6 they were hoping they wouldn’t have to play.

But injuries, another big first-half deficit and a sub-par performance by center Kevin Garnett cost the banged-up Celtics, who lost 103-98 on Sunday in Game 5 at Los Angeles and left Staples Center kicking themselves at the missed opportunity.

“Not what we wanted,” coach Doc Rivers said of the team’s stay in Southern California. “We wanted two more (wins). Obviously, the blanket was that we get to go home, but we really believed that we could win one of these games. We won one and we’ll take it, but that’s obviously not what we want.”

The Larry O’Brien Trophy, given each year to the league’s top team, was nearly Boston’s. At one point, it appeared to be on its way to the floor for an awards ceremony now on hold. Instead of being hoisted by the Celtics, it was hauled off to LAX and loaded into a jet’s cargo hold for the six-hour flight to New England.

Get The Daily Illini in your inbox!

  • Catch the latest on University of Illinois news, sports, and more. Delivered every weekday.
  • Stay up to date on all things Illini sports. Delivered every Monday.
Thank you for subscribing!

Despite the loss, the tradition-drenched Celtics feel good about their chances of winning a 17th title – on the 17th.

“We’re one up, with two games to go at home,” said Paul Pierce, who scored 38 in Game 5. “It still feels like we have the advantage, and I do feel like we’re the better team.”

So the 11th installment of Celtics vs. Lakers, the league’s signature rivalry and one of the best in pro sports, has at least one more 48-minute episode.

After a 21-year gap between finals meetings, these teams aren’t quite ready to part company.

Why would they?

Now five games old, this series has had plenty of drama (Pierce’s return from a Game 1 knee injury), history (Boston’s finals record 24-point comeback in Game 4), surprises (Leon Powe’s emergence as a Game 2 star) and even a little scandal as former referee Tim Donaghy’s allegations of fixed playoff games has hung over the finals like a layer of L.A. smog.

The Lakers are trying to become the first team in finals history to overcome a 3-1 deficit to win a title, and they’re one step closer. If they can win Game 6 on Tuesday night in TD Banknorth Garden, they’ll force a decisive Game 7 to cap a season as trying as any in commissioner David Stern’s career.

Kobe Bryant and his teammates staved off elimination Sunday by getting more physical with the Celtics, who Tuesday night will play their 26th game of this postseason – a record – and could be wearing down physically.

Los Angeles center Pau Gasol shed his “soft” label for a night and scored 19 points with 13 rebounds, banging his way inside against Garnett, the league’s best defender who couldn’t push back at the Spaniard while hampered with fouls.

“Pau was terrific,” said Bryant, who set the tone early with 15 first-half points and finished with 25 on 8-of-21 shooting. “He was aggressive. At both ends of the floor he did a great job.”

Garnett was disgusted by his game and Boston’s big man vowed to make amends when the Celtics get back inside their rowdy house on Causeway Street, where Boston’s fans arrive early, party late and treat visitors with little regard.

Lakers, you’ve been warned.

“It’s going to be like coming into the Amazon, into the jungle,” he said. “I look forward to coming home and playing.”