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Ranma4699
06-18-2008, 03:09 AM
http://assets.espn.go.com/photo/2008/0617/nba_g_pierce_mvp_400.jpg

Pierce wins MVP and Big 3 take care of business in Finals

BOSTON -- It's the reason Paul Pierce stuck around when the losses mounted and the end was far from clear. The reason Ray Allen was acquired as a draft-day consolation prize. And the reason Kevin Garnett agreed to leave the only pro team he'd ever known.

The Big Three has won the Big One.

The Boston Celtics rode their three All-Stars to their 17th championship on Tuesday night, blowing by the Los Angeles Lakers with a stunning show of second-quarter scoring to win 131-92 in Game 6 of the NBA Finals.

Pierce, the Finals MVP, had 17 points and 10 assists in the clincher, Garnett had 26 points with 14 rebounds, and Allen returned from a red-eye from the coast and a poked eye in the lane to add 26 points, including an NBA Finals record-tying seven 3-pointers.

It was the first NBA title for each of them, and the first for the league's most-decorated franchise since the original Big Three of Larry Bird, Kevin McHale and Robert Parish won No. 16 in 1986. Danny Ainge was the point guard for that team and the general manager for the one that won 66 games a season after winning 24 -- the biggest turnaround in NBA history.

"Where we came from a year ago, where I was at, to be here today celebrating with my teammates, putting a stamp on what a great year it was," Pierce told the jubilant fans after accepting the MVP trophy. "Everybody stuck with me throughout all the hard times. I know we didn't have a lot of great years, but you guys stuck with me, and now we bring home a championship to you."

The Celtics joined the 1975 Golden State Warriors and the '77 Trail Blazers as the only teams to win it all a year after missing the playoffs.

And it's not hard to see how they did it.

Last year's team featured Pierce and a passel of young players who showed promise individually but little sign of snapping the longest championship drought in franchise history. After their legendary luck deserted them in the lottery, leaving them with a worst-case fifth pick in a two-star draft, Ainge wheeled the first-rounder for Allen.

That was enough to convince Garnett to accept a trade and sign an extension, allowing Ainge to cobble together an unprecedented 7-for-1 deal for the final piece in the new Big Three.

"We sacrificed so much of what we did throughout our careers to get to this point because we've done everything we've been able to do individually, won all type of awards, but never made it to the mountaintop," Pierce said. "It's like a breath of fresh air."

With the best record in the NBA during the regular season, the Celtics earned home court for the playoffs -- and they needed it. They won all four games at home in the first two rounds to reach the Eastern Conference finals, then dispatched Detroit in six games.

"It seems like everything has worked out all year," Allen said. "We respect each other, and we're here sitting on championship 17."

But not without a few bumps for the Big Three in the Finals.

Pierce was carried off by his teammates after what turned out to be an inconsequential knee injury in Game 1. Despite a six-point, 2-for-14 stinker in his Game 3 return to his home town, he averaged 22 points, six assists and 4.5 rebounds in the finals to earn the Celtics' first Finals MVP award since Larry Bird.

"It means everything," Pierce said. "I'm not living under the shadows of the other greats now. I'm able to make my own history with my time here, and this is something that I wanted to do. If I was going to be one of the best Celtics to ever play, I had to put up a banner, and today we did that."

Allen's shooting deserted him for long stretches, and before Game 5 in Los Angeles he learned that his son had been diagnosed with diabetes. He rushed to the hospital after the game, stayed with his son on Monday and flew all night to get back to Boston.

Then, in the first half, he was raked across the left eye and went to the locker room.

It didn't stop him from going 7-of-9 from 3-point range, giving him a record 22 3-pointers in the NBA Finals.

"I was wondering what happened to Ray," Pierce said. "When Ray got back out there, I think it kind of fueled us. We pushed the lead up to over 20 when he came back, and it was just like, 'Hey, it's about to be lights out.'"

For Garnett, the title was the one thing missing from a potential Hall of Fame career, and the finale gave him a sense of redemption after a Game 5 performance -- 13 points and 14 rebounds, but some key missed free throws down the stretch -- that he called "garbage."

On Tuesday, he went from garbage to garbage time.

All three stars came out -- together -- with 4:01 left in the game, and Pierce went immediately to give coach Doc Rivers an emotional embrace.

"They came in as a group, and I thought we should take them out as a group," Rivers said. "They all said 'Thank you,' and I said 'Thank you' back. Paul ... it's just so sweet. He just kept saying 'Thank you. Thank you. Thank you for sticking with me again,' and I kept saying the same thing to him. So it was really a nice moment."

While the Celtics reserves -- a big advantage for Boston in the series -- continued to build on the lead, the starters yukked it up on the bench just as they did through the laugher of a season.

As soon as the clock stopped, it was Gino time: The scoreboard showed the disco-era American Bandstand clip that the Celtics have been using to celebrate victories all season. A shaggy man in a "Gino" T-shirt danced on the scoreboard, and Pierce stood up on the bench to frolic.

Amphibianbeast
06-18-2008, 05:34 AM
This right here is what I call a major azz whooping champion style
Ha!! Ha!! hahahahhahahah :box

The Boston Celtics rode their three All-Stars to their 17th championship on Tuesday night, blowing by the Los Angeles Lakers with a stunning show of second-quarter scoring to win 131-92 in Game 6 of the NBA Finals.

inuyashaa
06-18-2008, 07:02 AM
lol i thought it would have been closer but looks like it was a 1 team show

Ranma4699
06-18-2008, 11:53 AM
Azz whoopin I think not. It was more like lakers ur my bizatches and go to the corner were u belong and make me that Money Money yeah yeah. What a beatdown never seen anything like that. Listen as of right now I live in the greatest sports town in the world. It doesnt get better than this. Pats with 3 Superbowl Wins, Red Sox with 2 World Series, and now the Celtics as the NBA champions, and all of this since 2001 it doesnt get any better than this. Also here is something wierd. The Celtics won their 17th championship on june 17. Last year they won 24 games. If u add 2 and 4 that = 6. So on 6-17 celtics won their 17th. Also bostons area code is 617. lol weird isnt it.

Ranma4699
06-19-2008, 03:40 AM
http://d.yimg.com/a/p/afp/20080618/capt.cps.mth72.180608093659.photo00.photo.default-341x512.jpg

Pierce has jumped from good to great in Finals

BOSTON – Between the end of the worst season of his life, and the beginning of Kevin Garnett and Ray Allen, there had been a passage of time when Paul Pierce had word delivered to Danny Ainge: Get me help or get me out.

Pierce had waited for his chance to be one of those generational Boston sports icons, and the Celtics had stopped surrounding him with a fighting chance. It was getting late in his prime, late in his patience. He watched Tom Brady win his Super Bowls and David Ortiz his World Series, and he could take it no more. This town is the best in the world for winners, and just the worst for everyone else.

These forever New England stars are remembered for the most clutch championship performances. Pierce was the forgotten, dismissed talent, a victim of unfair cir***stance when the city never had less tolerance for losing causes.

Suddenly now, Pierce returns for Game 6 in these NBA Finals on Tuesday within a victory of a championship, within a whisper of his wildest dreams. Maybe the regular season belonged to Kevin Garnett for the Celtics, but the playoffs belong to Pierce. History is closing fast.

Before the season, Boston debated on whether Pierce’s number would ever dangle in the Garden rafters. Only champions hang in the Garden. The Basketball Hall of Fame hung in doubt, too. Now, his decade in Boston is so close to its validation. One more victory, a Finals MVP over Kobe Bryant, and Pierce, in the minds of most, will have made the improbable thirtysomething NBA journey as a player from good to great.

Whatever is standing in New England, Pierce has transformed his standing in the sport. There was that Game 7 against LeBron James – the Bird-Dominique game – when his 41 points elevated the Celtics into the conference finals. James never acted like losing out to Pierce was shameful, an embarrassment. “I always say, second to Kobe Bryant, he has some of the best footwork I’ve ever seen in a player,” James said. “I love going against the best.”

Perhaps his peers have always appreciated Pierce better than the public. People had stopped paying attention to the Celtics. He was one more player throwing up big numbers on a bad team. Now, Pierce could be remembered as the most explosive offensive player in the Celtics’ history. Larry Bird was a better passer and shooter, but as a pure scorer, Pierce has no peer among the Celtics’ greats.

No one would take him over LeBron and Kobe, but he has outplayed them in this postseason. Yes, he has a superior supporting cast, but let’s face it: Few remembered that Pierce had so much game, with so much capacity for clutch. As much as anyone, Pierce won Game 1 and Game 4 of the Finals, and nearly stole Game 5 with 38 points and eight assists. He’s been fantastic. He has taken this stage and shown it all.

“There’s not a lot of players that have a well-rounded offensive game,” Bryant said. “What I mean by that, he’s got a good mid-range game, long ball, pull-up to the hoop, pull-up left, pull-up right. He has the whole package.

“Paul is one of my favorite players in the league.”

Rest assured, LeBron and Kobe don’t deliver false praise. Around the NBA, Pierce has never been so respected. Pierce has never had such presence, such game. The Celtics captain is on the cusp of a championship and a legacy looms in Boston. He goes in the rafters now, and maybe goes to Springfield, too. He’s been here a decade – longer than Brady and Ortiz – and Pierce creeps closer and closer to taking his place in the pantheon of a clutch champion.

One more night, one more victory and finally it all belongs to Paul Pierce, a forever Celtic.