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backofthepack
06-06-2008, 01:04 PM
Here comes the whining!!! :pussy:

http://www.latimes.com/sports/la-sp-plaschke6-2008jun06,0,5079539.column?page=2 (http://www.latimes.com/sports/la-sp-plaschke6-2008jun06,0,5079539.column?page=2)

From the Los Angeles Times

Pierce not hurt as bad as he would have had the Lakers believe.
Bill Plaschke

June 6, 2008

BOSTON — He lay in a heap on the parquet floor, visibly weeping into the silk-suited sleeve of his doctor.

He was pushed in a wheelchair down a narrow back hallway, head down, season over.

Paul Pierce, the Boston Celtics captain, was carried from the opening game of the NBA Finals in the third quarter Thursday with an apparent serious knee injury that momentarily deadened and distracted the Lakers.

At which point, Pierce came running back to finish them off.

To nearly 50 years of delicious Celtics-Lakers lore, add a new apparent bit of chicanery.

Call it the Fake N'Shake.

The Celtics won Game 1, 98-88, on the momentum of a recovery that smacked more of professional wrestling than professional basketball.

When Pierce crumpled on the floor after being apparently faked out of his kneecap by Kobe Bryant with 6:52 left in the third quarter, the Lakers led by four points.

When he returned after just 1:45 had ticked off the game clock, the Celtics led by one.

The "Rocky" theme played. The crowd roared. Pierce hobbled out with drama dripping from every step.

He was so hurt, he immediately began sprinting around the stunned Lakers defenders.

He was in such pain, he hit consecutive three pointers late in the period that gave the Celtics the lead for good.

At which point, a Lakers season filled with colorful adjectives had been reduced to one word.

C'mon!

Afterward, Pierce played the part of the resurrected hero, shaking his head at the wonder of it all.

"You know, I think God 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,' " he said.

The Lakers, meanwhile, were just shaking their heads, period.

"You know, you don't know what happens," Lakers Coach Phil Jackson said of Pierce. "Guys can break a shoelace and go out, the pants break down, a drawstring falls apart."

Pierce said he heard his knee pop.

"Once I heard the pop, and I couldn't move it at first, I thought that was it," he said.

He was literally carried from the court. While the Lakers were staring at him, the Celtics were being inspired by him.

"I reminded them . . . there will be adversity and you've got to overcome it," Celtics Coach Doc Rivers said. "I said, this is it right here."

The Celtics responded, the Lakers retreated, and the game was never the same.

The Celtics' Kevin Garnett said Pierce "gave everybody life. I could tell that everybody was rejuvenated."

Said the Lakers' Kobe Bryant: "We got a little stagnant."

According to Pierce, doctors have diagnosed him with a strained meniscus, with his chances of playing in Game 2 on Sunday unknown.

As for the Lakers, in the end, it was their reliable attack and steady defense that seemed injured.

Bryant's jump shot was strained. He put up 26 attempts and made just nine, forcing shots as if feeling the pressure of his first NBA Finals game without Shaquille O'Neal.

Some of it was the new Celtics bumping him away from the basket. But some of it was the old Bryant just being impatient.

"I said to him, check it out, he had some guys open in other parts of the offense, but he said he had some good looks," Jackson said. "You live on that. That's going to happen."

In other words, Jackson is cutting his league MVP some slack. For now.

"They're going to be determined and not let me get to the paint, particularly in the half court," Bryant said. "Those little mid-range jumpers that I get, I've got to knock those in."

Then there was the Lakers' inside presence, which was also strained, Pau Gasol being pounded by Garnett while Lamar Odom simply disappeared at times.

The low-light was a soaring dunk by Garnett over a confused Gasol in the game's final minutes.

All those "Beat L.A." chants that began in the streets outside the TD Banknorth Garden long before the game?

On this night, it was Garnett who did the beating.

"We didn't get after the ball on the board and opportunities that were there for us," said Jackson. "They did a much better job on the boards. That's the difference in the ballgame."

That, and this angel that somehow transformed a shattered kneecap into a soaring jump shot into a scintillating victory.

No official word on this yet, but here's guessing that angel smoked a cigar and answered to Red.

Bill Plaschke can be reached at bill.plaschke@latimes.com (bill.plaschke@latimes.com). To read previous columns by Plaschke, go to latimes.com/plaschke.

Patti37
06-06-2008, 01:27 PM
and in response to that article...

from ESPN

Pierce Shows His Worth On Biggest Stage
<!-- end subheader -->
http://assets.espn.go.com/i/columnists/Sheridan_Chris_55.jpg (http://x.go.com/cgi/x.pl?goto=http://search.espn.go.com/keyword/search?searchString=chris_sheridan&name=SEARCH_m_archive&srvc=sz) By Chris Sheridan
ESPN.com
(Archive (http://x.go.com/cgi/x.pl?goto=http://search.espn.go.com/keyword/search?searchString=chris_sheridan&name=SEARCH_m_archive&srvc=sz))



BOSTON -- The first promising sign was one that almost nobody in the new Boston Garden could see.
Three ambulances were parked beneath the stands underneath the north end of the arena, all of them idle. No drivers in sight, no emergency medical technicians standing by, no rear doors waiting open to transport Boston's injured superstar to the hospital.
The good news would become apparent to the home fans just moments later, when Pierce made a right turn as he walked out of the home locker room (a left turn would have led him to the ambulances), headed down the hallway and popped out of the same tunnel he had been carried through by teammates just a few minutes earlier.
"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, and I was just in pain where I couldn't move," Pierce said.
"Did you see the look on his face? Just agony," said teammate P.J. Brown (http://sports.espn.go.com/nba/players/profile?statsId=814), who was the last player to exit the home locker room -- just seconds after Pierce shuffled out ever so gingerly.
<!---------------------INLINE TABLE (BEGIN)---------------------><TABLE id=inlinetable cellSpacing=1 cellPadding=3 width=210 align=right border=0><TBODY><TR><TH style="BACKGROUND-COLOR: #000000">LAKERS VERSUS CELTICS</TH><TR style="BACKGROUND-COLOR: #ececec" vAlign=top><TD width=194>NBA FINALS
Boston 1, L.A. Lakers 0 (http://sports.espn.go.com/nba/playoffs2008/series?series=lalbos)
Game 2: Sun., 8:30 ET, at BOS

Full NBA Finals schedule (http://sports.espn.go.com/nba/schedule)</B>
</TD></TR></TBODY></TABLE><!---------------------INLINE TABLE (END)---------------------></I>
After the game, Pierce was walking with a pronounced limp as he exited the postgame interview room and headed back to the locker room, but some 45 minutes later the injury was clearly bothering him more.
As he walked to his car, Pierce was still wearing his warm-ups. The snaps along the right side were hanging open, revealing a wrapping of several ace bandages from the bottom of his calf to the top of his thigh, an additional layer of white tape wrapped around the lower half of his hamstring, ending just above his knee.
Pierce's feet moved no more than 12 inches with each step, and as you watched him begin to navigate the four flights of stairs from the locker room level to the players' parking lot, you couldn't help but wonder exactly how much adrenalin had fueled his comeback. The knee injury could also keep him out of Game 2 or, at the very least, reduce his effectiveness.
As it was, Pierce showed what kind of a player he is, not only by coming back, but by hitting a pair of 3-pointers late in the third quarter that gave the Celtics the separation they needed in a 98-88 victory Thursday night for a 1-0 lead in the NBA Finals. Game 2 is Sunday night.
"Once I got to the back, I stood on my two feet and tried to see where the pain was at," Pierce said. "It was on the inside of my knee. I tried to put weight on it, wasn't bad. I tried to move laterally, a little soreness. Once I felt I could put weight on it, I had to get back out there."
The arena went so nuts when Pierce returned, Phil Jackson called a timeout to diffuse some of the energy in the building and allow his team to regroup. It was still a one-point game at the time, and the Lakers would go ahead 71-69 before Pierce changed the game again.
His 3-pointer with 1:26 left in the quarter gave Boston the lead for good, and another 3-pointer 22 seconds later from the exact same spot on the floor gave the Celtics a four-point lead that they'd carry into the final quarter.
It was still a four-point game when Pierce returned after sitting out the first 6:12 of the fourth quarter, but he knocked down a 13-footer with 5:23 left and then made a pair from the line. Los Angeles couldn't put together a rally the rest of the way. After scoring just three first-half points, Pierce had 19 in the final 24 minutes.
There wasn't any outright skepticism from the Lakers regarding Pierce's heroics, but there did seem to be just a smidgen from Jackson as he noted how quickly Pierce went from possibly being done for the series to being right back on the court.
And as big as Pierce's two third-quarter 3s and four fourth-quarter points were, you could argue the play of the game happened when Ray Allen (http://sports.espn.go.com/nba/players/profile?statsId=3080) drove the lane, met up with two defenders and hurled a wild pass back toward the top of the key, where it eluded everyone before Garnett made a great play to save a backcourt violation, flipping the ball blindly back into the frontcourt where Sam Cassell (http://sports.espn.go.com/nba/players/profile?statsId=1295) turned it into one of his four buckets for an 83-78 lead.
Cassell and Rajon Rondo (http://sports.espn.go.com/nba/players/profile?statsId=4149) combined for 23 points and eight assists from the point guard position, and Garnett had 24 points and 13 rebounds. The Celtics won a couple of key statistical battles -- 46-33 in rebounds and 12-4 on second-chance points -- and held Kobe Bryant (http://sports.espn.go.com/nba/players/profile?statsId=3118) to just four fourth-quarter points.
But again, this series is only one game old, and Pierce left the building looking more like someone in need of a leg transplant than someone who will bounce back quickly with treatment. He has between 48 and 72 hours to heal, as does Kendrick Perkins (http://sports.espn.go.com/nba/players/profile?statsId=3730), who sprained his left ankle on the same play on which Pierce twisted his knee.
If the Celtics don't get both of them back at something approaching full strength, this could go down as the night Boston lost the series despite winning the game.
Because ambulance or no ambulance, the truth was The Truth could barely walk by the time the night was over.
Chris Sheridan covers the NBA for ESPN Insider. To e-mail Chris, click here (http://proxy.espn.go.com/chat/mailbagESPN?event_id=9634).

NBA Finals Dimes Past: June 2 (http://sports.espn.go.com/nba/dailydime?page=dime-080602) | 5 (http://sports.espn.go.com/nba/dailydime?page=dime-080605)

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backofthepack
06-06-2008, 05:27 PM
what...ESPN wrote something nice about a Boston team...I am in shock, I just don't believe it. :smiley_towel:

groganfan
06-08-2008, 05:34 PM
WTF is ESPN??

TommyD420
06-19-2008, 08:10 PM
what...ESPN wrote something nice about a Boston team...I am in shock, I just don't believe it. :smiley_towel:
He'll be fired shortly.