A6 BAKER CITY HERALD • TUESDAY, MAY 31, 2022 SPORTS NBA EASTERN CONFERENCE FINALS Celtics hold off Heat 100-96 in Game 7 BY TIM REYNOLDS AP Basketball Writer MIAMI — Not this time. After being thwarted on the doorstep of the NBA Finals three other times in the pre- vious five seasons, the Boston Celtics have broken through. The beasts of the East, again. And now a chance at an NBA title awaits. Eastern Conference finals MVP Jayson Tatum led the way with 26 points, Jaylen Brown and Marcus Smart each added 24 and the Celtics beat the Miami Heat 100-96 on Sunday night, May 29, to earn a berth in the NBA Fi- nals against the Golden State Warriors. “This is amazing,” Smart said. “We finally got over the hump.” It was Boston’s first Game 7 win on another team’s home floor since topping Milwaukee for the 1974 NBA title; tech- nically, the Celtics were the “road” team when they beat Toronto in a Game 7 two years ago at the restart bubble, but that was at Walt Disney World. Tatum — wearing a purple- and-gold armband bearing the number “24” of Los Angeles Lakers Hall of Famer Kobe Bryant, his favorite player — had lost two East finals in his young career. Brown and Smart were part of Boston’s East finals losses in 2017, 2018 and 2020. And this one was slipping away, a frantic Miami run in the final moments cast- ing what looked like a sure-fire Celtics win into serious doubt. But they would hold on. Jimmy Butler — brilliant again for Miami — missed John McCall/South Florida Sun Sentinel-TNS Miami Heat center Bam Adebayo fights for possession of the ball against Boston Celtics forward Jaylen Brown during the first half of Game 7 of the Eastern Conference final playoff game at FTX Arena on Sunday, May 29, 2022 in Miami. what would have been a go- ahead 3-pointer with about 17 seconds left, and the Celtics never trailed. On to San Francisco. “To get over the hump with this group, it means every- thing,” Tatum said. Butler, who willed Miami into Game 7 by scoring 47 points on Friday, May 27, in Boston, led the Heat with 35 points in what became their season finale. Bam Adebayo added 25 for the Heat, who were down 11 with under 3 minutes to go before trying one last rally. A 9-0 run, capped by a 3-pointer from Max Strus with 51 seconds left, got the Heat within 98-96. They got no closer. Boston would not be denied, and now is 2-0 in Game 7s in these playoffs after ousting defending champion Milwaukee in the East semis. “It’s just one of those really tough moments,” Heat coach Erik Spoelstra said. “You can’t prepare for it. ... It’s one of the worst feelings into the world to address your locker room after a game like this.” Kyle Lowry scored 15 for the Heat. Grant Williams finished with 11 for the Celtics. The notion of Boston be- ing finals bound would have been considered an unlikely proposition two or three months ago. Ime Udoka’s first season as coach of the Celtics was not without immense challenges. Boston got off to a 2-5 start, lost to Milwaukee on Christ- mas Day to fall below .500 and was still saddled with a losing record as recently as late January. Through 50 games, the Celt- ics were 25-25. No team had that sort of record through 50 games and made the NBA Finals since 1981, when the Houston Rockets started 22- 28 and wound up making the title series — where they fell to Boston. Now the Celtics will look to do the Rockets one better. That Rockets team got into the playoffs at 40-42. This Celtics team roared to life down the stretch and is still roaring. “Our focus is getting four more,” Udoka said. They went 26-6 down the stretch of the regular season, and had an uncanny ability to bounce back. Boston is now 13-1 after losses over the last four-plus months. “The road that we took to get here, not a lot of people believed in us,” Tatum said. “We took the toughest route. It looked out.” Boston’s lead was 32-17 after one quarter — the largest ever by a road team after 12 min- utes of a Game 7, four points bigger than Golden State’s lead over the Los Angeles Lakers back in the 1977 playoffs. The tone was set, and the lead was never relinquished. Miami ended the half on an 11-2 run, the burst sparked by 3s from Strus and Butler, then capped by four free throws from Lowry in the final 29 seconds. Butler was up to 24 points at the break and Miami had gotten within 55-49 going into the third. Miami thought it had gotten within 56-54 when Strus rat- tled in a corner 3 early in the third. But the Celtics answered with a 9-1 run, which was even worse — the NBA replay cen- ter in Secaucus, New Jersey, decided that Strus had stepped out of bounds, his 3 came off the board while the game was going, and a 56-54 game be- came 65-52. “The Boston Celtics did what they came out here to do in this series,” Butler said. The Heat kept clawing back, all the way to the end. They just couldn’t catch Boston. “It’s heartbreaking when it ends like this,” Spoelstra said. “You certainly have to credit the Boston Celtics organiza- tion and their team and their coaching staff. ... We tip our hats off to them. They are a heck of a basketball team.” And now, the Celtics are off to the finals. “Today was the biggest test,” Brown said. “Not just of the year, but of our careers.” They passed. The Finals matchup: Celtics vs. Warriors for NBA title State Warriors, a series that be- gins Thursday night, June 2, in MIAMI — Somewhere, San Francisco. The teams split Gregg Popovich must be their two regular-season meet- pleased. ings, each winning on the oth- Ime Udoka and Steve Kerr er’s home floor. played for Popovich with The Warriors have been the San Antonio Spurs, both waiting for an opponent since served as assistant coaches un- May 26 after needing only five der him, and neither makes games to beat Dallas for the any effort to hide the affinity West title. The Celtics got there they have for the NBA’s career the hard way, winning Game victory leader. 7 in Miami on Sunday night, And now, Udoka and Kerr May 29, to capture the East. are about to go head-to-head “We stayed with it. We be- — in the NBA Finals. lieved in each other. We made a The title matchup is set: It’ll commitment on the defensive be Udoka and the Eastern Con- end,” said Celtics forward Al ference champion Boston Celt- Horford, who, after 141 playoff ics facing Kerr and the Western games, is headed to the NBA Conference champion Golden Finals for the first time. “That BY TIM REYNOLDS AP Basketball Writer was the biggest thing, defend- ing.” For the Celtics, it’s a chance at an 18th NBA championship — which would break the tie with the Los Angeles Lakers for the most in league history. For the Warriors, it’s a chance at a seventh crown — which would break a tie with the Chicago Bulls for third-most in league history. It’s also a rematch of the 1964 finals, when Bill Russell and the Celtics topped the Warriors in five games. “I’ve said it many times: You go to the finals, it’s al- most a two-month journey filled with stress and fatigue and everything else,” said Kerr, who gave his team Fri- day and Saturday off before bringing them back to work Sunday. “So, if you can get a little bit of a break, it’s very meaningful. Hopefully, we can get healthy and have a few days of really good prep and be ready to go on Thursday.” Golden State won at Boston 111-107 on Dec. 17, behind 30 points from Stephen Curry. The Celtics rolled on Golden State’s home floor in the rematch on March 16, winning 110-88 in the game in which Curry in- jured his foot — and that’s where his regular season ended. Curry was ready to go for the playoffs. So were the rest of the Warriors. They’re 12-4 in the playoffs, getting through Denver, Memphis and Dallas to get to the ti- tle round. “It all starts with Steph,” Kerr said. 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