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The San Diego Union-Tribune

 
NBA PLAYOFFS
Pierce shoots down Cavs

LeBron's 45 points can't stop Celtics from taking Game 7

UNION-TRIBUNE NEWS SERVICES

May 19, 2008

Paul Pierce returned home and made sure the Celtics would play there again.

Boston's captain scored 41 points – and still lost a shootout with LeBron James with 45 – but led the team with the NBA's best regular-season record to a 97-92 victory over the visiting Cleveland Cavaliers yesterday in Game 7 of the Eastern Conference semifinals.

The conference finals begin tomorrow night against the Detroit Pistons in the same arena where the Celtics have won 14 straight games and are 8-0 in the postseason.

“Before the year our goal was to be there in Game 1 at home and that's where we are,” Boston coach Doc Rivers said. “So we're exactly where we should be.”

Home teams are 22-2 in the second round of this season's playoffs. But the Celtics are 0-6 on the road in the postseason after Friday night's 74-69 loss in Cleveland. Yesterday, they never trailed but they never were safe until the final seconds.

Pierce hit two free throws with 7.9 seconds left for the final points, then James missed a three-pointer on the last shot of the game with 4.4 seconds to go.

“I had it going, LeBron had it going and we just didn't let up,” Pierce said. “Neither one of us wanted our teams to lose.”

Sasha Pavlovic's three-pointer made it 95-92 with 8.6 seconds left and the Cavaliers immediately fouled Pierce. His first shot hit the rim, hung in the air, then fell through as the crowd roared. Pierce said team patriarch Red Auerbach, who died in October 2006 at age 89, had something to do with that.

“The ghost of Red just looking over us,” Pierce said. “I think he kind of tapped it in the right direction. It sort of put a smile on my face.”

Pierce's second free throw was much smoother, making it 97-92.

Cleveland raced downcourt and James hoisted a three-pointer that missed with 4.4 seconds to go. The Cavaliers got the rebound and James waved for the ball from the same spot he had just missed from.

But Boston's Eddie House intercepted the pass and, as the final seconds ticked off, James turned and walked toward his bench, his chances of reaching the East finals dashed on the court where the Cavaliers were 0-6 this season.

Said Boston's Kevin Garnett, who finished with 13 points: “Today it was basically get the ball to Paul Pierce and get the hell out of the way.”

Down to the wire

If the young New Orleans Hornets are nervous about tonight's Game 7 against the defending champion San Antonio Spurs, it didn't show after practice yesterday. This the first time the Hornets have faced elimination in these playoffs, something the Spurs overcame in Game 6 in San Antonio, when the Spurs blew out the Hornets, led by Manu Ginobili's 25 points.

Although the Spurs have won four NBA titles in the previous nine seasons, they've never won two back-to-back. They've also never fought back from a 2-0 playoff series deficit, which they had early on in this series.

Bynum faces surgery

Lakers center Andrew Bynum will have arthroscopic surgery on his injured left knee this week and probably won't be able available for the rest of the postseason. Bynum was injured more than four months ago and hasn't played since for the Lakers, who won their first two playoff series to advance to the Western Conference finals. Bynum averaged 13.1 points and 10.2 rebounds before getting injured in a Jan. 13 game against Memphis.

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