Game 7 worries Lakers, but delights Celtics
L.A. is in panic mode vs. Houston, while KG-less Boston is happy to be alive
![]() Lm Otero / AP Lakers guard Kobe Bryant (24) wipes his face during the final minutes of their Game 6 loss to the Rockets. |
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It wasn't supposed to come to this, not against a Rockets team without its two best players. The Lakers, it said in the script issued at the start of the season, were the team to beat, the favorite to win it all. They were supposed to tear through the preliminaries and wait for LeBron and the Cavaliers in the Finals. The very necessity of a Game 7 suggests a giant Lakers failure, even though a victory would send them to the Western Conference finals.
Amazing the contrast in Boston, where the Celtics are overjoyed to hosting their own Game 7 Sunday in the nightcap of a day-night NBA playoff doubleheader. The Celtics, in getting to a seventh game, seem downright admirable, having fought to a 3-3 draw with Dwight Howard and a seemingly physically superior Orlando Magic team. The possibility of reaching the Eastern Conference finals without Kevin Garnett and backup Leon Powe suggests a measure of playoff overachievement rarely associated with the Celtics. One more victory over Orlando and the Celtics' postseason will have been a success, no matter what happens against Cleveland.
The Lakers, in the absence of professional football in Los Angeles, are the franchise and there's no panic like Lakerland panic when the Lakers aren't living up to expectations, which they certainly have not in this postseason. Even one measly loss to the Utah Jazz in the first round was met with much civic angst because the Lakers fell into a relatively new habit of treating big leads casually, and settling for 10-point victories after leading by 20 or more. And now, in the past two games in Houston, the Lakers haven't led by anything, not a single point.
Derek Fisher, the veteran point guard, said after Game 5 of this series that "we're still learning how to play in the postseason at a really high level," and he pointed to the likes of young Andrew Bynum, Jordan Farmar and Sasha Vujacic as relative playoff neophytes. But nobody in Southern California seemed to be listening and Fisher understood that, too. "We're the more popular and easier target," he said. "We have the personalities, the individuals people recognize and pay attention to. . . . The expectation that you're supposed to discard an opponent because you're better than them on paper. I don't live in that world."
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Part of what has enraged the locals nearly as much as the losing is what they perceive as the lack of outrage coming from the two most important Lakers: Kobe Bryant and Phil Jackson. The Los Angeles Times's veteran basketball columnist, Mark Heisler, wrote in Friday's editions, "The best Coach Phil Jackson, still looking for silver linings on this tornado that just popped up on the horizon, could come up with was, 'I'm looking forward to Sunday's game.' "
Bryant's specific reaction after losing Game 6: "You've just got to grind these things out. . . . We could be playing much better on a consistent basis."
That's pretty much it. The Lakers appear calm, cool and collected, except when they have to play defense, at which time they just seem disinterested.
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