Celtics champions after Game 6 rout


Boston celebrated another championship by walloping the Lakers, 131-92.

BOSTON (AP) — On a new parquet floor below aging championship banners, the Boston Celtics won their 17th NBA title and a first one — at last — for Paul Pierce, Kevin Garnett and Ray Allen — their Big Three for a new generation.

After 22 long years, the NBA has gone green.

Lifted by ear-splitting chants of “Beat L.A.” from their adoring crowd, which included Boston legends Bill Russell John Havlicek and JoJo White, the Celtics concluded a shocking rebound of a season with a stunning 131-92 blowout over the Los Angeles Lakers in Game 6 on Tuesday night.

With the outcome assured, Boston fans sang into the night as if they were in a pub on nearby Canal Street. They serenaded the newest champs in this city of champs, and taunted Kobe Bryant and his Lakers, who drowned in a green-and-white wave for 48 minutes.

Garnett scored 26 points with 14 rebounds, Allen scored 26 and Pierce, the finals MVP, added 17 as the Celtics, a 24-win team a year ago, wrapped up their first crown since 1986.

This was total domination. The Celtics obliterated the Lakers, who were trying to become the first team to overcome a 3-1 deficit in the finals.

No way. No how. No chance.

Boston’s 39-point win surpassed the NBA record for the biggest margin of victory in a championship clincher; the Celtics beat the Lakers 129-96 in Game 5 of the 1965 NBA finals.

Pierce doused Celtics coach Doc Rivers with red Gatorade. Owner Wyc Grousbeck, who named his group Banner 17 to leave no doubt about his goal, put an unlit cigar in his mouth — a tribute to Red Auerbach, the patriarch who had a hand in the franchise’s first 16 titles.

Garnett dropped to the parquet and kissed the leprechaun at center court, then found Hall of Famer Bill Russell for a long embrace.

“I got my own. I got my own,” Garnett said. “I hope we made you proud.”

“You sure did,” Russell said.

Using strong performances from their new Big Three and a suffocating defensive effort, the Celtics opened a 58-35 halftime lead.

Garnett, seeking his first title, scored 17 points. Pierce and Allen, also ringless in otherwise decorated careers, added 10 and eight, respectively, even though Allen missed much of the half after getting poked in the eye.

Boston limited Los Angeles to 8-of-27 shooting (29.6 percent). The Lakers missed 10 of 13 shots in the second quarter and 15 of their final 19 attempts in the half as the Celtics closed on a 26-6 run.

Kobe Bryant had 14 points for the Lakers at the half, but was only 4-of-11 from the field and was getting little help. Lamar Odom missed all four shots and had four points, while Pau Gasol scored six points on 2-of-5 shooting.

The Lakers were hoping to become the first team to overcome a 3-1 deficit in the NBA finals, but they faced a huge comeback just to force a Game 7. The largest halftime deficit overcome to win a finals game was 21 points, 60 years ago when Baltimore beat Philadelphia.