1986 NBA Finals
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Dates: | May 26 - June 8 | |||||||||
MVP: | Larry Bird (Boston Celtics) |
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Television: | CBS (U.S.) | |||||||||
Announcers: | Dick Stockton and Tom Heinsohn | |||||||||
Referees: | ||||||||||
Game 1: | ||||||||||
Game 2: | ||||||||||
Game 3: Joe Crawford and Jake O'Donnell | ||||||||||
Game 4: Darell Garretson and Earl Strom | ||||||||||
Game 5: | ||||||||||
Game 6: Jake O'Donnell and Darell Garretson | ||||||||||
Hall of Famers: | Larry Bird (1998) Kevin McHale (1999) Hakeem Olajuwon (2008) Robert Parish (2003) Bill Walton (1993) Coaches: K.C. Jones (1989, player) |
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Eastern Finals: | Celtics defeat Bucks, 4-0 | |||||||||
Western Finals: | Rockets defeat Lakers, 4-1 | |||||||||
NBA Finals
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The 1986 NBA Finals was the championship round of the 1985-86 NBA season. It pitted the Eastern Conference champion Boston Celtics against the Western Conference champion Houston Rockets. The Celtics defeated the Rockets four games to two to win their 16th NBA championship, which is still the most in league history. The title also remains the last Celtics championship as of 2007. Larry Bird was named the Finals MVP.
On another note, this series marked the first time the "NBA Finals" branding was used, as they dropped the "NBA World Championship" branding which had been in use since the beginning of the league.
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[edit] Background
[edit] Boston Celtics
The 1986 Boston Celtics team, which finished the regular season 67-15, is generally considered to be the best of Larry Bird's career. Under head coach K.C. Jones, the 1986 Celtics were certainly the deepest team of Bird's career. In addition to longtime teammates Kevin McHale and Robert Parish, Bird was joined on the front line by former NBA MVP Bill Walton. Despite a career plagued by a series of serious injuries to his knees, ankles and chiefly his feet, Walton would win the NBA Sixth Man of the Year Award in 1986 appearing in a career high 80 games. The backcourt was almost equally talented, led by defensive stopper Dennis Johnson and shooting guard Danny Ainge. Off the bench, the Celtics featured former All-Star Scott Wedman and recent acquisition (from the Indiana Pacers) Jerry Sichting.
The Celtics steamrolled through the Eastern Conference Playoffs, sweeping the Chicago Bulls 3-0 in the first round. The highlight of the first round was undoubtedly the Celtics double-overtime classic game 2. Matched up against a far superior Celtics team, Michael Jordan exploded for 63 points at the Boston Garden and nearly lead his team to a stunning upset. The Celtics prevailed 135-131, and finished the series off two days later in Chicago. Then Boston defeated the young Atlanta Hawks four games to one in the semifinals, highlighted by a game 5 blowout (132-99), that featured the Celtics hammering the Hawks in the third quarter by a score of 36-6.
The Eastern Conference Finals matched the Celtics up against the Milwaukee Bucks and head coach Don Nelson, a former Celtic player who enraged the Celtics in the 1983 NBA Playoffs by accusing Celtic guard Danny Ainge of "dirty" play. The Celtics got their revenge, sweeping the Bucks easily. The Bucks and the Celtics met in the Playoffs four times during the Larry Bird era (1983, 1984, 1986 and 1987), and Boston won three of four (Milwaukee swept Boston in the 1983 Playoffs).
[edit] Houston Rockets
The Houston Rockets, led by Hakeem Olajuwon, Ralph Sampson, and head coach Bill Fitch, won the Western Conference Championship in five games over the Los Angeles Lakers. Houston was entering the NBA Finals for only the second time in their history. Their last appearance was in 1981 against their 1986 opponents, the Boston Celtics. The season took an unexpected turn when the Houston Rockets eliminated the Lakers in the Western Conference Finals, four games to one. Los Angeles had reshuffled its team in the off-season by releasing Bob McAdoo and Jamaal Wilkes picking up veteran power forward Maurice Lucas in a trade, and rookie A.C. Green through the draft. The Lakers got off to a good start on their way to a 62-20 record, but complacency had began to set in by playoff time as the Lakers blew out pretty much everyone they played. The Rockets, on the other hand, played with confidence and enthusiasm. With Bill Fitch as coach, they sported the original "Twin Towers," 7-foot-4 Ralph Sampson at power forward and 7'0 Hakeem Olajuwon at center. Jim Petersen backed up the Twin Towers, while Robert Reid and Rodney McCray shared time at small forward. The guards included Mitchell Wiggins, Lewis Lloyd and Allen Leavell and John Lucas before being suspended by the league for violating the leagues drug policy.
The Rockets claimed the Midwest Division title with a 51-31 record. They ousted the Sacramento Kings and the Denver Nuggets easily in the playoffs before losing the first game against the Lakers in the Forum, then coming back to sweep four straight.
Their fourth victory against Los Angeles came on a buzzer-beating, turnaround jumper by Sampson in the Forum. Houston had set up the final play with a mere second on the clock. Sampson caught the inbounds pass, whirled and released. The ball hit the rim, bounced high and fell through the basket, ending the Lakers season and sending the Rockets back to the NBA Finals.
[edit] The Finals
The Larry Bird led Celtics would defeat the Rockets again 4 games to 2 in the 1986 NBA Finals. The Celtics dominated the first two games at the Boston Garden, where they had gone 40-1 during the regular season. The Rockets had been almost as good at home during the season, and they defeated the Celtics 106-104 in game three. Game 4 would be a tense battle at the Summit and the Celtics prevailed 106-103, with Bill Walton coming off the bench to spell a tired Robert Parish to score a crucial basket. The infamous fifth game featured the signature moment of the series, when 7'4" Ralph Sampson ignited a brawl with Jerry Sichting, a player 13 inches shorter than he, ultimately leading to Sampson's ejection. While Jim Petersen would lead the Rockets to a decisive victory, Sampson's actions would motivate the Celtics to end the series in six. Bird would dismantle the Rockets in game 6, as the Garden crowd booed every time Sampson touched the ball. The Celtics blew out the Rockets 114-97 in a game that wasn't as close as the score would indicate.
Bird was named the Finals' MVP for that year, averaging 24 points, 10 rebounds and 10 assists per game for the series. It was the Celtics' 16th championship in 40 years and is their last championship to date 21 years later.
[edit] Finals Series Summary
Game | Date | Home Team | Result | Road Team |
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Game 1 | May 26 | Boston | 112-100 | Houston |
Game 2 | May 29 | Boston | 117-95 | Houston |
Game 3 | June 1 | Houston | 106-104 | Boston |
Game 4 | June 3 | Houston | 103-106 | Boston |
Game 5 | June 5 | Houston | 111-96 | Boston |
Game 6 | June 8 | Boston | 114-97 | Houston |
Boston beats Houston 4-2
Following the conclusion of the 1986 NBA Finals, a video documentary of the 1986 NBA season, known as "Sweet Sixteen", was released. David Perry was the narrator after Dick Stockton narrated the last three NBA season documentaries.
The closing song following Game 6 was "Whatever We Imagine" by James Ingram.
[edit] Team rosters
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Hakeem Olajuwon, Ralph Sampson, Lewis Lloyd, John Lucas, Robert Reid, Rodney McCray, Allen Leavell, Mitchell Wiggins, Jim Petersen, Steve Harris, Hank McDowell, Craig Ehlo, Granville Waiters