<?xml version="1.0" encoding="ISO-8859-1"?>
<BODY.CONTENT>
<UID>
8601260219
</UID>
<PUBLICATION>
DETROIT FREE PRESS
</PUBLICATION>
<DATE>
860609
</DATE>
<TDATE>
Monday, June 09, 1986
</TDATE>
<EDITION>
METRO FINAL CHASER
</EDITION>
<SECTION>
SPT
</SECTION>
<PAGE>
1F
</PAGE>
<ILLUSTRATION>

</ILLUSTRATION>
<CAPTION>

</CAPTION>
<BYLINE>
MITCH ALBOM
</BYLINE>
<AFFILIATION>

</AFFILIATION>
<MEMO>
SEE ALSO STATE EDITION 1F
</MEMO>
<COPYRIGHT>
Copyright (c) 1986, Detroit Free Press
</COPYRIGHT>
<HEADLINE>
CELTICS ROLL OUT BARREL ROLLING OUT ROCKETS
</HEADLINE>
<SUBHEAD>

</SUBHEAD>
<CORRECTION>

</CORRECTION>
<BODY>
BOSTON -- Larry Bird's hair was dripping champagne. Kevin McHale was soaked
to his shorts. Bill Walton was grinning underneath an NBA Championship cap and
slapping hands with those high enough to  reach him. The Celtics had just won
their 16th title, the fans outside were mobbing the Boston Garden floor, and
finally, finally, it was time for the big moment. Finally, it was time for . .
. a beer.

  A beer?

  How long had it been? A long time. For 2 1/2 months Bird, McHale, Walton
and Jerry Sichting had stayed dry -- no post-game beers, no liquor -- as part
of a secret pact. An act of dedication.  Through the last weeks of the regular
season. Through the playoffs. Through Chicago and  Atlanta and Milwaukee.
Through Houston. How much did they want that NBA title? Two-and-a-half dry
months.
  "We should do this if we really want the championship," Walton had
suggested, when the no-drinking idea first came up.
  "Well, OK," McHale had agreed. "But we better win it this year."
  They won  it this year. They won it Sunday. Won it? They tore it off the
wall. They so bedazzled the Houston Rockets in Game 6 that in many ways, the
thing was over in the second quarter. Bird was magnificent  -- he captured the
MVP trophy, not surprisingly -- McHale banked home 29 points. Dennis Johnson
and Robert Parish were all over the place. The Celtics' defense was a
stranglehold, a choke. How many times  did they steal the ball? Block shots?
Strip a Rocket on the way up and dribble past him on the way down?
  For those wearing green, the 114-97 blowout was heaven in a hothouse, a
sweltering Boston  Garden full of champions past hanging from the rafters, and
champions future out on the floor. Hungry champions. Thirsty champions.
  How much did they want it? How much Diet Coke can you drink?
  "I had to call practice off yesterday," said coach K.C. Jones, screaming to
be heard over the victory celebration. "I just wanted them to shoot around,
but these guys went at each other like  Muhammad  Ali and the Gorilla. I've
never seen anything like that. The intensity level was just incredible."
A command performance 
  It carried over into the game. In fact, calling this a game is a misnomer.
 How about an exhibition? A clinic? A command performance for the
season-ticket holders? Five different Celtics scored the team's first six
baskets. Boston led by 17 at the half. The only drama left was  determining
when the game really ended.
  "Have you ever seen your team so pumped up?" someone asked Bird afterward.
  "Never," he said. "I thought we could have had a 20-point lead by halftime
and ended it right there."
  It didn't take much longer. By the third quarter, the Celtics had already
closed the lid of the coffin. They led, 59-45, when Danny Ainge pulled up and
fired in a three-point  rainbow that raised the crowd like an electric shock.
Nail One. Two minutes later, Bird heaved in his own three-pointer from in
front of the press table with nary a blink. Nail Two.
  Then, early in  the fourth quarter, Bird took  Walton's pass and again
scampered out to the three-point zone -- he actually ran away  from the
basket, with two Rockets chasing him -- and whirled once he reached the
border and fired over everybody.
  The entire Boston Garden rose with the arc of that shot. And when it fell
to earth, when it swished through the net -- was there ever a doubt it would?
-- this drama  was over, finished, blown up in an explosion of hysterical
noise. The upper rafters shook. The concrete trembled. The score, 87-61, was
irrelevant. That was Nail Three.
  Boston wins.
  "Are you  finally satisfied?" someone asked Bird.
  "Well," he said, cradling a beer -- his first? his second? his sixth? --
"as of right now I am. I have a lot of work to do over the summer. I'm going
to get  a few new moves, and nobody will be able to stop me."
  "Is this the best team you've ever been on?" someone asked.
  "No question," Bird said. "I've been honored to play on a lot of good
teams.  But no question, this has got to be the best."
  So the Celtics take it. And what of the Rockets? What could they do?
Everything they didn't want to happen, happened. They wanted Ralph Sampson not
 to be rattled by the crowd. He was rattled. They wanted to avoid foul
trouble. Akeem Olajuwon had foul trouble. They wanted to avoid a blowout. They
were blown out.

  The Rockets shot 26 percent  in the second quarter. Twenty- six percent?
Their guards were missing constantly. Sampson -- who scored eight  points in
38 minutes -- was simply a mess. His shots clanked. His rebounds were stripped
 away.
  To be fair, it is awfully hard to work in a hell house, when every time you
touch the ball you are washed over with a wave of boos so loud it  rattles
your eardrums. Sampson paid for the fight  he had with Sichting in Game 5. How
many "Sampson Is A Sissy" signs were there Sunday? How many "Sampson S----!"
jeers?
  In the end, all the Rockets could take with them was the solace that they
are young and will be back, and that they had not died at home, but had been
buried in Boston, like so many other teams.  Wasn't this, after all, the
Celtics' 16th championship in the last 30 years?
  "Could any team have beaten the Celtics here?" someone asked Houston coach
Bill Fitch.
  "It would have been awful tough," he said.
  He is right. And the Celtics knew it. After all, can you imagine  having to
go the entire off-season without a beer?
  "How many have you had?" someone asked McHale, who was grinning impishly
during the post-game interviews.
  "Oh, maybe six," he said, grinning  some more.
  "How will you celebrate tonight?" someone asked Bird.
  "Well, I'll just try to stay awake," he joked. "You know I'm not young
anymore."
  Finally, a reporter stuck a microphone in  Bill Walton's face -- Walton,
33, who had once been told his basketball days were over, who last year at
this time was without a team, without a future.
  "Did you ever, in your wildest dreams, imagine  you'd be here with Boston
winning a world championship?" the reporter asked.
  "This is my wildest dream," Walton said.
  Can you think of a better ending than that?
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<DISCLAIMER>

</DISCLAIMER>
<KEYWORDS>
BASKETBALL;COLUMN;NBA
</KEYWORDS>
</BODY.CONTENT>
