The Golden State Warriors went on an (18-0) run that transformed a 5 point halftime deficit (the fact that deficit was only 5 points, augured well for G.S, which is seeking a third straight crown and fourth in five seasons) into a 13 point lead, and won game 2 at Toronto (Raptors) to even the ’19 NBA final.
Golden State, in their fifth straight final, led (2-0) in the last three and have only trailed (2-0) in two of their eleven final round series, both times, to great teams, the ’64 Boston Celtics and ’67 Philadelphia 76ers, each of those teams led by great centers, Bill Russell and Wilt Chamberlain respectively.
The ’15 final was (1-1) and manifested in Golden State winning the series in 6 games with Andre Iguodala, named series most valuable player.
In game 2 last night Iguodala sealed the Warriors’ win with a 3 point shot, accounting for the game’s final points, with 6 seconds remaining in the “GS” 5 point win.
Speaking of 5, the Warriors have opened as 5 plus point(s) favorites, in game 3 to be played Wednesday night, at Oracle Arena, the Warriors home since 1971, in this the Warriors’ last season playing at that storied venue.

Andre Iguodala, pictured above.
The Boston Bruins, bidding to make Boston just the second city (Detroit with the Tigers, Lions and Red Wings in 1935-1936) to win consecutive baseball, football and either hockey or basketball titles in the same year/season, routed the Blues (7-2) in game 3, to take a (2-1) NHL final round series lead.
It is just the second time in their last 8 Stanley Cup/NHL final round appearances, that the Bruins have as much as a (2-1) series lead after three games.
After not doing so in 5 consecutive final round losses (’74,’77,’78,’88 and ’90) and in a final round win in ’11, the Bruins took a (2-1) final round lead vs Chicago (Blackhawks) in ’13, however, “Chi” rallied to win the next three games and the title.
Torey Krug became the first Bruins’ player to amass as many as 4 points in a Cup final game, while Patrice Bergeron opened the scoring with a goal, accounting for his 100th playoffs point.

Torey Krug, pictured above.
Opening sentences of any kind, especially those in obituaries are very important. In the case of the superb baseball player, Bill Buckner, who died days back at age 69, you likely know of one important, but vastly over publicized play, ( among other things, THE GAME WAS TIED, which I have pointed out so many times in the nearly 33 years since), what follows is some of the rest, about “Billy Buck.”
There are few if any players from his era (he played from ’69-’90), I would rather have at bat for my team, in a big situation, than Bill Buckner.
He amassed over 2,700 hits, more than two of the greatest players/hitters, namely Ted Williams and Joe DiMaggio. He was not nearly as great as those two, but in my opinion, he belongs in the Baseball Hall, ahead of some that are there.
Two memories involving 1986 which featured incredible post-season play:
Somewhere, I have a tape of Buckner homering as a Cubs’ player in 1981, vs a Mets’ pitcher named Mike Scott, the latter, a dominant pitcher for the Houston Astros vs the Mets in a great 6 game NLCS, won by the Mets in 1986.
In #6/1986 World Series, I was there and the Mets staged an incredible rally to win the game and won the title two nights later in game 7, despite trailing (3-0), entering the bottom of the sixth inning.
Roughly two weeks earlier, Buckner started the incredible 4 run Red Sox 9th inning, down 3 runs and 3 games to 1, at the Angels, as I drove to Shea Stadium for #4 of the aforementioned 1986 NLCS, matching the Mets and Astros.
Alas Donnie Moore, Dave Henderson and now Bill Buckner, all prominent names in the classic 1986 post-season, are gone.
The memories of that incredible baseball, if held in the proper perspective, are ones to appreciate–win, lose or not care, regarding the result.
Bill Buckner played the great game, the right way, excelled in it and it is that, particularly his superb hitting, that I will remember and appreciate the most.

Bill Buckner, at bat, a beautiful sight, pictured above.
ABC needed it, the Toronto Raptors needed it and got a win in the NBA final opener, at Toronto last night, vs the two time defending champion, Golden State Warriors. It ended a 5 game Warriors’ win skein in final round opening games, that encompassed over 42 years. (See below).
Toronto sans a title since the baseball Blue Jays repeated as champions over 25 years ago, has not lost a final series since 1960, going (6-0). (Jays in ’92 and ’93, Maple Leafs from ’62-’64 and ’67, the latter in their long ago last final round appearance in a year the NHL playoffs official film was narrated by Jeopardy host, Alex Trebek.)
It was the Raptors’ first final round game while the Warriors fell to a still very impressive (8-3) in final round opening games (wins in all three as the Philadelphia Warriors in the first two league final round series in ’47 and ’48 as well as 1956. Out west, as the San Francisco or Golden State Warriors, they lost road openers and eventually the series to great teams the ’64 Celtics and ’67 76ers. Next as cited above, the Warriors won five straight final round opening games, in ’75 at the favored Bullets and vs the James led Cleveland Cavaliers (’15-’18).

The NHL/Stanley Cup final series is tied at a game apiece, as for the second straight year, a team sans a final round victory and down (1-0), won a one goal game on the road, to get even in the final round series. (Last year the Washington Capitals, (0-5) in previous final round games won by one goal in #2, recall Braden Holtby’s big save, and eventually won the title).
After Sean Kuraly’s third period goal put the Boston Bruins, once down (2-0), ahead to stay and give them an 8th straight win, that in game one, the St. Louis Blues rode defenseman Carl Gunnarsson’s first ever ‘offs goal, occurring early, in a Blues dominated overtime period, to win game 2 and end a 13 game final round losing streak, that had continued 49 years later in game 1.
Back to the Boston/St. Louis final round series history, the teams are even after two games for the seventh time in the ten such series, as three of the four NBA and baseball final round series between the cities, also stood at a game apiece.
In the other hockey final matching Boston and St. Louis, the Bruins swept the Blues.
Last night, the Blues won an ‘offs game vs Boston, for the first time in 10 tries.

“Toni Stone” (playing at Roundabout at Laura Pels Theatre 111 West 46th Street), written by Lydia R. Diamond is a superb, humorous and meaningful play about Ms. Stone, who was the first woman to ever play baseball in a professional league, having done so in the so called Negro League, in 1953.
Obie-award winning, April Matthis leads a tremendous cast, telling Toni Stone’s story, her great pursuit of and love of playing baseball with humor, insight and a beautiful moving, “get with it” pace.
Again it is a superb cast. Their names follow: Eric Berryman, Harvy Blanks, who played “Alberga,” the older man Ms. Stone married and stayed such until his death at age 103 in 1987, Phillip James Brannon, Daniel J. Bryant, Jonathan Burke, those are alot of B’s and the buzz for this show is big and well deserved), Toney Goins, Kenn E. Head, Ezra Knight, and Ms. Matthis.
Click below for ticket information:
Toni Stone – Roundabout Theatre Company

Left to right, Toni Stone with her idol, the great Joe Louis.
The 2019 NHL final series, the eleventh final round entity between teams from Boston and St. Louis, begins tonight in Boston as the home team Bruins host the Blues.
This will be the first time in the six baseball or hockey final entities between the cities, in which the team with the better regular season record will have the series home advantage and also the first time that the better record team would automatically get home advantage, as was the case in all 4 Boston (Celtics) vs St. Louis (Hawks) basketball final rounds.
Boston has the home advantage/home opener for the eighth time in this, the tenth final round series between the cities. An eleventh entity, a one game contest/Super Bowl was played at a neutral site and won by Boston/New England (Patriots) vs the then St. Louis Rams, coincidentally now in L.A. and again denied by the Patriots, in the most recent Super Bowl.
In 1946, the Boston Red Sox had the better regular season record, however, the Cards of St. Louis had home advantage, riding it to the title in 7 games with Enos Slaughter racing home with the go ahead to stay, W.S. winning run, (B8) on Harry Walker’s double (not single as is often reported).
The Cardinals had the better record but opened at Boston, which had the home advantage in both the ’67 and ’04 World Series won by “St. Loo” in 7 and the Bo Sox in 4 straight, respectively.
In 2013, the year of the other Red Sox/Cardinals World Series clash, the teams had the same “reg” record. Boston had home advantage because the American League won the All-Star game (for this and other “brilliance” Bud Selig is in the Baseball Hall?!). They “titled” in six games.
The NHL West Blues had home advantage in their 1970 final vs the Bruins, however the heavily favored and “better record” Bruins won in 4 straight games.
Boston is (7-3) vs St. Louis in final round play; both the Pats and Bruins (1-0) vs the Rams and Blues respectively, the Celtics (3-1) vs the Hawks and the 4 W.S. split, 2 each, involving the Red Sox and Cardinals.
Boston is (6-3) in previous openers vs St. Louis, winning in ’46, ’04, ’13 World Series, ’60 and ’61 NBA final, and ’70 NHL final and “title-ing” in 5 of those years, failing in ’46, Mr. Slaughter’s “dash” (I do those from Starbucks and these type notes) referenced above.
St. Louis won openers in the ’67 World Series and ’58 NBA final at Boston en route to eventual crowns. They also won at Boston in the ’57 NBA final opener, but the Celtics prevailed in 2 overtimes to win a classic 7 game series, the first of an incredible 11 titles in 13 seasons for the Boston Celtics.

The great player, Bob Pettit, pictured above, still holds the record for the most points scored in a game that clinched the NBA title.
Bob scored 50 in game 6 as his St. Louis Hawks won the franchise’s only crown either in St. Louis or in Atlanta, where they have played the last 51 seasons, vs the incredible Boston Celtics.
The Toronto Raptors overcame a 15 point, second half deficit and led by Kawhi Leonard, “6’d” the NBA top seed, Milwaukee Bucks (now 2-7 in semis and sans a final round appearance since 1974), to advance to their first NBA final, in this their 24th season.
Toronto will host a final round opening game for just the second time in 55 years, (the Toronto Maple Leafs hosted the ’64 NHL final round opener and titled in game 7 at home with goaltender Johnny Bower getting a shutout, while the Blue Jays opened the World Series at home in ’93, eventually winning it on Joe Carter’s home run a week later), when they host the Golden State Warriors in game one of the NBA final, Thursday night.
Golden State is a near three to one series favorite and a one point favorite, on the road, in game 1.
The city of Toronto is in its first final series since the aforementioned 1993 World Series, as the Maple Leafs have not been in a final since 1967.
One bright note for Toronto in that regard is that they have won six straight final round entities, having not lost since the greatest of the great, the 1960 Montreal Canadiens, swept the Leafs in the 1960 final. That victory gave Montreal, the last of 5 straight NHL titles (’56-’60).
Toronto won their last 4 NHL final series (’62-’64 and ’67) and the Blue Jays won in their only two World Series appearances (’92 and ’93).

Kawhi Leonard, pictured above.
The incredible final round history between Boston and St. Louis teams will begin to “write anew,” as its eleventh such entity commences Monday night, when the Boston Bruins (6-13) in NHL final round play, entertain the St. Louis Blues, who are (0-3) and in a final, for the first time in 49 years.
There will be more facts in the days to come, for now consider the great players that have been a part of Boston/St. Louis major North American sports league’s final round play.
Four greats named Bob are on the list, Boston’s Cousy vs St. Louis’ Pettit in all four Boston Celtics/St. Louis Hawks final round clashes in ’57, ’58, ’60 and ’61. Cousy is 90 years old while Pettit is 86.
St. Louis Cardinals’ pitching great Bob Gibson won 3 games, including #7 at Fenway Park as St. Louis 7’d the Boston Red Sox in the 1967 World Series.
The remarkable Bobby Orr scored in overtime of game 4 in the 1970 NHL final for the Bruins vs the Blues, giving Boston its first NHL crown in 29 years.
Certainly Orr is at or near the top of the list, as the subject of the NHL’s greatest player is considered.
Additionally, so are Bill Russell of the Boston Celtics and Tom Brady of the New England Patriots, each of whom played in Boston vs St. Louis final rounds.
Nobody has as many NBA titles as a player nor such Super Bowl wins as Mr.Russell (11) and (Mr. Brady is Robert Reed and Tom is still playing) Brady (6).
Add (so many others and apologies to those not cited) two all-time baseball players, Stan Musial of the Cardinals and Ted Williams of the Red Sox, who clashed in the 1946 World Series, another Red Sox player, Carl Yastrzemski, another awesome great, whose performance right through the 1967 World Series, is one of the best ever in a season.
Sam Jones with 10 titles for the Celtics, Lou Brock of the Cardinals, David Ortiz of the Red Sox, and Phil Esposito of the Bruins, all won more than one title, are all-time great considerations in important categories and of course, part of the storied final round history between the great sports and otherwise cities of St. Louis and Boston.

Among the great coaches/managers in the storied final round Boston/St. Louis history is Bill Belichick, pictured above.
Belichick won the first of his six Supe crowns as New England coach, vs the St. Louis Rams in the 2001 season Super Bowl.
Arnold “Red” Auerbach won the first of his 9 NBA titles as Celtics’ coach, vs the St. Louis Hawks, coached by Alex Hanumn in 1957.
The Celtics won an incredible 11 crowns in 13 seasons and only two Hanumn coached teams, one the 1958 St. Louis Hawks (the great ’67 Sixers, the other) denied them.
Eddie Dyer (1946 Cards), Red Schoendienst (’67 Cards), Harry Sinden (’70 Bruins) (vs Scotty Bowman, who went on to coach more NHL title teams than anyone), Terry Francona (’04 Red Sox, ending an 86 year title drought) and John Farrell (’13 Red Sox, the only home title clincher for the Red Sox in 100 seasons, 99 of which had a World Series and the first in 95 years) also guided their teams to titles in this great final round history.
