Let’s hope with Marv Albert, tonight TNT presents a Monday night #7 “quarters” between the Boston Celtics and Washington Wizards nee Bullets.
Why was this game not played yesterday, as the S.A. Spurs might be asking, as the top heavy favorite, Golden State Warriors overcame a 25 point third quarter deficit to “open” San Antonio in their semi.
If Celts/Wizards nee Bullets, (try education and tolerance, try being without severe malice–I rage vs certain announcers, not healthy but perhaps but I do not shoot guns–not changing team nicknames to curtail violent acts, also those who enforce the law should NEVER do so with malice and hate), had been played yesterday, the Spurs would have another game 1 chance tonight.
The home team is (6-0), in the Wizards/Bullets (all as the Bullets) in previous franchise #7’s of quarters. Boston (Celtics) is a 5 point fave, in a bid to make the home team (7-0) in the 7 Wizards # 7’s quarterfinals games.
Next a famed Monday night, semi or later, game 7 from each franchise is recalled.
In the ’71 semis, at the half of #7, shown on channel 7 in N.Y. as unlike in the previous season, which was a Knicks’ title season, there was no blackout in New York (Cosell related, Ali often asked why the bad things were black?!!) Howard Cosell (it was as stated, a Monday night) was chirping about Dick Barnett and the defending champion New York Knicks and their lead.
However, Fred Carter had a key shot and the Bullets prevailed.
On Monday night May 5, 1969, in the last NBA game that season and of the extraordinary careers of Bill Russell (not known or announced before the game) and Sam Jones (known well before the game) the great Boston Celtics made it an incredible 11 NBA titles in 13 seasons (108-106) (L.A. had the last two points as the game was close but not THAT close) at L.A. vs the Lakers.

The great Sam Jones, a key member of 10 Boston Celtics’ title teams, to this point, one more than Michael Jordan and LeBron James have won combined, is pictured above.
Also while not as great a player as either, Jones’ great clutch play certainly rivals James and is in the ballpark, maybe even closer with Mr. Jordan.
Last night, after I missed Bobby Ryan’s overtime winning goal as Ottawa (Senators) “opened” at Pittsburgh, vs the Pens, with “Pitts” native Mike Emrick not broadcasting, (WHY?!) I noticed some coincidences, watching the fine Larry Peerce directed film, 1969 “Goodbye, Columbus.”
Richard Benjamin is “Neil KLUGMAN” in the 1969 film, falling in love with Ali MacGraw’s “Brenda,” whose father is played by Jack Klugman.
During the film, a marquee for a movie theater shows ” The Odd Couple” starring Jack Lemmon and Walter Matthau is being presented.
One year later, Klugman would begin a great run on the television series, “The Odd Couple,” also starring Tony Randall.
All four were great, so was “Goodbye, Columbus” and its cast. Mr. Peerce also directed, among others, another tremendous film, “The Incident.”

Goodbye, Columbus was written by the superb author, Philip Roth.
Also back to hockey, en route to at least the semis, Pittsburgh did “say” “Goodbye, Columbus,” dispatching the Blue Jackets (Columbus) in five games.
Both the defending champion Cleveland Cavaliers and top ranked (for a third straight regular season) Golden State Warriors sailed through the NBA prelims and semis with (8-0) records, an NBA first.
Many feel and the odds are say three to one in favor of a Cleveland/Golden State finals series which has decreased interest in the NBA ‘offs thus far.
Three is the operative number as if such a finals series manifests, it would be the first time in NBA history, that the same two teams clash for its crown in three straight seasons.
The “G.S.” opponent is set and they are no slouch in that they are the San Antonio Spurs, whose coach Gregg Popovich not only knows how, albeit somewhat arrogantly, to put the often ridiculous media in its place but has also coached 5 title teams (just one after a truly great 4 in 9 seasons from ’99-07).
Yet “G.S.” is an unbelievable 8 plus to one series favorite.
Cleveland will also be a huge favorite in its semi, huge, huge if it is Washington (Wizards), not as high vs the Boston Celtics, the latter would have home advantage.
The three remaining East teams with a #7/Qtrs, evokes memories of 1976, as the Cleveland Cavaliers won a melodramatic 7 game “quarters” series vs the then Washington Bullets, now the Washington Wizards.
Next in ’76, the Celtics “6’d” the Cavs. Likely the Cavs will do the same to Monday night’s 7th game winner, whether it is the visiting Wizards or 4 plus point “fave,” Celtics.

I would pay in dollars, likely significant ones, to view/ re live the unbelievable ’76 “Quarters” won in 7 in the waning seconds by the Cavs vs the Washington Bullets.
The subject is hockey again, as the NBA is seemingly a foregone conclusion until the finals, and it is still early in the baseball season.
However this hockey is recalling “exactly” 45 years ago tonight and not the wins by Pittsburgh (yet again!!) vs Wash (cue South Pacific as again, albeit unfairly in a quarterfinal, the Caps are not “washed out of her hair”, but the NHL ‘offs). and Anaheim (vs upstart Edmonton) in #7’s last night.
On Thursday night May 11, 1972 led by the great Bobby Orr (paraphrasing John Lennon, I am not saying Orr was better than Gretzky–who is often “Wayned” as the greatest by proclamation and I feel Orr, certainly Gordie Howe and others make that claim exaggerated. Also Wayne, you left Edmonton where the likelihood of many more titles was great and you never won another), Wayne Cashman and goaltender Gerry Cheevers, the Boston Bruins won their second title in three seasons, after a 29 year drought, clinching it that night (3-0) and 4 games to 2 vs the team with the second most points in the NHL that season, the New York Rangers.
Contrast that tremendous finals series, though essentially controlled by the Bruins, with the “quarters” clash of the two top points teams just completed.
The key game in the series was in game 1, when after the Bruins shockingly dissipated a (5-1) lead vs an excellent Rangers’ team, one that was better than the franchise’s lone title winner in the past 76 seasons, the “bought and paid for” 1994 team, that avoided the Mario Lemieux (another I might compare favorably with the surely great but yet over rated Gretzky–by the way you know what they say re opinions) Penguins, as low and behold the mediocre record Washington Caps did the Rangers’ “dirty work” and KO’d the Pens, as you are reading elsewhere today, the one time in 10 series, Wash beat Pitts and oh did it help the Rangers.
In that series opener on a Sunday afternoon with the great Dan Kelly broadcasting for CBS, (think “Cincinnati Kid” as Emrick is good but “Dans” such as Kelly and Gallivan were better) after the Rangers made that aforementioned great comeback, Garnet “Ace” Bailey took a pass from Mike Walton (Shaky), and scored the decisive goal.
One tragic consequence, among many concerning the events of “9-11,” on a Tuesday in 2001, is that Mr. Bailey lost his life that day.

Oh the pressure on each home team in tonight’s two NHL quarterfinals, seventh games, as both the Washington Capitals and Anaheim Ducks, the home teams, (vs defending champion Pittsburgh and upstart Edmonton respectively), have bad history in such encounters, sharing 6 time , game 7 losing coach Bruce Boudreau.
The Ducks, all under Boudreau have dissipated (3-2) series leads and lost #7 at home, the last four seasons.
“Wash” denied in a home 7th twice under Boudreau, is (1-8) in previous series vs the Penguins, twice losing a home 7th game to the Pens in years the Penguins won it all. Pitts dispatched Wash in the ‘offs en route to all four of their titles.
Predictions: Mike Emrick and NBC Sports Network gets a classic, (2-1) Wash on an overtime goal by T.J. Oshie is one prediction, the lesser known announcer out West gets an easy (4-1) Anaheim victory, as I go double “chalk,” which can make a most annoying sound.
The latest example “chalk” king, Mike Francesa on WFAN yesterday, being virtually certain there would be a #7 in Ott/Rangers, but once he said it, Eric Karlsson and Ott in 6, should not have been a surprise.

Eric Karlsson of the Ottawa Senators, pictured above.
“Ott,” no relation to Mel, is going to its third “semi,” winning in ’07 vs Buffalo, “taking the fifth” to clinch a game NBC moved off its primary station to make way for pre Preakness coverage and losing to eventual champion New Jersey (Devils) in ’03.
Anaheim coached by Randy Carlyle, their current coach who is in his second stint there, took “Ott” in 5 in the ’07 Cup Finals. That was one of only two Cup Finals to go less than six games, the usual money making barometer for the network since ’02, the other an L.A./New York tilt with built in better ratings.
Alas Mel Ott and the New York Giants once “final’d” a “Wash” team in 5, that in 1933.
Speaking of three, starting soon, the Wash area has THE game (how dare ESPN.com compare 5th of Wash Wizards nee Bullets at Boston Celtics with CAPS/PENS–get the caps, check who has a realistic title chance!!!) Caps/Pens, Wizards at Celts and first place Orioles at first place “Wash” Nationals.
After there were no decisive 7th games in the first round of the NHL ‘offs for the first time since 2001, and just the third time in the 30 seasons of such possibilities, there will be at least two seventh games and perhaps a third, in the 4 “quarters” possibilities.
Tomorrow night the top ranked Washington Capitals will host the defending Stanley Cup champion, Pittsburgh Penguins before the NHL West top seed, Anaheim Ducks do the same against the upstart Edmonton Oilers in decisive seventh games.
Meanwhile tonight, the New York Rangers, trailing three games to two vs the Ottawa Senators in their “qtr,” return home and are nearly nine to five “faves,” to give Gary Bettman and the NHL a third seventh game in these quarterfinals.
Some “exactly” 45 years ago Rangers’ history to note; on this date exactly 45 years ago, Tuesday May 9, 1972, the Rangers stayed alive with an upset win at Boston vs the Bruins in the Stanley Cup Finals which then ended on a reasonable, “ice not melting” Thursday May 11th.
Then the great Bobby Orr, Wayne Cashman and goaltender Gerry Cheevers led a Bruins’ Cup clinching victory.
If the Rangers win tonight, # 7 would be played on that game’s exact 45 year anniversary. Even if not, the NHL will not have progressed into its semis, as its war of attrition, not skill, continues.
One more thing, what a shame either the Pens or Caps will go out as early or “calendar late,” as the quarters, while either the Sens or Rangers will advance to the semis, having not played either team, as they (Pens/Caps) unfairly, played each other as early as the quarterfinal round.

This is not because the “doing it the right way,” Yankees are (21-9), which includes a three game sweep at Wrigley Field, of the defending champion, slow starting, Chicago Cubs.
Certainly the far bigger story is that the Nashville Predators have advanced to the NHL semis for the first time, winning (3-1) to (4-2) the St. Louis Blues in the quarters.
An additional note is the only other St. Loo team, the Cardinals (now the state of Tennessee, once with no teams, remember the scene in “Cast Away,” regarding the Tennessee Titans nearly winning the Supe, has three teams, one more than St. Louis, which once had 4 to the state of Tennessee’s none) swept all 3 games from the Braves, nearly 35 years after sweeping Atlanta in the 1982 NLCS, en route to the title.
Nashville is now (1-4) in NHL quarterfinal series, and will open their first semi on the road either in Anaheim or Edmonton.
The Ducks (Anaheim) host the Oilers in #7 of their quarter, on Wednesday night. The Ducks have lost game 7 of a series at home after holding a (3-2) series lead, the last 4 seasons and hope to avoid a 5th such occurrence Wednesday night. Already the “related/equivalent” L.A. area, Clippers had a bad “5,” this year, losing a series in which they led, for a fifth straight season, an NBA first.

It was exactly 45 years ago today, that the Los Angeles Lakers completed one of the greatest single seasons in any major sport, by winning the NBA Title, their first in Los Angeles, with a home (114-100) victory vs the New York Knicks in game 5 of the finals on a Sunday night at The Forum in L.A.
The Knicks had defeated the Lakers in game 7 of the NBA finals to win their first crown by almost the same score (113-99) just two years earlier.
This was the second title for playoffs MVP, Wilt Chamberlain and the first and only as a player for another great, Jerry West.
The Lakers had a regular season record of (69-13) a record until “Chi” broke it in 1996. They won 33 straight games which is still a record in any of the four major sports leagues. It was quite a team and a remarkable season.

Wilt and Jerry West, two of the greatest ever.

