May 9 – TD Garden, Boston
Game 4 of the Eastern Conference semifinals. Knicks vs. Celtics.
From quiet confidence to faint hope, Doc Rivers and his veteran squad were down to one question: how do we avoid the sweep?
Midway through the first quarter, the scoreboard gave no comfort—11-4, Knicks.
Rivers exhaled, signaled for a timeout, and stared up at the rafters where retired numbers and championship banners glowed under the lights. Three years earlier, he'd watched the Big Three hoist the O'Brien trophy. That night had felt like the peak of his career.
Now he studied the bench—grizzled vets running on fumes—and finally spoke.
"Fellas, don't sink into this," he said, voice steady. "I still believe. I have a dream that we can raise that trophy again. I have a dream that we can fight our way back, just as we did last year. And I have a dream that, at the very least, we do not get swept in our own building."
It wasn't word-for-word Martin Luther King, but the cadence and conviction had the same charge. For a minute, you almost believed he could talk anyone into anything.
Even the Knicks' bench caught fragments of his booming voice.
Lin Yi leaned toward Chauncey Billups with a grin. "Chauncey, what's your dream?"
"Simple," Billups said. "Another ring. What about you?"
"Same here," Lin replied, eyes still on the huddle.
The game turned into a grind. Boston's veterans clawed through every possession, refusing to let their season end. When the buzzer sounded, they'd pulled it out, protecting their floor for at least one more night.
Garnett bellowed toward the rafters, a week's worth of frustration released in one roar. Pierce and Rondo locked in a long hug; Ray Allen stood hands on hips, breathing it all in. Fate, maybe—but not surrender.
In the locker room, Rivers gathered them once more.
"It's 3-1 now," he said, eyes sharp. "We still have a shot."
The players exchanged looks—half weary, half amused—but no one argued.
The Celtics had lived to fight another day, and back in New York, Knicks fans were almost pleased. A Game 5 at Madison Square Garden meant one more night of playoff basketball—and for season-ticket holders, one more game already paid for.
...
David Stern wasn't losing sleep over the Celtics–Knicks matchup.
His real headache was in Miami.
From a TV-ratings standpoint, a Heat–Knicks Eastern Conference Final was the dream scenario.
But the Bulls had other ideas.
Adam Silver had quietly floated the idea of giving Miami a little help. Stern waved it off. LeBron had chosen his path; now he had to live with it.
Meanwhile, Derrick Rose was busy rewriting the script. After falling behind 1-2, the newly sharpened Windy City Rose dragged Chicago even. Two straight wins later, the series was tied 2-2 and headed back to the United Center for a massive Game 5.
Out West, the Thunder and Grizzlies were locked at 2-2 as well. Memphis, fresh off its upset of San Antonio, kept leaning on their bruising, chain-link defense to slow Oklahoma City's one-on-one fireworks.
Their only real drawback?
Lin Yi had convinced Tony Allen to sign with New York, leaving the Grizz without their premier perimeter stopper. Against the Spurs, they managed; against Kevin Durant, it showed.
Durant kept torching them, prompting OKC fans to flood message boards:
KD's every bit as good as Lin Yi!
Durant soaked it up, clapped a hand on Westbrook's shoulder, and said—loosely translated from his easy drawl—"Bro, the whole city is counting on us."
The Lakers, on the other hand, were in trouble. Down 1-3 to Dallas, they weren't getting the close calls that had kept the original timeline interesting. Kobe Bryant's body was betraying him. Phil Jackson, ever the long-term strategist, quietly urged his star to consider shutting it down for a year.
"Thirty-two isn't old," he reminded him. "Jordan was flying at thirty-six."
Kobe wouldn't hear it. He played through everything—nagging injuries, mounting pain—fueling both admiration and eye-rolling.
Fans: "Kobe is still dropping buckets with a 40-degree fever!"
"Bandaged up and still grinding—unbelievable!"
"Greatest competitor alive. Lakers need to match his heart!"
Detractors: "Enough already. This is reckless, not heroic."
Phil had a point. After thirty, even iron needs maintenance. But the lure of a three-peat was irresistible. Another ring meant closing the gap on Jordan's legacy.
Shaq knew it. Sitting beside Lin Yi one evening, he dialed Kobe, listened, and shook his head. "He's not resting," Shaq said flatly. "He never will."
Lin nodded. He understood. Just as Steph Curry could read Lin's competitive streak, Shaq knew Kobe's heart.
May 11 – Madison Square Garden
Game 5. Knicks versus Celtics.
Everyone in a New York jersey understood the assignment: time to finish the series.
...
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