LOS ANGELES |  Buckle up, Boston and L.A. These epic NBA finals are going to Game 7. Kobe  Bryant made sure of it, with plenty of help from the rest of the  revitalized Los Angeles Lakers. Bryant scored 26 points, Pau Gasol  added 17 points and 13 rebounds, and the Lakers emphatically extended  the NBA finals to a decisive seventh game with a 89-67 victory over the  Boston Celtics in Game 6 on Tuesday night. Ron Artest added 15  points for the Lakers, who stared down elimination by jumping to a  22-point lead during a dazzling first half. While limiting Boston to the  second lowest-scoring performance in NBA finals history, the defending  champions stretched the finals to the limit for the first time since  2005. A champion will be crowned Thursday night at Staples Center. Ray  Allen scored 19 points for the Celtics, who took an ugly pratfall on  the verge of winning their unprecedented 18th title. It turns out their  longtime rivals are still quite serious about earning their 16th  championship. Two years after the Celtics ended the finals with a  39-point blowout of the Lakers in Game 6, Los Angeles turned Game 6 into  a long nightmare for Boston. Only Utah’s infamous 54-point performance  against Chicago in 1998 was worse than this offensive disaster, which  included 33 percent shooting and a 52-39 rebounding advantage for the  Lakers. “We did a great job,” Bryant said. “We have to come with  the same energy, the same dedication to defense (in Game 7).” Bryant  grabbed 11 rebounds, and Gasol led the Lakers with nine assists in a  remarkable bounce-back game for Los Angeles, which dominated from the  opening minutes by vacuuming up rebounds and playing relentless defense.  The Lakers’ bench largely took care of the rest, outscoring Boston’s  reserves while the Celtics failed to make a run. “Our defense was  good, our rebounding was better,” Lakers coach Phil Jackson said. “We  had some good luck on some tips and offensive rebounds, and those things  changed the course of the game.” These rivals have played a Game 7  four times in their 12 previous finals meetings, with Boston winning  all four. But it hasn’t happened since 1984 — and it hasn’t happened to  Bryant, who looks determined to stake his claim among the NBA’s greats  in pursuit of his fifth championship. Bryant was a one-man band  for much of the Lakers’ three-game stay in Boston, but Los Angeles was a  symphony in Game 6. Gasol was a constant low-post presence after  disappearing for long stretches of the series, while Artest harnessed  his wildly inconsistent jumper and hit three 3-pointers. With  first lady Michelle Obama watching from a luxury box, the Lakers were on  their best behavior — and the Celtics responded terribly to the chance  to clinch a title. Paul Pierce scored 13 points and Kevin Garnett  added 12, but the Celtics’ offense was a jumbled, stand-around mess.  Rajon Rondo, the late-game hero in Boston’s last appearance in Los  Angeles, got off to a 1-for-8 shooting start before finishing with 10  points and six assists. After earning the NBA’s second-best road  record during the regular season, the Celtics must win on the road again  to avoid becoming just the third team to blow a 3-2 series lead in the  2-3-2 finals format. The Celtics lost starting center Kendrick  Perkins in the first quarter to a sprained right knee when he landed  awkwardly under the hoop, but his absence couldn’t explain the Lakers’  utter domination of the first half — a 30-13 rebounding edge while  holding Boston to 34 percent shooting and frustrating Rondo. There  hasn’t been a winner-take-all finals game since San Antonio finished  off Detroit five years ago, and Thursday’s Game 7 will be just the 17th  in NBA history. The Spurs’ victory over the Pistons was the first Game 7  since 1994, when the Houston Rockets capped a comeback with two home  victories over the New York Knicks and their point guard, Boston coach  Doc Rivers. The Celtics were on the verge of finishing off the  Lakers after winning three of the last four games, including Game 2 in  Los Angeles and the last two back in Boston. With their fluid offense  purring and their sturdy defense holding the Lakers to meager scoring  totals, the Celtics needed just one win in the final two games to clinch  another title. But facing their first series deficit and  elimination game of the postseason, the Lakers kept their championship  cool. The Lakers improved to 10-1 in the postseason at Staples Center,  using the homecourt advantage they earned by finishing ahead of the  Celtics, the East’s fourth-place team before their remarkable playoff  run. The Celtics dropped to 3-4 in closeout playoff games this  season, including 0-3 on the road. Boston had nine chances to finish a  playoff series away from home in the past three postseasons, but has  been successful only once. NOTES: Los Angeles got little from  injured center Andrew Bynum, who had two points and four rebounds in 16  minutes before going to the locker room in the second half, presumably  for work on his injured right knee. … Even with the dire stakes for  the Lakers, Staples Center wasn’t yet full for pregame introductions.  Many fans likely were delayed in the nightmarish traffic and parking  around Staples and the next-door Los Angeles Convention Center, which is  hosting a huge technology expo. … Fans near courtside included anthem  singer Christina Aguilera, Josh Brolin, Diane Lane, Lenny Kravitz and  Snoop Dogg sitting alongside Diddy. Dane Cook and Maria Menounos were  among the Massachusetts transplants decked out in Celtics regalia, while  director Eli Roth wore a Red Sox shirt.
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