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BOSTON CELTICS
HISTORY
Boston Celtics,
professional basketball team and one of seven teams in the Atlantic
Division of the Eastern Conference of the National Basketball
Association (NBA). The Celtics play at the FleetCenter in Boston,
Massachusetts, and wear jerseys of green and white. The team’s mascot,
the leprechaun of Irish folklore, represents Boston’s strong
Irish-American heritage.
One of the most successful and
celebrated franchises in professional sports, the Celtics have captured
16 NBA championships since their founding in 1946. From 1959 through
1966, they won eight titles to establish the longest streak of
consecutive championships in United States sports history. The Celtics
have faced the Los Angeles Lakers ten times in the NBA Finals,
establishing one of the best-known rivalries in professional basketball.

Under coach Red Auerbach, Celtic lineups featured early NBA greats such
as guards Bob Cousy, K.C. Jones, Sam Jones, and Bill Sharman; forwards
John Havlicek and Frank Ramsey; and center Bill Russell. Coach Tommy
Heinsohn led the franchise to two more titles in 1974 and 1976 with a
lineup featuring center Dave Cowens, forward Paul Silas, and guard Jo Jo
White.
During the 1980s the Celtics appeared in five NBA Finals, winning titles
in 1981, 1984, and 1986. Led by head coach K.C. Jones, the Celtic
lineups in the 1980s starred forward Kevin McHale, center Robert Parish,
and three-time NBA most valuable player (MVP), forward Larry Bird.
The Celtics entered the newly formed Basketball Association of America
(BAA) in 1946. In 1949 the BAA and the National Basketball League (NBL)
merged to become the NBA, and the next year the Celtics picked up two
key players—center Ed Macauley and rookie Bob Cousy—after their teams
had folded. Before the 1951-52 season, the franchise acquired Bill
Sharman.
Rookie Bill Russell joined the Celtics in 1956 and brought the team
overnight success. Boston defeated the St. Louis Hawks in 1957 for their
first NBA championship in a dramatic double-overtime seventh game. With
the addition of K.C. Jones before the 1958-59 season, the Celtic dynasty
was in place. That year Boston swept the Minneapolis Lakers to capture
the NBA championship. The Celtics and Lakers met in six more NBA Finals
during the 1960s.
Auerbach coached the Celtics to seven more NBA championships from 1960
through 1966 as Cousy, Havlicek, Tom Heinsohn, Frank Ramsey, Russell,
and Sharman dominated the league. The 1964 finals featured an
exhilarating matchup of Russell and center Wilt Chamberlain of the San
Francisco Warriors.
In the seventh game of the 1965 finals against the Lakers (now located
in Los Angeles), Havlicek stepped in front of an inbounds pass for a
steal with five seconds left, securing the Celtics’ victory and inciting
announcer Johnny Most to utter a cry that would become legendary,
“Havlicek stole the ball! Havlicek stole the ball!” Auerbach retired
after the 1966 victory over the Lakers. Russell took over as
player-coach, becoming the first black head coach in major league
professional sports.
In 1967 the Celtics’ string of eight championship victories was finally
broken, but the aging team put together two more championship victories
against the Lakers in 1968 and 1969. Russell retired before the 1970-71
season, and Heinsohn took over as head coach. Boston finished the season
with its first losing record in 20 years. Two seasons later a new
Celtics era began, led by Dave Cowens, Paul Silas, and Jo Jo White,
although the team fell to the New York Knicks in the division finals.
The next season, 1973-74, the Celtics bested the Milwaukee Bucks for the
NBA championship. A victory over the Phoenix Suns in 1976 gave the
franchise its 13th NBA crown.
The Celtics entered a rebuilding phase following the 1976 victory. A new
wave of talented players included Larry Bird, who won the rookie of the
year award in the 1979-80 season and energized the team with his
talented shooting and passing. With the addition of Robert Parish and
Kevin McHale, the Celtics again became the dominant force in the league
and appeared in five NBA Finals during the 1980s.
The Celtics captured the 1981 NBA championship, but they failed to win
the conference title the next two years. Former star K.C. Jones was
named head coach and guided the team to three NBA championship battles
against the Lakers from 1984 through 1987. The rivalries between the
Celtics and the Lakers and between Bird and Laker great Magic Johnson
revitalized professional basketball during the 1980s. After losing to
the Lakers in the 1985 NBA Finals, the Celtics secured another NBA title
by defeating the Houston Rockets in 1986. In their next finals
appearance the injury-plagued team was bested by the Lakers.
The Celtics were no longer a dominant force in the 1990s. Bird retired
before the 1992-93 season, and young star forward Reggie Lewis died of
heart failure in 1993. During the 1994-95 season, the Celtics moved from
the Boston Garden, where they had played since their founding, to a new
home at the FleetCenter.
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