1976 NBA Finals
The 1976 NBA World Championship Series was the championship round for the National Basketball Association 's 1975–76 season, and the culmination of the season's playoffs. The Eastern Conference champion Boston Celtics defeated the Western Conference champion Phoenix Suns 4 games to 2 to win their 13th NBA Championship. Celtics point guard Jo Jo White was named as the series MVP.
Background
Phoenix Suns
The Phoenix Suns entered the NBA as an expansion team in the 1968–69 season. Prior to 1976, they only made the playoffs once, losing to the Los Angeles Lakers in the first round of the 1970 NBA playoffs. Before that, the Suns lost a coin flip to the Milwaukee Bucks prior to the 1969 NBA draft, losing out on selecting Kareem Abdul-Jabbar. Phoenix ultimately selected Neal Walk, who became a bust. The Suns redeemed themselves in the 1975 NBA draft by selecting Alvan Adams fourth overall.With Adams fortifying the center position, and with new addition Paul Westphal and Dick Van Arsdale providing the scoring punch, the Suns reached the playoffs for the second time, finishing with 42 wins. The Suns defeated the Seattle SuperSonics in six games in the conference semifinals, before achieving a bigger upset in dethroning the previous year's champions, the top seeded Golden State Warriors in seven games. The Suns reached their first NBA Finals.
Boston Celtics
The Boston Celtics were seeking to make up for the lost opportunity they squandered in the 1975 NBA playoffs. That year, they finished with 60 wins, but lost to the Washington Bullets in the conference finals. They kept the core of the team that won the 1974 NBA Finals, but made some tweaks, including trading Westphal to Phoenix for Charlie Scott. The Celtics won 54 games in the 1975–76 season, then defeated the Buffalo Braves and the "Miracle of Richfield" Cleveland Cavaliers in six games each to reach their 14th NBA Finals. Boston was seeking its 13th NBA title.Road to the Finals
Regular season series
Boston swept the four-game regular season series.Series summary
| Game | Date | Home team | Result | Road team |
| Game 1 | May 23 | Boston Celtics | 98–87 | Phoenix Suns |
| Game 2 | May 27 | Boston Celtics | 105–90 | Phoenix Suns |
| Game 3 | May 30 | Phoenix Suns | 105–98 | Boston Celtics |
| Game 4 | June 2 | Phoenix Suns | 109–107 | Boston Celtics |
| Game 5 | June 4 | Boston Celtics | 128–126 | Phoenix Suns |
| Game 6 | June 6 | Phoenix Suns | 80–87 | Boston Celtics |
''Boston Celtics defeated Phoenix Suns, 4–2''
Game 1
Boston won game one with a balanced attack. John Havlicek did not start for the Celtics due to a heel injury. However, Boston coach Tom Heinsohn rushed Havlicek into the game with 7:24 left in the first quarter as Phoenix took an early 10–7 lead, and the Ohio State product played the rest of the game. Dave Cowens recorded a triple-double with 25 points, 21 rebounds, and 10 assists while Jo Jo White shot only 1-for-4 in the first half before making 8-of-11 shots in the second half to keep Phoenix at bay. Phoenix trailed by two at the end of the first quarter, despite 11 first quarter Celtic turnovers. Kevin Stacom scored five straight points, his only points of the game, to put Boston up for good 22–20. Charlie Scott fouled out when he picked up his fifth and sixth fouls in an 11-second span.Game 2
Phoenix lost their twelfth game in a row at the Boston Garden. Boston put the game away with a 20–2 run at the start of the third quarter, giving them a 72–43 lead. The run was started by steals from Jo Jo White and Charlie Scott. Scott made just one of his nine shots in the first half but came alive with 12 points in the third quarter. Boston again started slowly without John Havlicek in the starting lineup, not making a field goal in the first three minutes of the game, again prompting Heinsohn to put Havlicek in the game.Game 3
Phoenix held Boston scoreless for nearly five minutes in the second quarter as they went to a 16-point lead. Then, the Suns' Ricky Sobers and Boston's Kevin Stacom got into a fistfight, and both were ejected. Sobers had a good game to that point, and Phoenix coach John MacLeod would later accuse the Celtics of having Stacom bait Sobers into the fight in order to get him out of the game.The Suns extended the lead to 23 in the third, but Boston began to charge back and cut the lead to two with three minutes left. At that point, Suns rookie center Alvan Adams scored twice, passed off to Paul Westphal for another basket, and then tipped in a Westphal miss. That was enough to get Phoenix a 105–98 win. Adams finished with 33 points and 14 rebounds. Dave Cowens and Charlie Scott both fouled out for the Celtics, and the Celtics also received for two technical fouls.
Game 4
In the first NBA game played in the month of June, referees Don Murphy and Manny Sokol whistled 21 fouls in the first 10 minutes. Celtics coach Heinsohn claimed later that the affair was pure "high school." John Havlicek and Cowens put the blame on their team for committing stupid fouls.""The game was close to the end, when Ricky Sobers hit a bank shot to put the Suns up by four with 90 seconds left. The Celtics cut it to two and had a chance to tie it, but lost 109-107 when Jo Jo White missed a jump shot late.
Game 5
Game 5 was a triple-overtime contest that is sometimes referred to as "the greatest game ever played" in NBA history. The Celtics surged out to a 36–18 lead after one quarter and led 42-20 early in the second, with John Havlicek scoring 19 of his team's points. The halftime lead was 61-45 Celtics, but the Suns began to claw back and held Havlicek scoreless until near the end of regulation.The game was enhanced by several controversies. Two controversies involved each team's use of timeouts:
Another set of controversies involved the clock:
The most notable portion of the game was the final 20 seconds of the second overtime. Boston led at that point 109–106. Phoenix had possession of the ball after taking its last timeout of the OT. In an amazing and frantic sequence, the following transpired:
Phoenix suddenly led, 110–109, with just five seconds left, and the team looked poised to win their third straight game and grab a 3-to-2 edge in the series. John Havlicek responded with a drive and a leaning one-hander in traffic, that he banked in off the glass, putting Boston in front 111–110 as the horn sounded. The fans then poured onto the court to celebrate Boston's apparent victory. The Celtics returned to their locker room. According to CBS guest analyst & Golden State Warriors forward Rick Barry, the ball went through the hoop with two seconds left and the clock should have been stopped. The officials apparently agreed with Barry and ordered the Celtics back onto the floor, continuing the game.
During the ensuing pandemonium, a fan attacked referee Richie Powers and other fans turned over one of the scorer's tables. After clearing the court and getting the Celtics back on the floor, the officials put one second back on the clock. Still, Phoenix's chances seemed slim, as they had the ball under their own basket with a second left. Then Paul Westphal of the Suns signaled for a time out that the Suns did not have. Although this resulted in a technical foul being called on Westphal, the play was critical for Phoenix, because the rules at the time gave Phoenix the same advantage that they would have had with timeouts remaining to use; namely, possession of the ball at half court. Boston's Jo Jo White made the technical free throw, increasing Boston's lead to 112–110.
During the timeout, fans were still on the Boston Garden floor, even disturbing the Suns' huddle by their bench as coach John MacLeod was drawing up a play for a possible tying basket. The Suns' players repeatedly had to shove the fans out of the way, and Phoenix general manager Jerry Colangelo even threatened to not bring his team back to the Boston Garden for Game 7 if security couldn't maintain control. When play resumed, Phoenix's Gar Heard took the inbounds pass from Perry and made a buzzer-beating shot for the Suns that tied the score yet again, 112–112.
Boston eventually took a six-point lead, 128–122, late in the third overtime, as Glenn McDonald, a little-used Celtic reserve player, chipped in half a dozen. Westphal then scored the next four points for Phoenix cutting the gap to 128–126, but he could not get the ball again;.
Celtics who fouled out were Charlie Scott in the last minute of regulation, Dave Cowens with one minute left in the 2nd overtime, and Paul Silas in the 3rd overtime. Alvan Adams and Dennis Awtrey both fouled out for the Suns. Silas picked up his fifth foul late in the fourth quarter, but played the entire remainder, including all three overtime periods before fouling out late in the third.
The Suns had the lead in the game on only four occasions and never by more than 2 points. They led 95–94 late in the fourth, and 106–105 and 110–109 in the 2nd overtime. They also led by two points on three occasions in the third overtime.
McDonald scored eight points in the game, all in overtime.
Jo Jo White led all scorers with 33 points.
Game 6
After the tough Game 5 loss, the Suns were more defiant heading home to Phoenix. "We know we're going to beat them." Gar Heard declared. "It's going to take seven now, but we know we're going to beat them. We showed we came to play."The first half was a defensive struggle. Tied after the first quarter at 20 points each, Boston scored 18 in the second quarter while holding the Suns to 13. Suns reserve Keith Erickson attempted to play at the start of the second quarter but reinjured his sprained ankle and never returned. After falling behind by 11, Phoenix caught up again in the third and took a 67–66 lead on a Ricky Sobers free throw with 7:25 left in the game.
But the Celtic responded and took control. Havlicek hit two free throws, then Cowens stole got a steal and immediately scored while drawing a foul. He made the ensuing free throw for a three-point play. Cowens then scored twice and Havlicek another to put the game away. Scott had three steals during the run and finished with 25 points and 11 rebounds, ending a series-long 11-for-44 shooting slump. During the run, Phoenix's only response was four free throws. The Celtics rode their surge to an 87–80 win and their 13th championship.
Jo Jo White scored 15 points, giving him 130 points in six games, and was named the series MVP. John Havlicek celebrated his eighth and final NBA title as a Celtic.