The Celtics were very clearly affected by the style of officiating in game 1. Though I witnessed just as many bogus and unnecessary fouls called on the Lakers throughout, I knew that the pace of play would bode well for LA.
Let me set this straight though first: I've seen several replays of various defensive trips from game 1 since Friday...and I'm thoroughly shocked at how dysfunctional everyone was. Players were out of rotation, or just entirely out to lunch in not responding to imminent penetration and post-up threats. The Celtics obviously lacked not only a killer instinct on Friday, but also any semblance of team focus. Oddly enough this bodes well for game 2, because this team clearly wasn't out-talented...they just didn't do what they normally do...and they paid for it in being embarrassed by LA.
However, the excessive foul-calling took the C's out of their element, and they didn't seem entirely prepared to deal with the consequent adjustments that immediately needed to be made. With Ray out of the game, their offense suffered tremendously...no spacing, no 3 pt. threat, no room for Rondo and the bigs to work with in the lane. In all, it resulted in an offensive disaster. Defensively, it necessitated putting FINLEY in the game..which quickly resulted in 6 straight Laker points! Later, the lack of production at the 2 position totally crippled the Celtic defense in attempts to guard Kobe in the 2nd half. By that point, the damage had been done.
Of course, none of this matters one bit. The next game will not be officiated in nearly the same way that game 1 was. There will be different refs, and of course Joe Crawford won't be around (he is known to call VERY tight games). In addition, no two consecutive games for the C's (or anyone else for that matter) have been called the same way.
I guarantee that we will see a loosely-officiated game 2 in which the Celtics will successfully get back to their stifling brand of D that led them to such success through April and May...with renewed offense, solid rebounding, and many opportunities for fast-break points.