Laker Nation Hops Aboard Warriors Bandwagon

The Lakers want the Warriors to win because they don’t want the Boston Celtics to win — because they’re the Celtics and because a green-themed party in a week or so would mean NBA championship No. 18 for Boston, breaking its current tie with L.A.

“The Lakers never want the Celtics to win,” Johnson told ESPN, insisting that Laker owner Dr. Jerry Buss, who died in 2013, had fixated on trying to get the Lakers to the top of the all-time championship list during his lifetime.

“We are all Warriors fans now,” added Mychal Thompson, whose son Klay scored 25 points on Wednesday but could not prevent the Warriors from falling into a 2-1 series hole.

While the Celtics have reached the Eastern Conference finals four times in the past six years, the franchise’s last title was back in 2008. Since then, the Lakers have collected three, most recently behind LeBron James and Anthony Davis in the Orlando bubble in 2020, to draw level on 17 overall.

It’s a serious matter in Boston, too, where the “Banner 18” catchphrase has been ever-present during this postseason, providing historic fuel to draw upon when faced with Game 7s against the Milwaukee Bucks (at a screaming TD Garden) and the Miami Heat (on the road to cap off a wild and unpredictable series).

And it seems to matter just as much in California, where the first searing waves of summer heat have kept the locals out in bars into the late evening, with Laker-jersey-packed watering holes featuring screens devoted to the Finals.

Steph Curry, Warriors fall to Celtics in Game 3 of NBA Finals

Jaylen Brown and Jayson Tatum combined for 53 points while Steph Curry led the way for Golden State with 31 points.

The Finals are where the Lakers thought they might be when Russell Westbrook came aboard at the start of the 2021-22 campaign to formulate an imposing triumvirate of star power, one that eventually found itself hopelessly incompatible and condemned the team to an 11th place finish in the Western Conference, and therefore out of the play-in tournament.

According to Hector Rivera, a 49-year-old Lakers fan from Ontario, Calif., the dismal campaign makes it even more important that the Celtics don’t prevail in the Finals.

“Can you imagine how hard the Celtics fans would be laughing at us if they win it in the year when we stunk?” Rivera told me. “That’s why I’m out here yelling at the TV.”

Rivera watched the first half on Wednesday at a bar near his workplace, took an Uber to another closer to home at the half, and braced himself for some difficult questions once he returned to his family.

“My wife isn’t going to believe I was out just to watch the game,” he said. “She doesn’t know much about basketball, but she knows the Lakers were eliminated weeks ago.”

Matrimonial hurdles aside, this is a concerning time for Lakers supporters. With the Celtics’ glory days of the 1980s now a fading memory, most of the L.A. fanbase believed that joining Boston on 17 titles in 2020 would inevitably lead to their team surging clear and firmly establishing a claim as the greatest franchise in NBA history.

Yet with James’ individual stat lines unable to translate into wins, Davis’ repeated injury troubles continuing to flare, Westbrook apparently spent and years worth of draft picks already blown on trades, it is the team from the East and its young core of Jayson Tatum and Jaylen Brown that may have the greatest upside over the next few years.

Will Steph Curry suit up for Game 4 after his injury?

After Game 3, Steph compared the injury to the foot sprain he suffered when Marcus Smart dove into his leg in March which caused him to miss the final 12 games of the regular season.

Celtics fans crave a return to the glory days of the 1980s. To irk L.A. in the process would be even sweeter. After all, it was the Celtics supporters who came up with the original “Beat L.A.” chant, more than 40 years ago.

Then there were the heated series between the Celtics and Lakers in the Finals, three times in the 1980s, then again in 2008 and 2010 — and 12 times overall dating back to 1959.

For Warriors head coach Steve Kerr, the infamous Kevin McHale clothesline on Kurt Rambis in Game 4 of the 1984 Finals was one of the most memorable images of his childhood.

“There’s a mystique that exists with the Celtics, for sure,” Kerr told reporters. “Incredible franchise, incredible history. And for me, just having grown up watching those games and being a fan, it’s pretty cool to be coaching in the Finals against them.”

For the Lakers and their supporters, it will be very cool if their newfound buddies, the Warriors, can mount a comeback and reverse the course of the series. And very miserable if they can’t.

“A bunch of nights watching, only to have the Celtics brag about being first to 18?” Rivera said. “That would be the worst start to summer.”