Bulls edge Celtics in triple OT to force game seven

CHICAGO, (Reuters) – The Chicago Bulls stunned the  Boston Celtics 128-127 in a triple overtime thriller on  Thursday, sending the Eastern Conference first-round playoff  series to a deciding seventh game.

A steal, slam-dunk and free throw by second-year centre  Joakim Noah with 35 seconds to play put the Bulls up for good  against the defending NBA champions after 21 lead changes.

“I felt like it took forever to get to that basket,” said  Noah, son of former French Open tennis champion Yannick. “Words  can’t really describe it. We’re still alive.

“We were very close to death. Each game has been a  rollercoaster.”
The often ill-tempered series, which has already had an NBA  record four overtime finishes, goes down to the wire in Boston  today. The winners face the Orlando Magic.   With its season on the line Chicago blew a 12-point lead in  the fourth quarter and needed two clutch plays from backup  center Brad Miller — a three-pointer and a driving lay-up —  to pull level with 30 seconds left in regulation.

“Brad Miller was the savior for them. Those were the two  biggest plays, I thought. It gave them hope again,” said  Celtics head coach Doc Rivers.

Forward John Salmons led the Bulls with 35 points,  including a crucial layup with two minutes left in double OT  while Derrick Rose added 28 points in another tempestuous  clash.

The rookie guard also posted a team-high seven assists and  eight rebounds as the Bulls overcame a 51-point performance  from veteran Boston guard Ray Allen.

“We’re making too many mistakes still but I’m pleased with  how it turned out,” said Bulls coach Vinny Del Negro. “I’m so  pleased with our guys’ ability to make shots when they had to.”

Boston let an eight-point lead slip away in the final  minutes, to the chagrin of Rivers.
“We had our chances. We tried to hold onto the game but we  stopped playing,” he said. “We let a team score 50 percent on  us — and we’re supposed to be a defensive team.
“Some of our guys were tentative.”

Tempers flared as early as the first quarter when Boston’s  Rajon Rondo, who Chicago felt was guilty of rough play earlier  in the series, clashed with Kirk Hinrich.

Miller played with seven stitches in his mouth following  Tuesday’s hit from Rondo, who was called for a flagrant foul  this time. He finished with eight points and a game-high 19  assists.