WALTHAM, Mass. — The Boston Celtics are exactly where they want to be for Game 7 — home. Now they must keep Dwight Howard from getting to his favorite spots, right near the basket.
Defense will mean more than the decibel level when the defending NBA champions try to control the Orlando Magic’s powerful center tonight.
The winner faces a huge challenge in the Eastern Conference finals — LeBron James and his playoff-perfect Cleveland Cavaliers, who swept their first two series.
The Celtics are in their second straight seven-gamer. They beat Chicago in the first series and bobbled themselves into the Game 7 against Orlando by blowing a 10-point, third-quarter lead in Game 6 and losing 83-75. Howard had 23 points and 22 rebounds Thursday night.
“Game 7 is the ultimate players’ game. I’ve always thought that,” said Boston coach Doc Rivers, who feels their will and execution mean more than coaching tips. “If you need a rah-rah speech for Game 7, your team’s probably in a little trouble.”
So he plans to forgo any inspirational pregame words. The fans will be loud enough.
But the Celtics don’t want to hear about home-court advantage.
“You can’t go into any situation thinking that you’re comfortable at home,” Ray Allen said. “You’ve got to play basketball and it starts with not getting too comfortable at home.”
The Celtics beat Atlanta and Cleveland at home in Game 7 of the first two rounds last year. They did it again against the Bulls, a series in which four games reached overtime.
They’re 17-3 in seventh games at home.
“You can’t think about the aura of Boston while you’re playing them,” Magic guard Rafer Alston said, “but the days before, leading up to it, you have a thought in your mind about it. There’s nothing bad about it. The history of that organization to me is fascinating, the fact that they consistently get it done in their building in decisive games.”



