Howard says Finals heading back to L.A.
ORLANDO, Fla. - Dwight Howard has his bags packed.
Showing off an it's-not-over-yet smile and a confident attitude, the Orlando Magic center said Saturday that the NBA Finals will be headed back to Los Angeles. The Magic is down 3-1 to the Lakers but wants to "make history," starting with Game 5 today (7 p.m., ABC 7) in its final home game of the best season in franchise history.
"You want me to get up here and say the season is going to be over tomorrow? That's not what anybody should do or anybody should think," Howard said. "I believe that we're going to be going back to L.A."
Magic coach Stan Van Gundy wanted to make sure his team didn't lose hope.
So he called players in for a rare day-after-game meeting Friday to make sure his team had moved on from its Game 4 meltdown. Van Gundy, who rarely gives speeches or motivational pep talks, delivered one at the meeting about Greg LeMond's comeback in the 1989 Tour de France.
"He had come from behind and then taken the lead and then lost it on one of the late stages, and people started to write him off," Van Gundy said. "And at the end of the stage he looked beaten, and he and his wife were talking when they left, and they asked his wife what he had said.
"And he said, 'It'll just make the story all that much better when I come back and win it all.' "
The Magic's challenge might be just as difficult.
But Van Gundy doesn't want his team to believe it can win Game 5 unless it first believes it can still win the championship. That would take a record rally - no team in 29 previous tries has won the title after being down 3-1 in the Finals.
"I think when you're in this situation, the key thing is do you still believe you can win the championship?" Van Gundy said. "If you don't think you can go to L.A. and win the championship, then even though you're saying one game at a time, it's pretty easy to let go if things aren't going well."
Orlando has had a season filled with rallies.
All-star point guard Jameer Nelson went out with a shoulder tear in February. The Magic lost on two buzzer-beaters in the playoffs, twice rallied from a series deficit, won a Game 7 in Boston and knocked out MVP LeBron James and the top-seeded Cleveland Cavaliers.
Winning three straight against the best-in-the-west Lakers is another story. Even so, the Magic believes it can be the first team to mount such a comeback.
"Why not?" Magic forward Hedo Turkoglu asked.
It would take a big turnaround.
The Magic had 17 turnovers, missed 15 free throws and fell apart on defense in its Game 4 loss. The Lakers exposed Orlando's point-guard struggles and clamped down on all-star Rashard Lewis, who had just 6 points on 2-for-10 shooting from the field.
Howard's missed free throws followed by Derek Fisher's 3-pointer to force overtime left Orlando devastated. The Magic scored only 4 points in OT, struggling to find its rhythm.
But the past has meant little before with Orlando.
The Magic, a streaky team that can dazzle one minute and disappear the next, has been able to rally from tough losses simply by making baskets if its potent shooters can get hot. Orlando shot a Finals-record 62.5 percent - and 75 percent in the first half - in its Game 3 win after missing a chance to take Game 2.
But this is the Magic's last chance to show its resiliency. There will be no more bounce-back games if it loses, only elimination.
It's a challenge the Magic welcomes.
"We want to try to make history," Howard said. "We've done a lot of things this year as far as a team and individuals and reaching a lot of different goals and breaking records and stuff like that, so why not try and do something else?"