I
wanted to take a step back and think about this one for a little while
before coming here and posting about it. By now, you've heard Paul
Pierce will join Kevin Garnett in the All-Star game, while Ray Allen
and Rajon Rondo will get the weekend off (which really isn't a bad
thing for the Celtics in the long term). Of course, all four Celtics
can make their case to be in next month's game, but there are snubs
every year -- Allen was in the same spot last year before being a
commissioner's invite due to a late injury.
But do Allen and Rondo deserve to be there this year?
That's what I'll focus on here. Let's get it out of the way that Chris
Bosh, Danny Granger, Rashard Lewis, Joe Johnson and Pierce all belong
on the roster. That leaves point guards Devin Harris and Jameer Nelson.
Because the All-Star game is so much about numbers, let's look at
everyone's production:
Ray Allen: 18.0 points, 3.4 rebounds, 2.8 assists, 0.98 steals, 41.5 percent from 3-point range, Celtics are 38-9
Jameer Nelson:
17.0 points, 3.4 rebounds, 5.4 assists, 1.2 steals, 45.4 percent from
3-point range, missed five games due to injury, Magic are 35-10
Here is a comparison between the point guards:
Rondo against the Magic: 2-0 record, 12.5 points, 6.0 rebounds, 7.0 assists, 1.0 steal, 2.5 turnovers
Rondo against the Nets: 2-0 record, 9.5 points, 8.0 rebounds, 13.0 assists, 2.5 steals, 4.0 turnovers
Nelson against the Celtics: 0-1 record, 17 points, 2 rebounds, 3 assists, 0 steals, 2 turnovers
Harris against the Celtics: 0-2 record, 12.0 points, 1.0 rebound, 2.0 assists, 1.0 steal, 4.5 turnovers
With
that, it's extremely clear Rondo has gotten the better of both Nelson
and Harris in their matchups this season, but I could have told you
that based off of simply watching the games. I ran through the stats
for this reason, and I've got it on good authority: The coaches, who
select seven reserves from their respective conference without being
allowed to vote for their own players, don't watch every game. They
study the teams they're playing and basically stick to the tapes of
their opposition's most recent games. Do they catch the national games
on ESPN and TNT? Not as much as the passionate sportswriter or fan.
That's not a knock on the coaches, it's just a fact of life.
But
that leaves the coaches looking at a lot of stats. Sure, they hear
which players are doing well and which ones aren't, and some of these
All-Stars likely lit up their team at some point in the season, but the
voting process isn't a perfect science.
I'll say this: Rondo is
a better all-around player than both Harris and Nelson. What Harris
has, though, is a tremendous ability to wind up on highlight shows.
He's got one of the best crossovers in the league, and he's a very
talented scorer on a team that doesn't have many. The selection of
Nelson just doesn't make a lot of sense to me, however. Let's drop him
from the team. And because Harris had the Nets hovering at .500 for
much of the season while putting up career numbers across the board,
let's leave him on.
That basically pits Rondo against Allen for
the last spot. Both are having better seasons this year than last, and
both are valuable to the Celtics in their own ways. I can't sit here
and say Rondo is a better player than Allen because it just isn't true,
but Rondo is more valuable to the team by this train of thought: Would
the Celtics be in bigger trouble if they were without Rondo or Allen?
Since Pierce could take over the heavier scoring duties, and there's no
one on the roster who can put pressure on both sides of the ball the
way Rondo can, I'd say that nod goes to the third-year point guard.
My
conclusion is this: Replace Nelson with Rondo, and you've got a more
deserving squad. When it comes down to it, there are four deserving
guards for two spots. The two best players are Allen and Rondo, but
that's just now how it works sometimes. We've got a clear case of that
this season, and it'll continue to happen for as long as the game
exists.
The Breakdown
Posted by Jeff Howe, Jan. 28, 11:44 p.m.
Analysis after the Celtics beat the Kings, 119-100, to win their ninth consecutive game and improve to 38-9:
Fast Eddie. The Garden crowd brought back memories of the
Celtics’ 2008 playoff run, as it went crazy for Eddie House. But those chants
were more in recognition of House’s hustle plays. Tonight, they rained down on
House because he went nuts from 3-point range. After drilling seven 3-pointers
— to match his career high — twice in the last three games, House finally broke
through with eight tonight, and he scored a game-high and season-high 28 points
in just 20:18 of action. He was even
more instrumental during the Celtics’ red-hot second quarter, when they
outscored the Kings, 40-19, to turn a two-point deficit into a 19-point lead.
House hit four of his 3’s in the second and scored 16 points in a span of 9:12 . Doc
Rivers and the rest of the Celtics
have been leading a weeklong campaign to get House into the 3-point contest
during All-Star weekend in Phoenix
next month. Rivers joked after the game it would just be nice for House to get
a free flight home — he’s got a house in Scottsdale — jokingly calling him
“cheap.” But House fired back in the locker room by saying he’s already got his
free flight because he’s jumping on board with Kevin Garnett and whoever else
gets selected to join the Big Ticket in Phoenix .
House has never participated in any of the All-Star festivities, and it would
be extra special this time around because of his local roots (he went to Arizona
State ).
TA looked strong. After missing 11 consecutive games with a
sprained right ankle, no one really expected to see Tony Allen do much more than
run up and down the court to get in some conditioning tonight. You can even add
Doc Rivers to that list. Rivers said before the game he was hoping to get Allen
about 10 minutes of playing time — although he may have been thinking on the
low end as a worst-case scenario with that number. But after Paul Pierce picked
up his third foul just 9:04 into the
first quarter, Rivers went right to Allen and rode him throughout a strong
first half. Allen was extremely efficient in the second quarter, moving the ball
on offense and staying up to task on the defensive end. He was a tad bit
inconsistent in the second half, but Rivers won’t complain much because the
game was out of hand and Allen got 23:22
of playing time, the most on the bench. Allen said before the game it’ll
probably take a couple nights to get his game rhythm back, but he started off
way ahead of schedule tonight. He finished with 10 points, eight rebounds,
three assists, three steals and a block.
No losers. There obviously aren’t many teams that can boast
beating the Celtics, but even fewer are the teams with losing records that top
the C’s. Here are the records, entering tonight, of the teams that have beaten
the Celtics this season: Pacers (17-28),
Nuggets (30-15), Lakers (35-9), Warriors (14-31), Blazers (27-17), Knicks
(19-25), Bobcats (19-26), Rockets (28-18) and Cavs (35-8). Four of the Celtics’
losses have come against teams with losing records, and all of those have come
on the road, which didn’t bode well for the 10-37 Kings. Of those losses to
teams with losing records, only the Pacers beat the Celtics outside of the 2-7
skid, which further shows when the Celtics are on, you’ve got to be both
talented and on your game to beat them. Even further, you can’t really classify
any of those games as bad losses. The Bobcats game jumps out right away, but
they’ve played the C’s very tough over the last season and a half and seem to
have Boston ’s number in a way most
teams can’t fathom. Sure, the Knicks loss is a tad disturbing, but that’s a
team that can put some serious points on the board, and the same goes for the
Warriors. Danny Granger went nuts for the Pacers in the C’s third game of the
season, and the starting unit pretty much had their worst collective effort all
year. Are they games the Celtics would like to have back? Absolutely. Are they
inexcusable? Not so much.
C-Notes. Aside from a 2-2 tie, the Celtics trailed
throughout the duration of the first quarter, and they were down by as many as
10. But after a 9-0 run between the first and second quarters put them ahead,
35-30, they never looked back. … The Celtics had a 24-3 advantage in fast-break
points, including a 15-1 edge in the decisive second quarter. … The Celtics
could have been shut out in the game’s last 8:24
and still won. … Kendrick Perkins played 24 minutes and didn’t take a single
shot.
C's wear the crown
Posted by Jeff Howe, Jan. 28, 9:58 p.m.
The
Celtics just walloped the Kings by a 119-100 margin. After hitting
seven 3-pointers in two of his last three games, Eddie House knocked
down a career-high eight 3's tonight. Maybe more impressive, he scored
28 points in just 20 minutes of action and had the Garden crowd
chanting "Edd-ie! Edd-ie!" throughout the fourth quarter. I'll have
more coming later.
Kings cut lead, still not close
Posted by Jeff Howe, Jan. 28, 9:22 p.m.
Rajon
Rondo has 24 ponts, nine assists and three rebounds, and he's pacing
the Celtics to a 92-78 lead heading into the fourth quarter. The
Celtics have a 24-1 advantage in fast-break points, by the way.
Oh,
and Eddie House's 16 second-quarter points came in a span of 9:12,
which is pretty nice. No one on the Kings has more points than House
through three quarters.
Kevin Garnett passed Patrick Ewing for
22nd all-time on the rebounding list. Garnett has eight boards through
three quarters to give him 16,009 in his career, two more than Ewing.
Fast Eddie leads Celtics
Posted by Jeff Howe, Jan. 28, 8:27 p.m.
Eddie
House went nuts again, scoring 16 points in the second quarter to push
the Celtics to a 68-49 lead at the half. After allowing the Kings to
put up 30 points in the first quarter, the C's held them to 19 in the
second. The bench continues to play great basketball, scoring 30 of the
Celtics' season-high 40 second-quarter points.
And in case
you're wondering -- because I know referee Scott Foster was -- you
cannot score by putting the ball through the underside of the rim and
having it come back through the traditional way. Kevin Martin did just
that in the second quarter, and Foster ruled it a good basket before
Rodney Mott came over and talked some sense into the man.
Scal's concussion
Posted by Jeff Howe, Jan. 28, 8:27 p.m.
Brian
Scalabrine will be out 7-10 days after suffering a concussion yesterday
in practice. It's the second concussion of his career -- he also had
one early last season when he got whacked by Hawks forward Al Horford.
Here are a few quotes from Scalabrine and Doc Rivers regarding the
situation:
Scalabrine:"I got my bell rung two times in three days. I went to the
doctor, the CAT Scan was good, got a concussion, going to miss some time. I’m
more disappointed about that because as a team we’ve been playing some good
ball. I feel like I’ve been playing some good ball lately."
"I’m really not concerned. As athletes, we always think we’ll
just bounce back, and nothing will happen again. My wife said she was concerned
about my intelligence level."
"I did [drive to the Garden tonight], which was difficult. I was cool around the house, but
I think right now, the biggest thing is when I’m sitting around, it’s good. But
when I’ve got to walk up the stairs, I might get a little bit light headed."
"I just went down [yesterday at practice]. I don’t remember what happened. I know I
was going for a rebound, turned around and bam. [Celtics trainer] Eddie [Lacerte] was above me."
Doc Rivers:
"I hit him, that’s why he doesn’t remember. I didn’t think it
was very hard, honestly. I think it was more of a byproduct of the other one
[against Dallas ], which probably
meant he shouldn’t have been on the floor [at practice] to begin with. You’re
just learning so much about these darn concussions. I would assume football is
light years ahead of us in this whole thing, and in football, you at least have
a week to recover and then you get knocked out again. It was only two days for
Scal when you think about it. In some ways, it was even more severe. I didn’t
see it. I saw the collision, but it didn’t look hard from my angle. I just
think it was a byproduct of the other one. He kind of took two steps back and
then fell and then tried to get up. That’s when he was out of it. Probably, in
some ways, lucky it happened."
Rivers
also said he suffered a concussion during his playing days. He got
whacked by Hakeem Olajuwon, who should have picked on someone his own
size, like Patrick Ewing.
"
I got knocked out once by Olajuwon, and I
literally don’t remember it," Rivers said.
C's trail by two after one
Posted by Jeff Howe, Jan. 28, 8:10 p.m.
The
Kings jumped out to an early lead here at the Garden, and they hold a
30-28 edge on the Celtics after the first quarter. This was a tough
quarter for Paul Pierce, who was whistled for his third foul with 2:56
remaining in the quarter and got T'd up during the ensuing timeout
while sitting on the bench. It gave Tony Allen a chance to get into the
game a little earlier than Doc Rivers probably expected, but he played
pretty well.
Former Celtic Scot Pollard is in the building, too.
Crowning at the Garden
Posted by Jeff Howe, Jan. 28, 8:01 p.m.
Brian
Scalabrine isn't sitting alongside the bench for the game, which isn't
surprising considering the bright lights and loud noises that engulf
the Garden on game nights. Anyway, the Celtics (37-9) are in the
process of hosting the Kings (10-36), who are one of the worst teams in
the league. They played the Cavs tough last night, losing by seven
because of LeBron James' triple-double and Mo Williams' 43 points, but
there's no reason the Celtics shouldn't win this thing by 20, despite
their early deficit here.
The Celtics are 22-2 at home, 9-4 in
January, 7-1 on Wednesdays, 10-5 against the Western Conference, 3-2
against the Pacific Division and 1-0 against the Kings.
Allen in, Scalabrine out
Posted by Jeff Howe, Jan. 28, 7:07 p.m.
I'll
have a little more pregame stuff coming later on, but I wanted to check
in to let you know Tony Allen will be playing tonight, and Brian
Scalabrine will be out 7-10 days with a concussion. Allen missed the
last 11 games with a sprained right ankle, and Doc Rivers is hoping to
get him about 10 minutes of action tonight, mostly with the intent to
get him back into game shape. Scalabrine took a hard hit to the head
Sunday against the Mavericks and another yesterday during practice. He
said he's still feeling a little dizzy when he gets up to walk around,
especially going up stairs. It looks like the earliest he could get
back is next Thursday against the Lakers.
The Breakdown
Posted by Jeff Howe, Jan. 25, 10:44 p.m.
Analysis after the Celtics beat the Mavericks, 124-100, to win their eighth consecutive game and improve to 37-9:
One on one.
Before I get started with this point, I've got to say this talk about
Kevin Garnett not belonging in the All-Star game is simply ludicrous,
and it's coming from people who don't watch the Celtics on anything
close to a regular basis. You want numbers? Go with Chris Bosh. You
want a franchise player? It's not even a debate. Don't slight the man
for being a two-way player. I never realized you could knock someone
for playing defense, and Gary Payton should be the first guy on the
planet to realize that.
(Tangent No. 2: What's with Payton
picking on the Celtics this season? First, Rajon Rondo. Now, Garnett.
I'm not saying the guy shouldn't knock anyone on his former team -- one
of them, in his case -- because that's simply got nothing to do with
what I'm getting at. But I was always under the impression that a guy
who was traded by the Celtics only to return eight days later sort of,
you know, liked the franchise. I'm starting to wonder if there's some
ill will toward Boston after he couldn't win here -- and then failed to
win when the Lakers put together an All-Star squad. It's a coincidence
if he knocks two players on one team if they happen to deserve the
criticism, but Payton has seemingly gone out of his way to slight Rondo
and Garnett in less than two months. That, my friends, does not sound
like a coincidence to me.)
Now that I've gotten that out of the
way, Garnett was tremendous in his matchup with Dirk Nowitzki today.
Garnett means a ton to the Celtics' team defense, which is only
valuable when the five guys on the floor act as a cohesive unit. He's
loud with his instructions to the guys on the perimeter, and his
rotations from the weak side set an example for guys like Kendrick
Perkins, Glen Davis, Brian Scalabrine and Leon Powe. While his presence
obviously changed the way everyone on this team began playing defense
last season, it's sometimes forgotten how strong of an individual
player Garnett can be. There aren't many players in the league -- and
probably none who can do it to Garnett's level -- who can challenge
Nowitzki the way Garnett did today. I'll be the first to admit I think
Nowitzki is too soft, and he can get taken out of the game when you get
in his head. That's exactly what Garnett did, and he has the tools to
overpower Nowitzki in the post and chase him around the court. As a
result, Nowitzki missed his first seven shots and was 2-for-12 from the
floor with seven points at halftime, when the Celtics led by 27.
Nowitzki finished with 18 points on 4-for-17 shooting, just the fifth
time in his career he's taken at least 17 shots without making at least
five of them.
Move it around. I've made this point a few
times, but I wanted to bring it up again because Doc Rivers said in his
postgame press conference there were at least eight times in the game
when the shot clock got down to five seconds and the Celtics made two
more passes before getting off a shot. The Celtics' ball movement was a
thing of beauty today, or "poetry in motion," as Eddie House called it.
They had 34 assists on 50 field goals, more or less meaning a pass led
to 68 percent of the Celtics' made field goals. Heading into the game,
the Celtics had an assist on 60.2 percent of their field goals. Rondo
had 14 assists for the sixth time in his career -- all in the last 11
months -- and fifth time this season, and Ray Allen had a season-high
seven assists. It also helped that the Celtics had just eight turnovers.
Starting strong.
I made a point to ask a specific question around the locker room after
the game: Now that the Celtics are going good again, is there anything
else they've learned about themselves when looking back at the skid
when they lost seven of nine. The most common answers were fairly
predictable -- better bench play (no question), more ball movement
(we've been over that) and better execution on defense, particularly in
the passing lanes (certainly) -- but there was one that really stuck
out. Ray Allen told me teams had been gunning for them early in games.
Again, that's nothing new. But he said the Celtics needed to strip
their opponents' confidence right away. They needed to get out strong
and make other teams understand who they're playing. "Playing the world
champs, they're probably getting a great pregame speech," Allen said.
So, it's no coincidence the Celtics have gotten out to huge leads in
the last few games -- twice against the Nets and also against the Suns,
Heat and Mavericks. They're doing this on purpose. It's one thing for
teams to say, "Hey, let's build an early lead." It's a completely
different thing for teams to go up by 30 in the first half.
Alley-oop. It's
a good bet that one of the hottest plays on other teams' scouting
reports is the alley-oop from Rondo to Garnett, a play they've been
exploiting for about a month now. "We're going to milk it," Rondo said
with a wry smile. Thing is, this isn't so much of a set play as it is
an option in certain sets. Rondo and Garnett are on such a similar
wavelength that they're calling this play with little more than eye
contact. (Think about the success Tom Brady and Randy Moss have had
with one another. Defenses know it's coming, but they can't stop
certain routes because Brady calls them by first reading coverages.)
Rondo said they usually convert the alley-oop off a pick-and-roll. If
defenders can't get on the same page, one of two things will happen:
the alley-oop or an easy lay-up by Rondo. It all depends on Garnett's
man. If he jumps up on Rondo, they've got the alley-oop.
From downtown.
Eddie House has gone 7-for-11 from 3-point range in two of the last
three games. Over that span, including an 0-for-1 effort against the
Magic, House has raised his season percentage from .363 to .392, which
is a tick under his .393 percentage from last season. This is a result
of House doing things without the ball to create his shot, rather than
doing it off the dribble, which happens far too often when he's
struggling. It's pretty fundamental when you think about it. Defenders
don't want to chase a guy through two or three screens while doing a
couple laps around the court. They'd rather square up a shooter who
isn't great at losing a guy off the dribble. One thing leads to
another, and House is thriving because he's running through the offense
the way that best suits his game.
C's romp Mavs
Posted by Jeff Howe, Jan. 25, 4:18 p.m.
The Celtics destroyed the Mavericks by a 124-100 margin today at the Garden. I'll have the Breakdown coming later on.
The
quote of the day -- and there were some good ones -- came from Ray
Allen, who was complimenting Glen Davis and the hard work he's put in
on his jump shot. But Allen didn't hold back on Baby's quirky form,
saying, "He's got like Charles Barkley's golf swing."
Thanks for playing
Posted by Jeff Howe, Jan. 25, 2:51 p.m.
The Celtics have a 103-78 lead after three here at the Garden. The Mavericks are avoiding defense like it's the plague.
Everything's bigger in Texas ...
Posted by Jeff Howe, Jan. 25, 2:06 p.m.
...
Even the halftime deficits. The Celtics opened up a 74-47 halftime lead
against the Mavericks. The Celtics aren't doing anything wrong during
this early-afternoon affair. They're shooting 65.2 percent (30-for-46)
from the field and have 19 assists. The most eye-catching number,
though: The Celtics have turned nine Dallas turnovers into 19 points,
which means they're capitalizing on every single Mavs miscue. And Dirk
Nowitzki has missed 10-of-12 field goals.
No defense in Dallas
Posted by Jeff Howe, Jan. 25, 1:36 p.m.
The
Celtics got off to a 38-23 advantage after the first quarter because --
and we're sure you've never heard this one before -- a team from the
Western Conference didn't play a lot of defense. It also didn't help
much that Dirk Nowitzki, who is averaging 26.0 points per game, went
0-for-7 from the floor in the quarter.
Barea in Boston
Posted by Jeff Howe, Jan. 25, 1:29 p.m.
Mavericks
guard Jose Juan Barea, who graduated from Northeastern in 2006, is
playing in his third career game at the Garden today. He's averaged 2.5
points, 2.0 assists and eight minutes in his previous two contests.
Barea is having the best season of his three-year career, averaging
career highs in points (6.7), assists (3.1), rebounds (2.7) and minutes
(18.9).
The Mavericks got into Boston late Friday night, and
Barea spent a couple hours at Northeastern yesterday, walking around
the campus, meeting up with some old friends and grabbing a bite to eat
at Chicken Lou's.
"It’s so cold," Barea said. "I’m not used to it, but it’s great to come
back for a couple days and say hi to the people who have helped me out for four
years. It’s good to come back."
Barea
left a few tickets for some friends today, but being three years out of
college now, he said his most immediate ties to the program have
dwindled. Plus, the basketball team was on the road yesterday, so he
couldn't catch up with them. He did, however, watch the Huskies lay a
beating on Old Dominion, the first game he got to see on TV this season.
Barea
is one of a number of recent success stories out of Northeastern.
Carlos Pena helped the Rays get to the World Series, and the hockey
team is leading Hockey East and -- dare I say -- has a legitimate
chance to end its 21-year Beanpot drought.
"I heard hockey was doing good this year," Barea said. "Carlos Pena, I
followed him before I even knew he was at Northeastern, before I got here. He
had a great year."
Check out tomorrow's Metro for more on Barea.
Good morning, Boston
Posted by Jeff Howe, Jan. 25, 12:25 p.m.
We're
about 40 minutes from tip-off between the Celtics (36-9) and Mavericks
(25-18) here at the Garden. The Celtics are riding a seven-game winning
streak, while the Mavs are coming off a 21-point win in Detroit on
Friday night. Today marks the conclusion of a four-game road trip
that's included a win against the 76ers and a loss against the Bucks.
Tony
Allen will miss his 11th consecutive game with a sprained right ankle,
but there is some good news on that front. Doc Rivers expects Allen to
practice the next two days and might be ready for Wednesday's home game
against the Kings.
Kendrick Perkins is also working his way back
to game shape. He's averaged 4.5 points, 6.5 rebounds, 1.5 blocks and
about 24 minutes in the two games since returning from his shoulder
strain. Returning in time to play two games in 24 hours certainly
helped him last week.
"Back-to-back games are a great way to shock your system," Rivers said.
Mavericks
guard Jose Juan Barea, a Northeastern product, is also making his
return to Boston today. I'll have a little more on him in a bit.
And
finally, the Celtics are 21-2 at home, 8-4 in January, 6-1 on Sundays,
9-5 against the Western Conference and 2-1 against the Southwest
Division. This is their first game of the season against the Mavericks
after the C's took both contests against Dallas last year.
The Breakdown
Posted by Jeff Howe, Jan. 19, 11:30 p.m.
Analysis after the Celtics beat the Suns, 104-87, to win their fifth consecutive game and improve to 34-9:
Lane violation. The
Celtics' defense is at its best when it's jumping the passing lanes,
tipping balls and doing things to create a fast break. I thought that
was the most significant absence from their game when they lost seven
of nine, and it seemed to wake them up when the Cavs did just that two
weeks ago. Simply put, they got beat at their own game, and that hasn't
come close to happening during their five-game winning streak. They
were at the pinnacle of their defensive game tonight, forcing 23
turnovers (which turned into 28 points), including 15 turnovers during
the decisive first half.
Celtics make their case. When it
comes down to it, it really doesn't matter a whole lot how the rest of
the league views the Celtics. Statement games are (extremely overused,
though not by me) phrases for the media. But there is something to say
about the quotes from opposing teams in the last month, with players
saying they believe they can beat the Celtics now that they've shown a
dent in their armor. That belief may disappear slightly now that the
Celtics have won five straight -- their third streak of at least five
consecutive wins this season -- especially on the heels of the
nationally-televised affair against a good Suns team. Wins against
Toronto and New Jersey are fine and dandy, and every team in the league
is likely to get theirs against those teams. But victories against
Shaquille O'Neal and the Phoenix Suns carry a bit more weight.
"It was a good, old-fashioned ass whooping, and there is nothing more to say, period" O'Neal said.
"We got a good old spanking tonight," Suns coach Terry Porter echoed. "This is the worst [loss] of the year. No doubt."
KG is a quote machine. When
Kevin Garnett is holding court, he can be one of the funnier athletes
in the city. Sure, he loves to preach about going a game at a time, but
there have been the Superman rants about Paul Pierce, blurbs about
Rajon Rondo's ability to be in five places at once and tonight's
breakdown of what it's like to guard O'Neal, whose listed weight of 325
pounds is 72 pounds heavier than Garnett. "It's like holding up a wall.
Go home, knock out the foundation in your house and just hold up the
wall. When it's about to fall on you, that's what it's like holding
Shaq. Just knock out the side of your house and when the wall is coming
towards you, hold it up for 48 minutes over two hours, 15 minutes. Have
someone in your house come hold it, you take a break, get some Gatorade
and come back and just hold it up. That's what it's like guarding
Shaq." Garnett also said the matchup between Glen Davis and O'Neal is
"just like a boulder moving a boulder."
No love for Amare.
Amare Stoudemire, who I think should be the second most important
player in terms of priority during the 2010 free-agent bonanza, was
held to three points on 0-for-7 shooting and just one rebound while
being guarded mostly by Brian Scalabrine. I'll give you a minute to get
up, walk around, get some air, let that sink in, maybe grab a sandwich
and collect yourself. OK, now that we're back on the same page, this
was just the ninth game in Stoudemire's career he's been held to three
points or less (he's been held scoreless three times). It was the sixth
time he's ever been held without a field goal. The last time he's had
such a poor offensive performance was Nov. 22, 2006 against the New
Orleans/Oklahoma City Hornets. This was the second time he's been held
to so few points with just one rebound. And I guess if you really want
to stretch out the stat, this is the first time in his career he's had
fewer than four points, one rebound and four turnovers. Doc Rivers and
Tom Thibodeau wanted Scalabrine to front Stoudemire, which is a change
in tactics for the Celtics. With smaller forwards and centers coming
off the bench, Rivers typically has his guys stay behind bigger players
(ex: Dwight Howard) to keep them out of the paint because any pass that
goes over the top of the defender will equate to an easy dunk. Not so
much tonight.
C-Notes. The Celtics scored the first six
points of the game, and the Suns never got closer than four points
after that. After leading by as many as 35 points, the Celtics were
outscored, 29-15, in the fourth quarter to make the score look closer
than it should have. ... Fans always love a dunker, and Billy Walker
has really become a fan favorite since returning from the D-League. ...
The Celtics (47.9) percent and Suns (47.2 percent) had very similar
field-goal percentages, but the Celtics took an extra 22 shots (94-72).
... Glen Davis was phenomenal tonight with nine points and nine
rebounds. This is the third time in his career he's had as many points
and rebounds in the same game, but he's never had a double-double. ...
The Suns' draft-night decisions in recent years have been nearly as
criminal as the Grizzlies' trade of Pau Gasol to the Lakers last
season. Phoenix ownership has become famous for trading picks for
money, which helped the Celtics get Rajon Rondo on draft night in 2006.
When asked about the Suns "drafting" Rondo, Steve Nash tried to remain
politically correct: "We've had a few draft-night trades to stay under
the salary cap that were difficult in the big picture. Our franchise is
built on a business model that tries to stay under the cap as much as
possible. It's just how it's been."
Sun sets on Phoenix
Posted by Jeff Howe, Jan. 19, 10:30 p.m.
The Celtics completely dismantled the Suns here at the
Garden tonight, 104-87. None of the Celtics' starters played in the fourth quarter.
None of the Suns' starters played for any of the four quarters, so they were at
a bit of a disadvantage with that. Amare Stoudemire, who recently complained
about his role in the offense, was 0-for-7 from the floor and had three points
and one rebound. The Celtics have won their fifth straight and improved to
34-9. I'll have more later.
Same ol' same ol'
Posted by Jeff Howe, Jan. 19, 9:47 p.m.
Like
I figured, the Suns showed up with a little more offense in the third
quarter, but their defense left a great deal to be desired. The Celtics
have an 89-58 lead heading into the fourth, and the starters will be on
the bench for Gino once again. Rajon Rondo has 23 points, seven assists
and five rebounds and has completely dominated the older, slower Steve
Nash.
Celtics cruising
Posted by Jeff Howe, Jan. 19, 9:07 p.m.
This
thing is over. Sure, the Suns have one of the most dynamic offenses in
the league, but they don't have half the defense required to erase a
30-point deficit. The Celtics lead this thing, 64-34, at halftime.
They're shooting 57.1 percent (28-for-49) as a result of strong ball
movement with 17 assists. The Suns, however, have 15 turnovers that
have turned into 20 points for the Celtics. The C's are doubling up the
Suns on the boards, 26-13. And they're without Kendrick Perkins.
Kevin Morris? Really?
Posted by Jeff Howe, Jan. 19, 8:51 p.m.
Considering
this is a Celtics blog, I'll keep this rant as short as possible. UMass
really screwed up by hiring Kevin Morris today as the new head football
coach. Morris has been the offensive coordinator for the last five
years under former head coach Don Brown, who left to become the
defensive coordinator at Maryland. Sure, Morris has led a dynamic
offensive during his time in Amherst, but who couldn't thrive with
weapons such as Liam Coen, Brandon London and Steve Baylark, among
others? In fact, Morris was the crutch that held back the offense on a
number of occasions, calling trick plays that wouldn't work in your
back yard against your 4-year-old cousins and refusing to stick with
what works during games in which the Minutemen are cruising. UMass made
it to the national championship in spite of some of Morris' mistakes in
2006, and he was good for a head-scratching play call seemingly every
weekend. I covered the team in 2004 and 2005 -- his first two seasons
as the offensive coordinator -- and could go on and on if I spent a
little more time to go back to my notes, but I'll get back to watching
the whipping the Celtics are giving the Suns instead.
Oh, and Morris was fired when he worked at WPI, so there's that.
Heroes Among Us
Posted by Jeff Howe, Jan. 19, 8:47 p.m.
The
Celtics recognize someone during every home game as a "Hero Among Us,"
and tonight's ceremony is a really cool one. In honor of MLK Day, the
Celtics just honored 1968 Olympic Gold Medalist Tommie Smith and
Charlene Carlos, the wife of 1968 Bronze Medalist John Carlos, who was
unable to attend the game. Smith and John Carlos raised black-gloved
fists during the medal ceremony to recognize the Civil Rights movement
in the United States, and they ended up getting suspended from the
Olympic team as a result. Smith and Charlene Carlos will address the
Celtics after the game, which is a bit cooler than the time Jared from
Subway somehow snuck in there.
It sure isn't sunny in Phoenix
Posted by Jeff Howe, Jan. 19, 8:33 p.m.
The
Celtics got off to a great start, while the Suns haven't risen yet
(I'll be here all night). The C's took a 30-15 lead after the first
quarter with Rajon Rondo leading the action with eight points and three
assists. Ray Allen, who has tickets to tomorrow's inauguration, scored
10 points in the opening quarter. The Suns have shown how bad they can
look when they don't feel like going at it on defense.
By the
way, Shaquille O'Neal mentioned Glen Davis before the game, calling him
"my son." This is in reference to Davis' other nickname, "Baby Shaq,"
which came about during his days at LSU, where O'Neal also attended.
There
was a lot of speculation over the last week over O'Neal's status for
tonight's game. Shaq-a-pulco hasn't always suited up on both ends of
back-to-backs this season, but coach Terry Porter said before the game
the Suns' early start in Toronto yesterday allowed Shaq to rest enough
for tonight.
It's always sunny in Boston
Posted by Jeff Howe, Jan. 19, 8:23 p.m.
Late
start for me tonight. I was working on something for the paper earlier,
but you've got almost all of my undivided attention now. So you've got
that going for you, which is nice.
Anyway, the Celtics (33-9)
and Suns (23-15) are underway here at the Garden. I'll try to get you
as caught up as possible. If you're watching on TV or following the
blog on your iPhone at the game -- because who doesn't do that? --
you've already figured out Kendrick Perkins is wearing another one of
his "Godfather" suits and is again out of the lineup with a shoulder
strain. Perkins has been going through non-contact drills at practice
and is working out with the team much like he did during the preseason,
but he's not completely ready to get hit. He'll fly with the team
during their two-game swing in Florida -- Wednesday in Miami, Thursday
in Orlando -- but there is still no indication on whether or not he'll
play.
The condition of Tony Allen, on the other hand, has not
improved. He's still out with a sprained ankle and is at least another
week away from returning. He won't go with the team to Florida.
The Breakdown
Posted by Jeff Howe, Jan. 15, 12:15 a.m.
Analysis after the Celtics beat the Nets, 118-86, to win their third consecutive game and improve to 32-9:
Rondo’s intangibles. Devin Harris’ crossover is downright
filthy, and the kid is going to score a lot of points in this league because of
it. He can create his own shot by driving to the bucket as well as any point
guard I’ve seen this season, and his offensive numbers could put him in the
All-Star Game. Beyond that, though, I’d still take Rajon Rondo any day of the
week because the Celtics’ floor general does other things that propel his team
to victory. Harris had a team-high 17 points and three assists, and his scoring
kept the Nets within a reasonable margin in the first half. But he also
committed five turnovers before the break and hurt New
Jersey ’s chances of ever making a serious run. Those
turnovers also stemmed from Rondo’s aggressiveness along the perimeter. Harris
finished the game with six turnovers and three steals, while Rondo had 11
points, 12 assists, seven rebounds, three steals and four turnovers. Even
though Harris held the edge in scoring, Rondo had nine more assists, meaning he
was more valuable to his team than Harris.
Confidence is key. There’s a lot to be said for the Celtics’
confidence and how it affects their game. As talented as their starting unit
can be, they’re not a championship-caliber group without their killer swagger.
These last three games have been a step in the right direction toward the
Celtics regaining that edge. Despite Toronto’s record, don’t discount two wins
against that team, which is the biggest wild card in the league because there
are more deadly shooters there than an Army Ranger battalion. Two difficult
wins — made exponentially harder with the back-to-back factor — helped the
Celtics regain that winning feeling, which they clearly lacked last week
against the Rockets. Then tonight, the Celtics put together their most complete
game since their win against Washington
nearly two weeks ago. If the C’s finish off the home-and-home sweep, they’ll
carry a four-game winning streak into Monday’s home showdown with the Suns,
which could turn into the marquee victory the Celtics have needed since their
skid.
C-Notes. Eddie House left the game with a mildly sprained
left ankle. He said he’ll definitely be ready to play Saturday in New
Jersey . … Brian Scalabrine was more than serviceable
with the starting unit. He finished with nine points, four rebounds, one
assist, one steal and no turnovers. I can recall a couple instances when a
taller player would have grabbed an extra rebound, but there were no points in
the game when Scalabrine actually hurt the Celtics, which is everything they
can ask out of a guy stepping in for their starting center. … The Celtics
finished with a 19-5 advantage in fast-break points. … Glen Davis hit his first
career 3-pointer before the first-quarter buzzer. He’s now 1-for-2 in his
career from beyond the arc. When told his career percentage is higher than that
of Ray Allen’s (.397), Davis
responded, “Not many people can do that, so I’m happy.”
Boston beatdown
Posted by Jeff Howe, Jan. 14, 9:59 p.m.
The Celtics smoked the Nets here at the Garden to the tune of a 118-86 victory. I'll have more later.
It's raining 3's
Posted by Jeff Howe, Jan. 14, 9:27 p.m.
Paul
Pierce scored 18 points in the third quarter and knocked down all five
3-pointers he attempted to push the Celtics' lead to 88-60. I'm putting
the stamp on this one. Really brave of me, I know. But did you really
think the C's would lose with Walter McCarty in the house? Come on now.
Celtics maintaining control
Posted by Jeff Howe, Jan. 14, 8:44 p.m.
The
Celtics lead the Nets, 51-41, at halftime here at the Garden. Kevin
Garnett leads the way with 14 points and six rebounds, and Ray Allen
has 10 points. The pace of this game favors the Celtics, as they've
been able to get out and score nine points on the fast break, forcing
13 Nets turnovers in the process. Look for the starting unit to really
put some pressure on New Jersey early in the third quarter. If the Nets
can't respond by taking better care of the ball, this will be a
20-point game quickly.
C's out fast
Posted by Jeff Howe, Jan. 14, 8:08 p.m.
Glen
Davis knocked down a 3-pointer before the buzzer to give the Celtics a
30-23 lead over the Nets after the first quarter here at the Garden. If
there were ever a time I could be in the Celtics' huddle, this would be
it to hear what they're saying to Big Baby.
By the way, Vince
Carter is exceptional at making little injuries look like the death of
his career. It's happened twice against the Celtics in the last two
seasons, when he's dropped to the floor, rolled around like he took a
cannonball to the knee and then disappeared from the game making
everyone watching wonder if he'll ever be able to walk again. Carter
left the game early in the first quarter after it looked like his right
knee got Willis McGahee'd, acted like that kid Joe Pesci shot in
"Goodfellas" and returned a few minutes later to knock down a fade-away
jumper. Nate Washington would be very unimpressed.
Put a Jersey on
Posted by Jeff Howe, Jan. 14, 7:01 p.m.
We're
creeping closer to tip-off between the Celtics (31-9) and Nets (19-19).
The Celtics have won two straight, are 19-2 at home, 3-4 in January,
5-1 on Wednesdays, 23-4 against the Eastern Conference and 8-1 against
the Atlantic Division. This is their first meeting of the season with
the Nets.
The best one-on-one matchup tonight pairs two of the
most underappreciated point guards in the league with Rajon Rondo and
Devin Harris, who landed in New Jersey last season when the Nets
shipped away Jason Kidd. Harris, a four-year veteran, has always been a
tremendous talent, but he was greatly overshadowed by the cast in
Dallas, including everyone from former MVP Dirk Nowitzki to owner Mark
Cuban. Now in New Jersey, he's averaging career highs in points (22.9),
assists (6.7), rebounds (3.3) and steals (1.6), and he's been a
dangerous compliment to Vince Carter. Harris is one of the few point
guards in the league who can match Rondo's speed, too. Harris is also
two inches taller and seven pounds heavier than Rondo, so we'll see if
that reach comes into play at all. While neither Rondo or Harris will
garner enough votes to start in the All-Star Game, each player still
has a decent opportunity to make the squad. Whoever plays better in
these next two games might just earn the coaches' vote.
A big
key tonight will be the Celtics' ability to get out and run on New
Jersey's bigs, and that will tie directly into the C's halfcourt
defense. If they can snipe the Nets' passing lanes like they did
against Toronto (and like the Cavs did to the Celtics), they'll be able
to run more. Don't be surprised to see Doc Rivers keeping Rondo away
from the offensive glass to ensure his team a better opportunity to run
the break.
Get this, the Nets have six players who are at
least 6-foot-10. The Celtics have three, and one of them (Kendrick
Perkins) will not be playing tonight. Brian Scalabrine will start in
his place.
Back at it
Posted by Jeff Howe, Jan. 14, 7:01 p.m.
My
apologies for not keeping you up to date during Monday night's contest
between the Celtics and Raptors, but my immune system was terrorized by
an evil force not even Jack Bauer could neutralize. So I had that going
for me. Anyway, I'm back at the Garden tonight getting set for the
first leg of a home-and-home between the Celtics and Nets, which will
conclude Saturday afternoon in New Jersey.
The biggest news of
the night came from Kendrick Perkins, who said he's no longer feeling
any pain in his sore left shoulder. Perkins still won't play tonight
for the third consecutive game and said he won't be back to the court
until Monday "at the earliest" when the Celtics host the Suns. That
will prove to be a tricky situation for Perkins and Doc Rivers. With
Shaquille O'Neal and Amare Stoudemire in Phoenix's front court, the
Celtics could use all the size they can get, and Perkins isn't one to
shy away from playing against the league's best players. But like
usual, Rivers said he won't listen to what Perkins says about his
shoulder (for that reason) and will rely on the medical team to
determine Perkins' status.
Celtics recall Giddens, Walker
Posted by Jeff Howe, Jan. 8, 6:22 p.m.
The
Celtics have recalled rookies J.R. Giddens and Billy Walker from the
Utah Flash. Giddens appeared in 13
games for the Flash, averaging 17.3 points, 6.5 rebounds, 2.2 rebounds,
1.46
steals, a team-high 1.54 blocks and a team-high 37.6 minutes per game.
He was ranked 20th in the NBDL in scoring, 13th in field-goal
percentage (53.5%) and seventh in blocks. Walker appeared in 15 games
for the Flash,
averaging a team-high 18.7 points, 5.3 rebounds, 1.5 assists and 1.33
steals in
30.5 minutes per game. He
was ranked 11th in the NBDL in scoring and sixth in field-goal
percentage (55.7%).
The Breakdown
The
Celtics are clearly lacking in depth, and Giddens and Walker have torn
up the Development League. With Tony Allen sidelined with a right ankle
strain, the C's have had to go really small by rotating Eddie House,
Gabe Pruitt and Ray Allen at the small forward position when Paul
Pierce has been on the bench. This would have caused a serious matchup
problem -- or a demand for Pierce to play about 45 minutes tomorrow
night to guard LeBron James -- the Celtics could ill-afford to gamble
on. Look for Walker to get some early minutes on James.
This
move makes sense in another way. With the combination of Tony Allen's
injury, Doc Rivers having no plans to play Sam Cassell, and Patrick
O'Bryant serving little purpose against the Cavs, the C's can activate
both Walker and Giddens while knowing there's no dead weight on the
bench. That's not an attack on the game of Cassell or O'Bryant, but
there's no sense in dressing both players if you know they won't see
the court.
The Breakdown
Posted by Jeff Howe, Jan. 7, 11:58 p.m.
Analysis
after the Celtics fell to the Rockets, 89-85, at the Garden. It was the
Celtics' third consecutive loss and their sixth defeat in eight games.
It also marked the end of their 13-game home winning streak.
Intensity issue. While defense drives the Celtics, it’s
their intensity that drives their defense. That is the most noticeable
difference between the Celtics of now and the Celtics of the first 29 games of
this season and all 108 games last season. Doc Rivers pointed to their lacking
intensity before the game even started, and that was a huge factor when the
final buzzer sounded three hours later. It was mostly evident in the fourth
quarter, when the C’s had 11 points, their fewest scored and the Rockets’ fewest
allowed. What’s more astounding is how those points actually went down. Gabe
Pruitt scored five points early in the fourth before Ray Allen hit a pair of
free throws with 4:16 to play, Paul
Pierce knocked down a jumper at the 2:43
mark and Rajon Rondo hit a lay-up with 1:34
remaining. That’s it. Four field goals on 18 attempts, and the starters
accounted for two of them and six points overall. Earlier this season, the
Celtics destroyed teams in the fourth quarter, stepped on their throats and
beat them more when they got up. In their three consecutive losses, they failed
to make a run at the Knicks, let the Bobcats dominate an overtime and barely
even got off the mat against the Rockets. Think about it — it took more than
nine minutes for a starter to make a bucket in the decisive quarter, and this
team has the best starting unit in the league, maybe even in the last eight
years. I’m not trying to say the Celtics are mailing it in or anything, but
there’s a stark difference between their mentality this week than I’ve seen
from them in the last 14 months. They need their swagger back, and they’ve got
a golden opportunity Friday in Cleveland .
Championship effort. Before the Celtics lost six of their
last eight games, they had been 93-18 in their first 111 regular-season
contests since Kevin Garnett and Allen came to town. That means they’ve
accounted for 25 percent of their regular-season losses in about two weeks. They
were correct when they said before the season started they’d be getting every
team’s best effort every night, but it’s almost eerie to see some of these
teams’ bench players showing up with supernatural powers. Two Celtics were
talking in the locker room after the game about the Rockets, when one said in
disbelief, “Von Wafer?” No offense to the guy who doesn’t have a first name or
anything, but he scored 12 points on four 3-pointers tonight, including a huge
dagger from the corner with 43 seconds to play. Then there was Aaron Brooks,
who apparently was neither Michael Vick’s cousin or an interception-happy
quarterback for the Saints. Brooks dropped 19 points off the bench, the third
highest total of anyone in the game. If you told me before the game tonight
Wafer and Brooks would combine to score 31 points, I would have asked what in
the name of Pervis Ellison is wrong with you.
Baby brings it. Despite giving up nine inches to Yao Ming,
Glen Davis gave the Rockets’ big man all he could handle tonight. Granted,
there were times when Yao made “Big
Baby” and everyone else on the court look invisible, including his last
put-back, but Davis brought it in a
super-sized way in this game. He had a season-high 12 points and grabbed two
rebounds, but he frustrated Yao
when Kendrick Perkins failed to do so. In fact, Davis
had four more seconds of playing time than Perkins due to his manic play. Davis
is always going to be labeled a “tweener,” a guy who is too short to play power
forward or center but not agile enough to handle other small forwards. But when
he brings the energy he displayed tonight, he’ll always demand playing time
because he’s deceptively strong and can keep guys out of the paint when they
try backing him down. Yao scored 11
of his 26 points in the first quarter, before Davis
really got into the flow of the game. After that, it was the Wafer and Brooks
show.
C-Notes. Without Tony Allen on Friday in Cleveland ,
the Celtics are going to have a brutal time defending LeBron James when Pierce
is on the bench. That is, of course, unless Pierce plays about 46 minutes. …
Garnett, who hurt his right calf after getting whacked Sunday against the
Knicks, had it wrapped in the locker room after the game tonight. … The Celtics
scored 31 points in the first quarter and just 54 the rest of the way. Ray
Allen is 4-for-24 (16.7 percent) from 3-point range in the last three games. …
The C’s were doubled up in the paint, 36-18. It was their fewest points in the
paint all season.
Fourth-quarter face plant
Posted by Jeff Howe, Jan. 7, 10:00 p.m.
The Celtics scored a season-low 11 points in the fourth quarter and fell to the Rockets, 89-85. I'll have more later.
C's by 3
Posted by Jeff Howe, Jan. 7, 9:21 p.m.
The
Celtics reclaimed control and are taking a 74-71 lead into the fourth
quarter. Paul Pierce continues to lead the way with 24 points, four
assists and three rebounds.
Breaking down in the second
Posted by Jeff Howe, Jan. 7, 8:50 p.m.
The
Celtics' bench struggled without Tony Allen in the second quarter, lost
the momentum created by the starting unit and the C's surrendered the
lead as a result. The Rockets scored 14 of their 30 second-quarter
points in the paint, and that was with Yao Ming playing less than half
of the quarter. Houston is taking a 52-49 edge into the third.
C's start strong
Posted by Jeff Howe, Jan. 7, 8:07 p.m.
The
second biggest story in the first quarter was the Celtics jumping out
to a 31-22 lead on the Rockets, thanks to 10 points from Kevin Garnett
and 11 from Paul Pierce, who hit all three 3-pointers he took.
The
biggest story, though, was the cast of vertically-challenged characters
storming the floor. First, Von Wafer was victimized by the false hopes
that led him to believe he could be like Mike, when he was badly
rejected by the rim on a dunk attempt. Next, Rajon Rondo forgot his
trampoline when he tried to dunk over Yao Ming, who's got 17 inches and
132 pounds on the Celtics' point guard. And finally, Glen Davis fell
for Yao's Chauncey Billups up-fake when thinking he could Dikembe
Mutombo Yao's shot into the third row. What has all this taught us?
That David and Goliath story was a flat-out lie.
Ready to launch
Posted by Jeff Howe, Jan. 7, 7:27p.m.
The
Celtics (29-7) and Rockets (21-15) are just a few minutes from tip-off
here at the Garden in a matchup between two teams that have been
struggling -- the Celtics of late, and the Rockets all season. The only
thing going on during the pregame action surrounded what wasn't going
on, and that was Rockets coach Rick Adelman showing up 25 minutes late
to his press conference.
Tony Allen won't play again tonight, as
he's still nursing a right ankle strain. Doc Rivers said Allen
underwent an MRI, and Allen will miss "probably the next couple games."
Rivers said he didn't know the results of the MRI.
The Celtics
won't practice tomorrow before they leave for Cleveland in anticipation
of Friday night's playoff rematch with the Cavs. Rivers just wants his
players to take the day off to rest and spend time with their families,
as he said they've only been home for three days since leaving for the
West Coast on Dec. 23.
Dikembe Mutombo is here with the
Rockets, who signed him Dec. 31. Mutombo was also interested in joining
the Celtics, and while Rivers said the feelings were reciprocal, the
Celtics weren't ready to make an immediate commitment.
"We just
couldn't pull the trigger as soon as he needed us to pull the trigger,"
said Rivers, who preferred to see which players would be available
later in the season.
The Celtics have lost five of seven, are
18-1 at home, 1-2 in January, 5-0 on Wednesdays, 8-4 against the
Western Conference, 2-0 against the Southwest Division and 1-0 against
the Rockets, a 103-99 win in Houston on Nov. 4.
The Breakdown
Posted by Jeff Howe, Jan. 2, 10:40
p.m.
Analysis after the Celtics beat the Wizards, 108-83, to improve to 29-5 and win their 13th consecutive home game:
S.O.P. A win like this is exactly what the Celtics needed
after three stressful losses during their four-game road trip. It was pretty
much status quo when it comes to the majority of the Celtics’ victories over
the last season and a half — a blowout decided before the final quarter with
the starters resting as the bench closes it out. And this thing was decided
early on. The starting unit immediately put its stamp on the game with a 10-0
run in the first quarter that gave the C’s a 23-10 lead. And the bench did its
work in the second quarter to nearly double that advantage. After the C’s least
successful stretch of the season, it was a pretty good indicator they’d want to
come out in front of their home crowd and dominate the worst team in the
Eastern Conference, and they won their 13th consecutive home game in impressive
fashion. The next two shouldn’t be much more difficult, as the Celtics visit
the Knicks on Sunday and the Bobcats on Tuesday before returning home Wednesday
to take on the Rockets, who some believe to be a Finals-caliber team. This
dismantling of the Wizards gave Boston
its swagger back, and as a number of opposing teams have said through the early
portion of this season, the Celtics are a brutal team to tangle with when
they’ve got their swagger. That, I believe, is something they lost for a few
days after the defeat in Los Angeles .
I wouldn’t read much into the national outlets’ assessment that the C’s lack of
depth has caught up to them — that’s a ludicrous, extremely ill-informed
opinion, in all honesty. They just lost three games to three dangerous teams.
This, for all intents and purposes, was a lay-up, and the Celtics posterized
the Wizards.
Ball movement. The Celtics said the biggest key to tonight’s
victory was their ability to move the ball on offense, and they finished with
31 assists. In comparison, the Celtics had just 53 assists in their three
losses on the road trip, and they’re only averaging 18 assists per game in
their five losses this season. Their opponents have had more assists than them
in four of those five contests. On the contrary, the Celtics are averaging 21.8
assists in their 29 victories this season. Clearly, Rajon Rondo is a huge factor in that
area, and he had 14 assists tonight, but his assist numbers don’t exactly
correlate to the Celtics’ success, if you look strictly at the numbers. Rondo
averages 7.2 assists per game in wins this season but 7.8 assists in losses.
C-Notes. Paul Pierce made his first five 3-pointers before
missing his sixth and final attempt from beyond the arc. Danny Ainge has the
single-game team record with six made 3s without a miss. Asked if he would have
liked to take Ainge’s record, Pierce said jokingly, “I guess so because he
doesn’t hold many records. It would have been nice to erase his name.” … Brian
Scalabrine said after the game Doc Rivers printed out the team’s schedule
before the season and showed it to the players. There was just one thing that
stood out: Each of the 82 games on the calendar had the Celtics as their own
opponents. It was a message to his team that the Celtics only have to worry
about themselves, and if they don’t beat themselves, they don’t have to worry
about who they’re playing on any given night.
It's official
Posted by Jeff Howe, Jan. 2, 9:52
p.m.
The
Celtics put this one in the books early and just finished off their
108-83 beatdown of the Wizards at the Garden. I'll have more coming
soon.
Bench time
Posted by Jeff Howe, Jan. 2, 9:18
p.m.
Rajon
Rondo made up for a late mistake by accounting for five points in the
Celtics' last two possessions, a one-handed dunk and a crafty assist on
a Ray Allen 3-pointer from the corner. The Celtics have an 86-55 lead
heading into the fourth quarter, and there doesn't appear to be much
need for the starters to put in any more work, although Allen is on the
court with the second unit. (Allen just got taken out 12 seconds into
the quarter.)
King of the Cassel (Overused headline alert)
Posted by Jeff Howe, Jan. 2, 8:59
p.m.
Matt
Cassel just went walking by with Steve Pagliuca and is sitting with the
Celtics' owner on the baseline on the side of the court adjacent to the
C's bench. Cassel is wearing a white fitted hat that's hanging just
above his eyes, but he still got a small ovation from the fans he
walked past. It's on a small sample size, but it appears Cassel is
still relatively anonymous compared to other local sports celebrities.
For instance, if Tom Brady just walked by, girls would have seen him
all the way from the Berkshires.
Paging the Wizards
Posted by Jeff Howe, Jan. 2, 8:40
p.m.
The
Celtics have shown up, which is good for those of us who came here
expecting to watch a little basketball. That's because the Wizards, who
might finish the season with more coaching changes than victories, are
nowhere to be found. The C's have a 58-34 lead at halftime, the bench
put in a tremendous shift, the starters have been solid all the way
around and this thing is just about over. The Celtics' starting unit
has about 10 more minutes of action left in it before Doc Rivers lets
them take the rest of the night off.
The Butler didn't do it
Posted by Jeff Howe, Jan. 2, 8:02 p.m.
Caron
Butler's buzzer beater was disallowed, and the Celtics have a 28-14
lead after the first quarter. Paul Pierce was alive in the first,
scoring 13 points on 5-of-5 shooting, including three 3-pointers.
Breaking down the CBA and LeBron
Posted by Jeff Howe, Jan. 2, 7:50
p.m.
As I wrote earlier, I have something for the paper this week about the
wild free agency period that is scheduled to rock the NBA in the summer
of 2010. It was, of course, centered around LeBron James and his
chances of landing in Boston, and it will be on the Web by Monday
morning. Anyway, I threw around some projected salary numbers that
teams can dish out to LeBron when the time comes, and I wanted to be a
little more clear as to how I arrived at those figures.
First
of all, based on recent salary caps, I projected the 2010-11 NBA cap to
be at $64.6 million, and individual limits roll off from that figure,
according to the Collective Bargaining Agreement. Since LeBron will
have seven years of NBA service when he is a free agent, he'll fall
into the bracket (of seven- to nine-year veterans) that allows him to
command a first-year salary of 30 percent of the team cap. If he
chooses to sign with a team other than the Cavs, his salary can
escalate by 8 percent every year over a five-year contract, the maximum
amount of years a team other than the Cavs can offer him. That will
break down as follows:
2010-11: $19.4 million
2011:12: $20.9 million
2012-13: $22.6 million
2013-14: $24.4 million
2014-15: $26.4 million
Five years, $113.7 million
So, any team other than the
Cavs can offer LeBron a maximum of five years and $113.7 million, based
on my cap estimate. Obviously, those teams can only offer that money if
they stay under the cap, but there are 15 teams with less than $30
million on the books for the 2010-11 season, not including team and
player options. There will obviously be plenty of suitors for his
services.
It will be a little more tricky for the Celtics, who
would only have enough free cap space to offer James $16.2 million for
the 2010-11 season. By escalating his salary by 8 percent each year
over the course of the deal, the Celtics could extend an offer of five
years and $95 million.
Now, here's where the Cavs have a huge
advantage. Because of the Larry Bird Rule, the Cavs can offer LeBron
six years and a max salary without regard for the cap. This was put in
place by the league so teams have an advantage when trying to grow
their own stars. What's more, the Cavs can increase his salary by 10.5
percent each season. Here's how a contract from Cleveland would break
down:
2010-11: $19.4 million
2011:12: $20.4 million
2012-13: $22.5 million
2013-14: $24.9 million
2014-15: $27.5 million
2015-16: $30.4 million
Six years, $145.1 million
Clearly, Cleveland has a
distinct advantage in terms of salary leverage, even if the endorsement
opportunities might pale in comparison to cities like New York, Los
Angeles and Boston. And how about that ridiculous figure of $30.4
million? If LeBron was starting a new deal that season, he'd be looking
at about $10 million less in that season alone.
Anyway, you
can check out the full story in the Metro holiday edition right now or
online Monday. I'll link to it when it's online and will bump up this
post for more clarity.
Marbury in focus
Posted by Jeff Howe, Jan. 2, 6:50
p.m.
Marc Stein reported earlier today a deal "will happen" this season that would place
disgruntled Knicks guard Stephon Marbury on the Celtics.
That could happen in one of three ways. The Knicks could trade him to the
Celtics, which has a 0 percent chance of going down. They could waive him,
giving the Celtics and every other team in the league a chance to claim Marbury
and the remainder of his $20.8 million salary. (The Knicks have played 30
games, meaning Marbury has been paid about $7.6 million this season.) That's
also very unlikely. Or the Knicks could buy him out, and he'd be free to sign
with any team for the veteran minimum, the most likely scenario. It's been
widely reported, though, that Marbury is unwilling to negotiate a buyout for
less than his salary. Unless he decides to step back up to the bargaining
table, he'll likely finish out his contract and become a free agent this summer.
I spoke earlier with one highly respected veteran NBA writer who said Stein is
typically dead on when he breaks news, which means this report could have a
great deal of credibility, although the writer still wasn't confident Marbury
would be willing to take less than the money to leave
the Knicks.
Doc Rivers declined to comment on the matter due to NBA tampering policies,
which would be an instant fine at the very least.
C's crafty
Posted by Jeff Howe, Jan. 2, 5:56 p.m.
The
Celtics will try to bust out the magic stick against the Wizards
tonight in order to avoid their second two-game losing streak in the
last week. By the way, there seems to be more panic around here when
the Celtics drop two straight than the time they lost 18 consecutive
games just two years ago.
Anyway, the Celtics are 17-1 at home,
7-2 on Fridays, 20-1 against the Eastern Conference, 5-0 against the
Southeast Division and 1-0 against the Wizards, a 34-point whipping in
Washington on Dec. 11. I'm heading down the hall now and will be back
to post before the tip.
Welcome back
Posted by Jeff Howe, Jan. 2, 5:38 p.m.
After
a nine-day break from the Garden (for the Celtics and myself), we're
back here to open the gates of the 2009 portion of the schedule, as the
C's (28-5) are set to host the Wizards (6-24) at 7:30. First, here's a
quick snapshot of what's gone down since the Celtics went west.
92-83 loss to the Lakers.
Rajon Rondo didn't have his best game, and the Lakers played on
Christmas Day like the other 81 contests were nonexistent. And
confetti? Seriously?
99-89 loss to the Warriors. You could see this one coming. With the 19-game winning streak out the window, the Celtics looked like they needed a night off.
108-63 win against the Kings. Also predictable. The Celtics woke up, and the Kings are royally horrible.
91-86 loss to the Blazers. Portland played by hockey rules, and the refs stabbed the C's in the neck with a pair of skates.
Also,
if you haven't checked out the Metro holiday edition that's been on
newsstands this week, I formulated a plan in which the Celtics (and
other teams) could use to sign LeBron James in two summers. The story
will be online by Monday morning, and I'll write up a Cliffs notes
version to post on the blog later tonight.
The Breakdown: Extended Edition
Posted by Jeff Howe, Dec 23, 11:48 p.m.
Analysis after the Celtics beat the Sixers, 110-91, to become the first team in NBA history to start a season 27-2:
How long will it last? The Celtics won their 19th
consecutive game tonight to set a new franchise record and tie the fourth
longest winning streak in NBA history (with the 1999-2000 Lakers).
Coincidentally, the Celtics will get a chance to pass an old Lakers streak when
they take on the current version of L.A. ’s
bandwagoning bunch Thursday afternoon at the Staples
Center . The question obviously has
to be asked: How long can the Celtics keep this thing going?
Two things must first be understood: First, the Celtics are
clearly the best team in the league and can be expected to beat any team on any
night, all things being equal. Second, knowing a winning streak like this has
only been replicated four other times in the history of the NBA, it’s perfectly
clear how difficult such a feat can be to accomplish, and this thing could snap
at any moment.
Since those last two points didn’t exactly resolve anything,
let’s take a look at what lies ahead. The Celtics embarked for Los
Angeles tonight in anticipation for their second
longest road trip of the season, which will be trumped by a six-game beast in
February. After the Lakers, the Celtics visit Golden
State on Friday, a place they lost
last season in a wild shootout (do the Warriors win any other types of games?).
The C’s close the trip by visiting dormant Sacramento
on Sunday before heading to Portland
next Tuesday. Obviously, the Blazers will be looking to save some face after
being whipped by the Celtics here a few weeks ago, but considering how inept
the Blazers can be when they’re thoroughly intimidated by a physical team like Boston ,
Portland is unlikely to hold serve
at home. Sweeping that trip would give the Celtics 23 straight wins, which
would be the second longest streak in league history, trumping the Rockets’
22-game stretch last season (The Celtics ended their streak in Houston ,
by the way). Speaking of the Rockets, they’ll be in Boston
on Jan. 7, a night when the C’s will be going for their 27th in a row. The
parallels are strong enough to garner a ton of national attention.
Two nights later will be one of the Celtics’ biggest tests
of the season, their first trip to Cleveland .
The nationally-televised contest on Jan. 9 might wind up being the Celtics’
28th straight. The C’s could have an opportunity to tie the 1971-72 Lakers
league record with a 33rd consecutive win (a number with a Celtics feel, for
sure) when they host the Suns on Jan. 19, and they can set a new record two
nights later with a victory in Miami.
So, here I am on Dec. 23 talking about a record-breaking
streak that can’t be accomplished until 29 days — and 15 wins — from now. It’s
obviously premature, but it’s worth looking ahead after the Celtics just won
their third straight game by at least 18 points. You can only dissect so many of
the same types of wins before it makes sense to forecast what lies ahead. With
512 words already in the books, I’ll make my best attempt to answer the
original five-word question. I think the Celtics will sweep through the trip
out west, beginning with a game at the Staples Center that doesn’t fit the
hype, win four more after that and then lose in Cleveland on Jan. 9. How long
will the streak last? My best guess is 27 games.
Pine production. The Celtics’ bench put forth its best
effort in about a month tonight, starting with Tony Allen in the second quarter
and continuing through Leon Powe scoring 11 of his season-high 15 points in the
fourth quarter. Outside of Ray Allen’s 4:13
of action in the final quarter, the bench did a strong enough job holding the
lead to keep the starters on the bench with the game in hand.
This space was originally supposed to deal with the
struggles of the bench and what they need to do to turn it around, but they
must have read my mind before I could pen the words because they followed their
recipe throughout the game. Starting off, Tony Allen needs to be the
facilitator of the second unit. He’s no Rajon Rondo, nor does he pretend to be,
but Allen can create havoc in the paint when he gets aggressive moving toward
the basket. Allen doesn’t have to be a dominant scorer — although his finishing
ability needs some work — but he’s a good enough passer at times to free up his
teammates, whether it be Powe on the block or Eddie House and Gabe Pruitt on
the perimeter. Pruitt is definitely starting to show some things while running
the offense, not to the point where he should be the primary point guard behind
Rondo, and Doc Rivers
is doing a good job of letting the offense start with Pruitt. He should
absolutely be capable enough to warrant significant time off the bench during
the postseason. Down low, Powe has the interior moves and finishing skills to
be another good complimentary scorer with Allen and House. Powe isn’t good
enough to the point where he can get the ball 12 feet from the bucket and
continuously pound it toward the rim, but he’s got enough moves in his arsenal
to do some damage if Allen can get the defense moving in the wrong direction
before feeding Powe for an easy dunk.
The second unit is typically pretty strong on defense,
starting up top with Allen and continuing in the paint with the physicality of
Powe and Glen Davis, but the bench gets in trouble when the ball sticks on
offense. The best way for the bench to pick up where the starters leave off is
to keep Allen active from the moment he gets on the court.
Non-trash talk trash talk. The Lakers made it very clear early
this season they've got the Celtics on their radar. Whether they've
announced the ban of green clothes in the locker room, using the Finals
as a model for how to improve or just pointing to their Christmas Day
showdown at the Staples Center, the Lakers haven't ignored the Celtics
one bit, at least not through the media. The Celtics, however, aren't
saying anything, using the classic "one game of 82" phrase when asked
about the rivals from out west. And believe me, the Celtics have been
asked about the Lakers at LEAST 20 times in the last
week. I honestly believe the Celtics' mode of turning their backs on
the question is their form of public trash talk. They just won't let
the Lakers know they're on the minds of those in Boston. If the Celtics
acknowledge the Lakers in the same sentence, I think they're looking at
it as a form of equality. And clearly, the Celtics don't believe the
Lakers are their equals. That's how I see it.
C-Notes. The Celtics had a Christmas party in their locker
room after the game. The wives set up decorations during the fourth quarter,
including presents and a tree. The players’ kids were also there, and the team
put a video together, too. When the party cleared, the team packed up and left
for L.A.
Nineteen in a row
Posted by Jeff Howe, Dec 23, 10:02 p.m.
The
Celtics beat the 76ers, 110-91, to improve to 27-2 and win their 19th
consecutive game. They're the first team in league history to start a
season 27-2 and the first team in Celtics history to win 19 in a row.
I'll have more later in The Breakdown, which will take a look at how
long this streak can last.
Celtics up a dozen
Posted by Jeff Howe, Dec 23, 9:25 p.m.
The
Celtics have a 78-66 lead heading into the fourth quarter here at the
Garden. They're 22-1 this season when ahead or tied after three, with
the only loss coming to the Nuggets at the Garden on Nov. 14.
Late Celtics charge creates distance
Posted by Jeff Howe, Dec 23, 8:43 p.m.
The
Celtics used a late run to grab a 58-44 lead at the half against the
Sixers. After Philly's 7-0 run knotted the score at 37-37, the Celtics
responded with a 9-0 spurt and later closed the quarter on a 12-3 run
to open up their double-digit advantage.
As a side note, Patriots linebacker Junior Seau is here, and no one has tried tackling him yet.
Glen
Davis has been sitting at the end of the Celtics' bench all night in
street clothes, which is a good sign considering Doc Rivers gave him
the option of staying away from the gym to get treatment if he needed
it.
Celtics out in front
Posted by Jeff Howe, Dec 23, 8:06 p.m.
The
Celtics have a 29-25 lead after the first quarter here at the Garden.
Kevin Garnett and Ray Allen each have eight points, while Paul Pierce
has seven.
In the Paint goes On the Field
Posted by Jeff Howe, Dec 23, 7:53 p.m.
OK,
so I've got something coming out in the paper this week on the Celtics'
chances of signing LeBron James in the summer of 2010, which will be
the most memorable summer in NBA history. Well, just ignore it because
it looks like the Yankees will probably buy him, too. Anyway, based on
today's signing of Mark Teixeira, I decided to do a little more math.
Between Teixeira ($180M), CC Sabathia ($163.5M), A.J. Burnett ($80M),
Alex Rodriguez ($275M), Derek Jeter ($189M), Johnny Damon ($52M), Jorge
Posada ($52M) and Mariano Rivera ($45M), the Yankees are shelling out
contracts worth approximately $1,036,500,000. Yeah, that's more than a
billion dollars for eight guys. Forbes Magazine estimated in April
the Yankees were worth $1.3 billion, which is slightly more than
they're paying eight people who can't even take the field at the same
time. Yankee fans are getting their popcorn ready, all right, but
they'll be investing in Smartfood bulk bags considering a tub of
popcorn is going to cost about 18 bucks at the new Stadium next year.
Going streaking
Posted by Jeff Howe, Dec 23, 7:04 p.m.
The
Celtics (26-2) and 76ers (12-15) are about 35 minutes from tip-off here
at the Garden on what could be a historic night. The Celtics are trying
to win their 19th consecutive game, which would break the franchise's
all-time record set in 1981-82. A 19th straight win would also be tied
for the fourth longest in NBA history. The 1971-72 Lakers have the
record with 33 straight, followed by the 2007-08 Rockets (22), 1970-71
Bucks (20) and 1999-2000 Lakers (19). And finally, the Celtics have a
chance to become the first team to start a season 27-2 in league
history.
Anyway, here's what's been going on tonight around the Garden:
Rajon
Rondo said his team at Oak Hill Academy won 44 consecutive games during
his senior year, and that's the longest winning streak he's ever been a
part of.
Doc Rivers said the team set three main goals prior to
the season: Win a world championship, lock up home-court advantage for
the playoffs and become a better team than last season. He said right
now the starting five is better than last year's version, but the bench
is worse.
Next, the traffic around the city tonight has been an
extra shade of crazy, and a few Celtics were late getting to the
Garden, which isn't as bad as the Sixers' situation. Philly's first bus
was a bit late, but the team's second bus got here very late, less than
an hour before the game is set to start.
Glen Davis, who
suffered a concussion and other mild symptoms during a car accident
Sunday afternoon, will not play again tonight and isn't expected to
play Thursday against the Lakers, either. Rivers gave no immediate
timetable for his return.
The Breakdown
Posted by Jeff Howe, Dec 20, 12:19 a.m.
Analysis after the Celtics beat the Bulls, 126-108, to improve to 25-2 and win their 17th consecutive game:
Pierce laying low. Paul Pierce scored 16 points tonight,
fourth on the Celtics behind Ray Allen (27), Kendrick Perkins (career-high 25)
and Kevin Garnett (17). Pierce entered the night averaging 18.6 points per game
this season, a tick above Allen’s 18.5 for the team lead and the lowest average
of his career since he was a rookie. This is after he went off early in the
season and had me writing in this very space that he deserved to garner some
consideration for the MVP. While I’m not reneging how valuable Pierce is to the
Celtics, I was definitely too presumptuous to think he would keep killing teams
in the fourth quarter (at least at the pace in which he’d warrant the MVP vote).
He can obviously still go off when he wants to or when the Celtics need him — just
look at his 10-point, four-assist third quarter tonight. But I get the feeling
Pierce is completely fine with playing a more reserved role of a facilitator
rather than a dominant scorer. Another case from the third quarter tonight:
Just a few minutes after knocking down an open 3-pointer from the right arc,
Pierce got the ball alone at the top of the 3-point line, began to take the
shot, then hit Kevin Garnett with a strike in the paint, and Garnett got an
easy dunk and drew a foul. Pierce was obviously feeling it in the third but
instead opted to deliver the ball to a teammate. Again, he can score when he
wants, and there are sure to be a few more 30-point nights this season, but he’s
having too much fun embracing more of an all-around role at the moment.
Perks of the picks. Perkins came through with a career night
tonight, and I’m not convinced the Celtics called a single play designed to get
the ball to Perkins on the first option. Doc Rivers said after the game he
recently told Perkins he’s doing such a good job putting up offensive numbers
that he doesn’t want his young center to think he’s morphed into an offensive
juggernaut. Rivers told Perkins before the game tonight to concentrate on
setting picks to free up other scorers, particularly Allen. If Allen is open on
the wing, Perkins’ defender would have to rotate outside and Perkins would find
himself open for an easy dunk. That happened a few times tonight, and Perkins
put up his career-high 25 points without even setting foot on the court in the fourth
quarter. While Perkins is undoubtedly playing excellent basketball, he’s really
doing a great job of taking advantage of his situation by playing his role
perfectly around three potential Hall of Famers. Of course, it also helps that
Perkins is in the best shape of his life and puts in his time in the gym. “You
root for guys who really put their hours in,” Garnett said.
Fly away, TA. Tony Allen’s windmill dunk on the fast break
in the fourth quarter didn’t have anything to really do with the Celtics’ win
tonight, but it’s certainly a small victory for Allen and the coaching staff.
He’s had so many opportunities to really punctuate a breakaway since his return
from the knee injury, but he hasn’t always busted out his unique brand of
creativity, meaning he’s probably spending more time thinking about landing
than taking off. Tonight’s windmill (against the team from the Windy
City ) was another sign he’s getting
closer to believing in his ability rather than failing to trust his own
physical skill.
C-Notes. After the Celtics tied a season low with 14 assists
against the Hawks two nights ago, they had a season-high 40 assists tonight,
led by Rajon Rondo’s 15. Their previous season high was 31, which they had
against the Wizards last week … Gold medal sprinter Usain Bolt, the “World’s
Fastest Man,” was in the crowd and met with the Celtics after the game. Much of
the discussion involved who would win a race between Bolt and Rondo. Rondo was
apparently the only one who thought he would come out a winner. … Garnett joked
he was afraid the team would trade him after pulling down just one rebound
tonight. … A year ago, teams ignored Rondo when he had the ball. Now, his
penetration has caused so much chaos you’d think teams are playing defense with
bags over their heads.
Celtics blow out the Bulls
Posted by Jeff Howe, Dec 19, 9:49 p.m.
The
Celtics scored a season-high 126 points tonight in their 126-108
victory against the Bulls, giving them 17 consecutive victories. None
of the starters played in the fourth quarter. I'll have The Breakdown
later on.
Career night for Perk
Posted by Jeff Howe, Dec 19, 9:25 p.m.
Kendrick
Perkins has a career-high 25 points through three quarters. His
previous high was 24 against the Knicks at Madison Square Garden on
Jan. 21.
Celtics C's control
Posted by Jeff Howe, Dec 19, 9:20 p.m.
The
Celtics regained their momentum in the third quarter, storming past a
team that didn't feel like playing much defense to take a 98-82 lead
into the fourth. The Celtics scored 41 points in the third quarter, the
most they've scored in any quarter this season.
Bulls back in it
Posted by Jeff Howe, Dec 19, 8:33 p.m.
The
Celtics' bench had another poor showing in the first half and let the
Bulls overcome a 12-point deficit. The C's have a 57-55 lead at the
half, with Kendrick Perkins destroying the Bulls' undermanned interior
to the tune of 17 points and four rebounds. Rajon Rondo is one-third of
the way toward a triple-double with four points, 10 assists and four
rebounds.
Not good for Gooden
Posted by Jeff Howe, Dec 19, 8:17 p.m.
Bulls
starting forward Drew Gooden sprained his right ankle midway through
the first quarter and will not return to the game, according to the
team. The Bulls are already without Tyrus Thomas, who is suffering the
aftereffects of a concussion.
Running away from the Bulls
Posted by Jeff Howe, Dec 19, 8:03 p.m.
It
was nice of the Bulls to show up tonight, but then again, maybe it
takes them a little longer to thaw out of the frost that has overtaken
the Garden. Anyway, the Celtics have a 31-21 lead after the first
quarter, with Rajon Rondo pacing the C's with four points, eight
assists and three rebounds. The triple-double watch begins early
tonight.
Snow day
Posted by Jeff Howe, Dec 19, 7:40 p.m.
Someone
needs to call Jeremy Jacobs and tell him to put the heat on in this
building. Anyway, hopefully my problems with the World Wide Internet
have subsided, and I can get to giving everyone their regular doses of
in-game posts while the Celtics (24-2) entertain the Bulls (12-13) at
the Garden. The Celtics are going for their 17th consecutive win, which
would tie the franchise mark for the second most all-time.
Due
to today's snowstorm, the Celtics had the option of staying at a nearby
hotel after shoot-around in case they didn't want to worry about the
commute. In the Paint's official attendance tally had Kendrick Perkins
at the hotel and Ray Allen passing on the deal. J.R. Giddens and Billy
Walker are with the Utah Flash and the other 11 are unaccounted for.
OK, so I'd be a lousy teacher.
And finally, Bulls starting forward Tyrus Thomas is not with the team after suffering a concussion.
Pierce says he's fine
Posted by Jeff Howe, Dec 16, 12:12 p.m.
Paul
Pierce limped off the court in the final minute of the game tonight
after Jazz center Mehmet Okur fell into Pierce's left knee. Pierce said
after the game he was fine, his knee only buckled a little bit and he
doesn't think it's necessary to get tests on the knee.
It may
have been a coincidence, a knee-jerk reaction (couldn't resist) or a
practical joke by one of Pierce's teammates, but there was a wheelchair
in the hallway after the game. Several in the locker room said they
still give Pierce a hard time for getting wheeled away during Game 1 of
the Finals in June, so the possibilities are endless.
The Breakdown
Posted by Jeff Howe, Dec 15, 11:44 p.m.
Analysis
after the Celtics beat the Jazz, 100-91, to improve to 23-2 and win
their 15th consecutive game (and after Jared from Subway allowed the
media to do our work):
Perk pounds the paint. Without All-Star forward Carlos
Boozer, who was out with a strained biceps, the Jazz are softer on the interior
than a toilet paper factory, and Kendrick Perkins flushed Mehmet Okur and Utah ’s
big men down the drain tonight. It’s not uncommon for Perkins to eat up lesser
opponents, but most of the centers in the Eastern Conference are willing to put
up a fight. The Jazz don’t have that without Boozer, and Perkins put up 15
points and a season-high 14 rebounds. While Paul Millsap (career-high 32
points, 10 rebounds) and Okur (13 points, six boards) had some numbers, they
did the brunt of their damage from the outside. As Kevin Garnett put it after
the game, “Someone had to score” for Utah ,
and it sounded like they were fine with Millsap providing the damage as long as
Deron Williams remained quiet.
Back on track. Speaking of Williams, Rajon Rondo took Utah ’s
point guard out back and had his way with him. After having a difficult game
against Chris Paul and the Hornets, Rondo really came back against Williams,
who was drafted one pick ahead of Paul in the 2005 draft. There’s no doubt
Williams is still limited from his ankle injury, but he’s widely labeled as the
second best point guard in the game (behind Paul). Rondo seemed tentative against
the Hornets, started slow and never got fully up to speed, and he looked revved
up from the jump tonight. He scored seven points in the first quarter and had
five points and two assists during a 13-2 run that put the Celtics up by 12
early. When it was all over, Rondo nearly had his second triple-double in as
many weeks, finishing with a career-high 25 points to go along with nine
rebounds, eight assists and three steals. Not to mention, he was 11-for-15 from
the free-throw line, making and attempting more than anyone in the game. When
he’s that aggressive in the paint, the Celtics don’t lose.
Response time. After the Celtics’ lost their early lead due
to some stagnant play by the bench, things were shaping up for some in-game
déjà vu in the fourth quarter, which the Celtics entered leading by four. Rondo
stayed on the court at the start of the quarter but made way for Pruitt for a
few minutes, and the rest of the bench rotation (minus Eddie House) remained pretty
much intact. Anyway, this seemed to have the feel of a game that might slip
away from them, especially after the Jazz dominated the fourth quarter in last
season’s 18-point win at the Garden. But the Celtics showed their mettle and
kept responding in the fourth. The Jazz scored on five straight possessions (11
points) in a two-minute stretch (from five minutes down to three remaining on
the game clock), but the Celtics followed all but one of those buckets with a
point of their own. Typically, when the C’s defense lets its guard down, the
offense stumbles, too. That wasn’t the case tonight, and chalk it up as another
way the Celtics found a way to win a game this season.
C-Notes. Pierce and Garnett were later than usual
to their postgame press conference because Olympic swimmer Michael Phelps and
Jared the Subway guy met them in the locker room after the game. Pierce and
Garnett couldn’t hold back their laughter when saying Jared told them he never
has to pay for food at Subway again. … In related news, Luke Ridnour is
somewhere smiling knowing he’s not the most useless guy to set foot in a Garden
locker room this year. … The Celtics have benefited from opponents’ injuries in
the last two games. Boozer was out tonight, and Hornets center Tyson Chandler
didn’t play Friday. … The Celtics took a season-low six 3-pointers, making
three. Gabe Pruitt was 2-for-3, and Ray Allen was 1-for-3. … The Celtics’ 23
turnovers led to 28 points for the Jazz.
Celtics win
Posted by Jeff Howe, Dec 15, 10:30 p.m.
The Celtics got past the Jazz with a 100-91 victory tonight at the Garden. I'll have more later.
Celtics by a nose
Posted by Jeff Howe, Dec 15, 9:22 p.m.
The
Celtics have a 69-65 lead heading into the fourth quarter, meaning the
bench will be counted on to protect this thing. The bench hasn't been
the brightest spot lately and helped cough up the Celtics' lead in the
second quarter, so they're in a big spot down the stretch against a
quality opponent.
All tied up
Posted by Jeff Howe, Dec 15, 8:40 p.m.
The
Jazz jumped off the mat in the second quarter and used a 14-2 run to
get back in this thing, and it's tied at 43-43 at the half. Kendrick
Perkins has dominated the post with 12 points and 10 rebounds, but Paul
Millsap went off for 16 points in the quarter to revive the Jazz.
Celtics out strong
Posted by Jeff Howe, Dec 15, 8:05 p.m.
Rajon
Rondo is a different man tonight than he was against Chris Paul and the
Hornets on Friday. He came out fast, pushing the ball and staying
aggressive on defense, and the Celtics thrived as a result, taking a
28-16 lead after the first quarter. Rondo has seven points, three
assists, one rebound and a highlight-reel cross-up of Deron Williams
(four points, three assists) on the fast break.
Speaking of Williams, he said before the game Rondo has the fastest hands in the NBA.
Start the music
Posted by Jeff Howe, Dec 15, 6:52 p.m.
We're
about 45 minutes away from tip-off between the Celtics (22-2) and Jazz
(15-10), who have been very up and down since their 5-0 start. The
Celtics are trying to pick up their 15th consecutive win, which would
be the fourth longest in team history. The 1981-82 Celtics have the
longest winning streak in team history
with 18 straight, followed by the 1959-60 (17) and 1964-65 (16) teams.
The
Celtics are 13-1 at home, 6-0 in December, 2-0 on Mondays, 6-1 against
the Western Conference and 3-1 against the Northwest Division. The Jazz
are 3-8 against the Eastern Conference, including a 1-4 mark on the
road.
The biggest news of the night is Jazz forward Carlos
Boozer won't play due to a strained tendon in his left quadriceps. Paul
Millsap will start in his place. Boozer (team highs of 20.5 points and
11.7 rebounds) is a dominant force on the low block and a more
difficult assignment than the Hornets' David West, which obviously
serves as a huge advantage for the Celtics.
On the C's side,
Eddie House is not with the team because he is attending the funeral
services for his aunt. He's expected to rejoin the team in time for
Wednesday's game in Atlanta, but Doc Rivers said House is permitted to
take all the time he needs. Gabe Pruitt will get some of House's
minutes, and it sounds like Sam Cassell will only play in an
extenuating circumstance.
And finally, due to a tractor trailer accident on I-93, a few Celtics have been showing up late tonight.
The Breakdown
Posted by Jeff Howe, Dec 12, 11:07 p.m.
Analysis after the Celtics beat the Hornets, 94-82, to win their 14th consecutive game and improve to 22-2:
Taking over. Of late, Paul Pierce hasn’t looked like the
dominant offensive force who blitzed through the middle of November, but he
showed tonight he’s still one of the best closers there is. This time, it was
in the third quarter, when Pierce scored 13 of his 28 points and helped the
Celtics turn a small deficit into a lead that changed the pace of the game. With
Peja Stojakovic guarding Pierce, the Celtics’ captain went to work on nearly
every possession, and he found ways to score even when the Hornets overloaded
his side of the court because they knew Pierce was on a mission. Third quarters
have been a difference maker for the Celtics all season, and you could tell at
halftime it was going to be more of the same story. Pierce catapulted the team
to a 14th consecutive win.
Paul Rondo’d Rondo. It’s easy to get excited over Chris
Paul’s numbers, and why not? The fourth-year product from Wake
Forest has been the best point
guard in the NBA since the beginning of last season and entered the night
averaging 20.3 points, 11.9 assists and 5.5 rebounds per game. But it’s even
more impressive to watch him in person. Don’t slight the fact that he makes
guys like Devin Brown, Morris Peterson and Rasual Butler look like pretty good
offensive players. Paul creates passing lanes that don’t exist, both on the
break and in the half court, and he runs the fast break as well as I’ve seen
anyone do it in the league this season (the Hornets outscored the Celtics,
19-6, on the break). More than that, he made Rajon Rondo look human tonight,
holding the Celtics’ point guard to one of his rougher performances of the
season after a stretch in which Rondo dominated everyone who matched up against
him. The lines tonight: Paul had 20 points, 14 assists, six rebounds and three
turnovers. Rondo had 10 points, a season-low two assists, four rebounds and one
turnover.
Price of admission. With the emergence of Rondo, the
early-season dominance of Pierce and the marksmanship of Ray Allen, it’s been
easy to look past the contributions of Kevin Garnett, who is burglarizing teams
with a steady stream of double-doubles. The Big Ticket’s ability to quietly put
up 15-point, 10-rebound nights with such ease is almost unparalleled across the
league. Garnett had another 19 points and 10 boards against the Hornets and
really streamlined the offense early when the Celtics struggled behind Rondo.
Most impressive about his performance tonight was who he did it against. David
West (23 points, 14 rebounds) is one of the most physically imposing power
forwards in the league and brings it on both ends of the court, and there were
times when the two looked like they were downright wearing each other out with
their one-on-one battles.
C-Notes. Kendrick Perkins was way too much in the paint for
a Hornets team without starting center Tyson Chandler. Perkins had nine
points,
all of which came in the second half, and 13 rebounds. … James Posey
was
virtually a non-factor with seven points, seven rebounds and one steal.
He was
also dropped by Glen Davis on one of the finer full-court picks set by
a Celtic
this season. … Garnett said after the game one of the reasons this
Celtics team
is better than last year’s is because they have more of a “killer
mentality.” ... For what it's worth, Doc Rivers out-coached Byron Scott
all night long.
Fourteen in a row
Posted by Jeff Howe, Dec 12, 10:37 p.m.
The
Celtics spoiled James Posey's return to Boston with a 94-82 victory
against the Hornets tonight at the Garden. It was the Celtics' 14th
straight win, tied for the fourth longest streak in team history. I'll
have The Breakdown coming shortly.
Celtics jump ahead
Posted by Jeff Howe, Dec 12, 9:57 p.m.
The
Celtics had another strong third quarter and took control of the pace
of the game, as a result. They lead the Hornets, 69-64, heading into
the fourth. Paul Pierce had 13 points to pace the C's in the third.
Hornets up a point
Posted by Jeff Howe, Dec 12, 9:09 p.m.
The
Hornets have a 40-39 lead at the half of a game that hasn't had any
flow at all. The highlight of the second quarter came with 4:50
remaining when Kendrick Perkins had the ball on the left block, and the
Hornets decided to quadruple-team him. Now, I'll be the first to say
Perkins has improved his offensive repertoire this season, but there
isn't a person in the history of the league worthy of a quadruple-team,
especially when they've been held scoreless through two quarters.
Anyway, Perkins took advantage of the defensive puke job and passed out
of it to Paul Pierce, who knocked down a 3-pointer from the right arc
to give the Celtics a 35-29 lead.
Knotted after one
Posted by Jeff Howe, Dec 12, 8:35 p.m.
Paul
Pierce hit a leaner at the buzzer to tie the game at 21-21 after the
first quarter. The Celtics fought back from an 18-10 deficit and scored
the final seven points of the quarter to tie the game. The biggest
difference early in the quarter was the matchup between two of the
games elite point guards: Boston's Rajon Rondo and New Orleans' Chris
Paul. Paul outplayed Rondo for the majority of the time the two were on
the court, and the Hornets jumped out to their lead while Rondo hit the
bench with two fouls.
The importance of Posey
Posted by Jeff Howe, Dec 12, 8:09 p.m.
The
Hornets are starting to find out what the Celtics and Heat already
knew: James Posey is an invaluable member to a winning team. Posey's
stats (8.8 points, 4.3 rebounds, 1.1 assists per game this season)
obviously help, but his leadership on and off the court is the asset
that has filled his bank account. Here is what three key members of the
Hornets told me about Posey's impact to the team before the game:
Peja Stojakovic: "From the very beginning, he’s been vocal. He’s been a
leader, and he brings what most people don’t see on the stat sheet in the game.
He does the little things, and that really helps the team. He’s been a very big
lift for us."
David West: "He’s just been a guy who has been in just about every
situation possible in the NBA in terms of winning. There’s a certain
perspective he brings to the team that we didn’t have. Peja has made some runs
in the playoffs, but he’s never won championships. There’s a different level of
respect for a guy who has won championships. He comes in the game. We know what
he can do. We expect him to come out there and make plays, and he does that.
"We understand that everybody’s got a voice on this
basketball team, regardless of your position. But what he says, we understand
it probably holds a little more weight because of the experience that he has."
Tyson Chandler: "It’s nonstop for him. He’s constantly aware of where we need
to improve. He’s constantly on guys, individually and as a team, pushing us to
get to the level that he knows we need to get to. We haven’t necessarily had
that voice around. It’s good to have that, especially knowing what he’s
accomplished. Winning rings carries more weight.
"In the huddle, I didn’t realize how vocal he is. That’s one
thing we were lacking, and that’s one thing that he’s improved for our team.
"[Being the missing piece is] what we’re hoping for. I think it’s the piece that
helps bring the squad together. It’s been that way so far in helping us grow. I
think having a guy like that makes the other four guys on the court aware of
what it takes to win basketball games and what it takes to win the big game."
Ring ceremony: Take 2
Posted by Jeff Howe, Dec 12, 8:01 p.m.
The
Celtics just honored James Posey with his championship ring during a
quick ceremony at half court. Each of the current Celtics from last
season's team, along with Doc Rivers, Danny Ainge and the ownership,
joined Posey around the team logo, and the crowd welcomed him back with
a standing ovation. Rivers took the microphone and gave a quick speech,
calling Posey a "special person."
Almost game time
Posted by Jeff Howe, Dec 12, 7:45 p.m.
The
Celtics (21-2) will be looking to open up a can of Raid on the Hornets
(12-6) tonight at the Garden during James Posey's lone trip to Boston
during the regular season. Clearly, much of the pregame focus was on
Posey, and I'll have more on him in my next post. As for right now, the
Celtics have their 13-game winning streak on the line, which is tied
for the sixth longest in team history. A win tonight would tie them for
the fourth longest in franchise history along with the 1985-86 and
1957-58 teams. The 1981-82 Celtics have the longest winning streak in
team history with 18 straight, followed by the 1959-60 (17) and 1964-65
(16) teams.
The Celtics had a quick scare on the plane trip
home from D.C., as the storms through the northeast didn't discriminate
against those who were at 35,000 feet. There was a ton of turbulence,
and the landing was a little shaky, too. But Rajon Rondo said he did
his part to keep the team calm, particularly Kevin Garnett, who he
jokingly said was suffering something of a panic attack. The team got
in at 2:30 a.m., and Rondo said, "At least we were on the ground."
And
finally, Hornets center Tyson Chandler won't play tonight due to a neck
injury he said he either suffered Wednesday against the Hornets or
later that night when he was sleeping. Former UConn center Hilton
Armstrong will start in his place.
Posey's big return
Posted by Jeff Howe, Dec 12, 6:19 p.m.
James
Posey makes his only scheduled return to the Garden this season when
the Hornets meet the Celtics tonight. He will receive his championship
ring during a pregame ceremony.
"It's going to be emotional,
just coming here as far as what we were able to accomplish with this
organization," Posey said at the Hornets' shoot-around today. "It's
known for winning and bringing titles and championships here. For us to
be a part of that tradition, that's history. It's going to mean a lot."
Though
the Hornets won't be back in Boston in the regular season, Posey is
counting on a few more games in the event both teams reach the Finals.
"I jokingly said, well I wasn't joking, but I said I'll see you all in late June," Posey said.
Posey
realized he has the chance to go down in Boston sports history with
other champions who had short tenures in the Hub such as Orlando
Cabrera.
"I really think it will be a warm, great reception for
the most part," Posey said of how he'll be received during the pregame
ceremony. "While I was here, it was great. They're just great fans,
period."
All-Star returns released
Posted by Jeff Howe, Dec 11, 2:11 p.m.
The
first All-Star ballot returns were released today by the NBA, and Kevin
Garnett is the only Celtic currently slotted as a starter. Garnett, who
garnered the most votes last season, has 495,514 votes through the
first returns. LeBron James is the leader at forward in the Eastern
Conference with 643,786 votes. Yi Jianlian, who is expected to
challenge Garnett in the balloting due to the presence of voters in
China, is third with 356,556 votes. Paul Pierce is fifth among forwards
with 153,512 votes.
Ray Allen is fourth among the guards with
174,155 votes, and Rajon Rondo isn't on the list. Dwyane Wade (623,311)
and Allen Iverson (492,093) are the top-two vote getters among Eastern
Conference guards.
Dwight Howard (775,933) is the leader among
Eastern Conference centers, and Kendrick Perkins is way down the pack
at ninth with 24,777 votes.
Forwards Tim Duncan and Amare Stoudemire, guards Kobe Bryant and Chris Paul and center Yao Ming are the leaders in the West.
The
2009 All-Star Game takes place in Phoenix on Feb. 15. Starters are
voted in by the fans, and they will be announced Jan. 22. Coaches in
each conference will then vote for the reserves, which will be
announced Jan. 29.
The Breakdown
Forwards. The
Eastern Conference forward position is pretty much locked up by James
and Garnett, and Pierce is an extreme long shot to be voted in as a
starter. The guy with the biggest gripe might be Danny Granger, who is
currently 10th and should probably be in the top five or six.
Guards.
Wade certainly deserves the top spot here, but Iverson is a complete
joke. Not only has he played poorly since being traded to the Pistons,
but his presence on the court appears to directly correlate with
Detroit's struggles in the first half. He doesn't belong up top at all.
As we currently stand, there's more of a case for Allen to be a starter
at guard than Pierce at forward. With more than 300,000 votes to make
up on Iverson, though, he's in trouble there. The guard position is
littered with controversy as it stands through the first returns, not
just with Iverson. Luke Ridnour, who might be the worst starting point
guard in the NBA, is at sixth. Jameer Nelson, who has been hurt most of
the season, is seventh. And then there's Gilbert Arenas, who hasn't
played at all this season but is in 11th. The two biggest snubs are
Devin Harris and Rondo. Harris is just about the only watchable player
on the Nets at this point, but he is sitting just head of Arenas in
10th place with 94,294 votes. That's simply a disgrace. As far as Rondo
not being listed in the top 11, well, this is a blog about the Celtics,
so I don't really need to plead his case. I was never under the
illusion he had a chance to be voted in as a starter because the rest
of the country just doesn't know him yet, but it's pretty shocking he's
behind a guy like Ridnour, who's been embarrassed by Rondo this season.
Center. This
is pretty much status quo. Perkins has been playing extremely well this
season and deserves to be in the top six with Howard, Samuel Dalembert,
Rasheed Wallace, Al Horford and Zydrunas Ilgauskas. In the East, let's
face it: there's Dwight Howard and everybody else. Perkins has
outplayed Howard, Dalembert, Horford and Ilgauskas when he's faced each
of them this season (he doesn't match up with Wallace), so you could
make that argument. But Howard is asked to be a star for the Magic, and
he's great at filling that role.
The Breakdown
Posted by Jeff Howe, Dec 5, 11:21 p.m.
Analysis after the Celtics beat the Blazers, 93-78, tonight at the Garden:
Digging in on defense. The Celtics were clearly struggling
offensively tonight, but you could see them really turn the switch to defense
when the starters re-entered the game in the second quarter. After Rudy
Fernandez’s dunk put the Blazers ahead, 36-35, with 3:54 to play in the first
half, the Celtics shut them out for the rest of the quarter — and then some.
The Celtics closed the second on a 14-0 run that turned a tight affair into a
49-36 contest. A 7-0 spurt after the break (21-0 overall) pushed the margin to
56-37 and cleared the way for an easy finish the rest of the way. The Celtics
held the Blazers without a point for 6:59
between the second and third quarters and without a field goal for 8:53 , a remarkable stretch against any team,
let alone one that has five players scoring in double figures. (Side note: Even
with those five scorers, the Blazers often lose their identity on offense,
particularly when things aren’t going so hot. They really need a more demanding
point guard out there — there’s been a rumored trade in the works that would
send Mike Conley Jr. from Memphis to Portland in exchange for Travis Outlaw —
and it’s never a good thing when Brandon Roy has to carry the rock. As a
two-guard and the team’s most fluid scorer, it’s a sin to waste him by putting
him at the point.) Anyway, the Celtics have been in a tremendous defensive
rhythm since the start of the season, and they entered the night ranked first
in the NBA in points allowed per game (90.3) and field-goal percentage allowed
(41.01). One visiting coach in the last week said the Celtics might be the best
defensive team in 25 years, and that’s a pretty scary thought.
Man down. It obviously hasn’t been a difference maker in the
last two games, but the Celtics are definitely missing Tony Allen’s scoring off
the bench while he’s been out with a sprained right ankle. Of course, it’s
pretty much a moot point when the starters scored 105 of 114 points against the
Pacers and 74 of 93 tonight against the Blazers, including 63 of 74 through three
quarters — before the fourth-quarter stats sort of changed the story of what
really happened in the game. Allen has averaged 8.8 points per game this
season, good for fourth on the Celtics, and his scoring ability with the second
unit really takes the pressure off Paul Pierce and Ray Allen early in the
second and fourth quarters. I understand Tony Allen’s significance on this team
in the long run is on the defensive end, but he’s definitely been missed on the
offensive side over these last two games. Doc Rivers said before the game it’s
highly unlikely Allen will play Sunday at Indiana ,
and they’re hoping to get him back Thursday at Washington .
Oden looks his age. OK, say what you will about the
20-year-old looking like he’s 45, but he’s definitely playing like the rookie
he is. He had five points, six rebounds and fouled out after playing 18 minutes
tonight and was never a factor in the game. There are definitely signs of life
with his defensive ability, but his foul-prone ways are typical of a player that
age (remember Al Jefferson and Kendrick Perkins in their early years?). Offensively,
Oden looks like a mess. Sure, he’ll clean up enough rebounds and turn them into
points, and that’ll be enough to allow him to average a double-double once his
career really starts to progress. Right now, though, his low-post moves are
very slow and extremely unintimidating. Perkins (12 points, 12 rebounds) ate
him up in the paint. It was also interesting to listen to the Garden crowd get
all over Oden and rain him with boos at every opportunity when the majority of
these people were praying on a nightly basis he’d be the future of the
franchise just a year and a half ago. After the game, the Celtics were glowing
over Oden’s future (especially Perkins, who doesn’t hand out compliments to
opposing players very often), but it’s definitely going to take a couple years
for him to be a real force.
C-Notes. Look, I can’t write about Rajon Rondo every night,
but he had another one of his typical 16-point, eight-rebound, seven-assist
performances. It’s becoming too easy for this kid, it really is. Oh, and once
again, he completely devoured a lesser point guard in Steve Blake.
Celtics cruise again
Posted by Jeff Howe, Dec 5, 10:37 p.m.
The Celtics rocked the Blazers, 93-78, tonight at the Garden to win
their 11th straight and improve to 19-2. I'll have more in a little bit.
This one's over
Posted by Jeff Howe, Dec 5, 10:00 p.m.
Rajon
Rondo's buzzer-beating 3-pointer gave the Celtics a 74-51 lead after
the third quarter. Like O.J. Simpson's freedom, this one is over.
The D's the key
Posted by Jeff Howe, Dec 5, 9:10 p.m.
The
Celtics picked up their defensive intensity to offset their struggles
on offense in the second quarter and lead the Blazers, 49-36, at the
half. Portland let an opportunity go by earlier in the quarter by
holding the Celtics scoreless for a stretch of 2:24, but the Blazers
only scored four points over that period. That's when the Celtics
answered, closing the quarter on a 14-0 run over the last 3:54. The
Blazers only made one field goal in the last 6:18 of the quarter, and
they were 0-for-7 from the field with one turnover during the last 3:54.
Celtics up after one
Posted by Jeff Howe, Dec 5, 8:34 p.m.
The
Celtics recovered from a sloppy start to grab a 24-21 lead over the
Blazers after the first quarter here at the Garden. Ray Allen is off to
yet another one of his hot starts, scoring 10 points in the quarter.
Doc Rivers said before the game Allen is playing his best basketball as
a Celtic, which is on par with how well he played in the Finals.
Oregon Trail
Posted by Jeff Howe, Dec 5, 7:43 p.m.
We're
about a half hour away from tip-off tonight in a highly anticipated
game between the Celtics (18-2) and extremely exciting Blazers (14-6),
who have a one-game lead on the Nuggets in the Western Conference's
Northwest Division. Portland has won a season-high six consecutive
games since Greg Oden returned to the lineup after an ankle injury. The
Blazers are also 7-0 against the Eastern Conference, their best start
against the East since winning 12 straight 18 years ago.
What's
most remarkable about Portland is its age. The Blazers are the second
youngest team in the NBA to Golden State with an average age of 24
years, 166 days. This roster is downright stacked with superstars in
waiting (though you could argue some already have that status). Oden,
Brandon Roy, LaMarcus Aldridge, Travis Outlaw, Jerryd Bayless and Rudy
Fernandez might all be All-Stars at some point. I'd make a loose
comparison to the Blazers and the Tampa Bay Rays, who were down for so
long and struck it rich by hitting on every single one of their lottery
picks. They're easily in the top three of NBA teams I'd go out of my
way to watch on a nightly basis.
Tony Allen will sit out again
tonight with a sprained right ankle. He suffered the injury in the
second quarter against the Magic but came back to play. As of
Wednesday, Allen didn't rule out playing tonight but was shooting for
Sunday. Doc Rivers said earlier he doubts Allen will play Sunday in
Indiana but could return at Washington next Thursday. The Celtics are
off Monday and will likely practice Tuesday and Wednesday.
I've
also got to give a shout to whoever baked that amazing chocolate cake
that was in the media room before the game. Wow, just wow.
The Breakdown
Posted by Jeff Howe, Dec 3, 11:55 p.m.
Analysis after the Celtics beat the Pacers, 114-96, tonight to win their 10th consecutive game and improve to 18-2:
C’s run through Rondo. It’s obvious Rajon Rondo is in the
midst of the best stretch of his career, and he finally cracked through with
his first triple-double tonight with 16 points, a career-high 17 assists and a
season-high 13 rebounds. Doc Rivers said after the game he told Rondo a couple
weeks ago he needed to improve his “mental focus” on a nightly basis in order
to reach this point. But the key with Rondo’s performance tonight was what
happened with the other four starters. Aside from Ray Allen knocking down a
season-high six 3-pointers and scoring 31 points, the other starters had some
of the quietest performances of their season — despite all scoring at least 16
points. That can be credited directly to Rondo, who makes it look easy for
everyone around him, and their stats pile up as a result. In case you didn’t
notice, Kevin Garnett had 26 points and 14 rebounds, Paul Pierce had 16 points
despite struggling from the floor and Kendrick Perkins added 16 points and 10
rebounds. So, give Rondo all the credit in the world for recording his first
career triple-double, as he certainly deserves it, but don’t forget the other
key statistic in the starters combining to score 105 points. That’s what a true
point guard does for a team.
“It seemed like there were like three Rondos out there
tonight,” Garnett said. “I looked up and he passed the ball to [Pierce], and it
came off the rim and he was rebounding. All of a sudden, I got back on defense,
and he beat me back. Then [Danny] Granger went to drive, and he got the strip,
got loose and threw it out for a lay-up and he got the lay-up. I sort of had to
turn around. This boy was everywhere tonight, straight up. Didn’t it feel like
that? I just call it like I see it, man.”
Good things come in three. The Celtics outscored the Pacers,
31-22, in the third quarter, when the game essentially broke open. After Indiana
got within 62-55, the C’s ripped off a 21-4 run that sealed the deal, sans a
brief Pacers run early in the fourth quarter. Over the last season and a half,
the Celtics have been a tremendous third-quarter team, and they’ve won a lot of
games immediately after the break. Rivers says he doesn’t go all Lou Holtz on
his team in the locker room; he just reinforces what their objectives are
during that game and emphasizes how they need to be achieved. It’s pretty
common to see Garnett and company come out of the break with a fire in their
eyes, lock things down on defense, score a few easy points, get the crowd
involved — or silence the crowd on the road — and build a large enough margin
to coast to a victory.
Perfect 10. I’ll say this: The Celtics look like they could
develop into a team that might end up being better this season than last
season, and it’s hard to argue they’ve ever looked this dominant over a 10-game
stretch than they do right now. But let’s chill out with the talk of the
Celtics “playing better than they ever have” under the new regime because
that’s an insult to what they did last spring. Maybe I’ve spent too much time
around the Patriots, but I believe in the school of thought that you don’t
trump the performance of a championship run with a 10-game spurt in the first
quarter of your schedule.
C-Notes (milestone edition). Pierce needs 20 points to pass
Kevin McHale (17,335) for the fourth most in Celtics history. … Pierce grabbed
five rebounds tonight to pass Bob Cousy (4,781) and tie Antoine Walker (4,782)
for the ninth most in franchise history. … Garnett needs 19 points to pass
George Gervin (20,708) for the 29th most in NBA history. … Garnett needs eight
blocked shots to pass McHale (1,690) for 22nd on the all-time list. … Garnett
had one steal tonight to pass Clifford Robinson (1,402) and tie Randy Smith
(1,403) for 38th all-time.
Celtics avenge loss, Rondo goes nuts
Posted by Jeff Howe, Dec 3, 9:55 p.m.
Rajon
Rondo had 16 points, a career-high 17 assists and 13 rebounds for his
first career triple-double, and the Celtics blitzed the Pacers, 114-96,
tonight at the Garden. All five starters scored at least 16 points for
the Celtics, who improved to 18-2 to win their 10th straight and match
last year's start after 20 games. I'll have more coming later.
Pacers got Rondo'd
Posted by Jeff Howe, Dec 3, 9:25 p.m.
Rajon
Rondo has his first career triple-double, and the Celtics lead the
Pacers, 88-73, after the third quarter. Rondo has 13 points, 12 assists
and 10 rebounds, and he recorded the triple-double just 88 seconds into
the second half.
Celtics taking control
Posted by Jeff Howe, Dec 3, 8:36 p.m.
Rajon
Rondo is leading the way again tonight, and the Celtics lead the
Pacers, 57-51, at halftime. Rondo has 10 points, nine assists, eight
rebounds and two steals. Ray Allen has been sharp, as well, with 19
points on a 4-for-6 night from 3-point range.
Celtics reclaim the lead, Granger in focus
Posted by Jeff Howe, Dec 3, 8:06 p.m.
The
Celtics fought back from a six-point deficit to grab a 28-27 lead after
one. Ray Allen has continued his red-hot shooting streak and led the
way with 13 points.
Danny Granger, who scored a game-high 20
points in the Pacers' win against the Celtics last month, had nine
points, two assists and one rebound in the first quarter. Granger is
actually loosely tied to the Celtics, who heavily coveted him in the
2005 draft. When Indiana was on the clock with the 17th pick, Doc
Rivers knew he was about to get one of the two players he was hoping
for with the 18th selection: Granger or Gerald Green. Of course, the
Pacers went with Granger and the Celtics wound up with Green, who was
sent to Minnesota in the package that landed Kevin Garnett. Granger, a
6-foot-9 forward out of New Mexico, is starting to emerge into a star
while Green is catching on a bit in Dallas, where defense isn't
required to earn playing time.
It's worth wondering how things
might have panned out if Indiana passed on Granger and left him for the
Celtics. I'm not saying he would have been worth any more wins in
2006-07 than Green, but his presence in a deal for Garnett could have
potentially spared someone like Ryan Gomes or maybe a draft pick. Or,
maybe Danny Ainge would have rather waited it out and decided the core
of Pierce, Ray Allen, Al Jefferson, Granger and Rajon Rondo was worth
developing for another couple seasons.
Terrible move in Toronto
Posted by Jeff Howe, Dec 3, 7:59 p.m.
The
boneheaded decision of the season -- which could eventually be replaced
by the Pistons' acquisition of Allen Iverson -- happened this afternoon
in Toronto, where coach Sam Mitchell was fired after an 8-9 start,
including a 39-point road loss to the Nuggets last night. Mitchell was
the NBA Coach of the Year two seasons ago and had created a winning
culture North of the Border, which is a difficult task to say the
least.
He had a tremendous plan of acquiring European talent
that didn't mind playing in Canada, and he had a good crop of shooters
who could spread the floor and play a deadly brand of basketball that
isn't used anywhere else in the league. It's not Mitchell's fault the
Raptors traded a really good young point guard in T.J. Ford -- who is
here tonight with the Pacers -- for an angry, injury-prone veteran big
man in Jermaine O'Neal, whose game does nothing to help Mitchell's
system.
I don't know what kind of preconceived notion they've
got up in Toronto about what type of basketball tradition they've got
and how many games they should be winning, but here's a news flash: Be
happy with making it to the playoffs and putting people in the seats
when you're season coincides with the Maple Leafs. And while I'm on the
Leafs, they're not even any good right now. If it were so easy to put a
winning team out there every night of every season, the Leafs would be
doing that right now. And if Raptors management thinks they should be
competing with the Celtics this season, they're lying to themselves and
that's a whole different mess not even worth our time.
Ray Allen's friend had a scare in India
Posted by Jeff Howe, Dec 3, 7:25 p.m.
Ray
Allen told a small group of reporters before the game one of his
lifelong friends was in a Mumbai hotel in India during the terrorist
attacks last week. After Allen left the Garden following a Celtics
victory, his wife asked him if he had heard about the attacks, and
Allen had not. That's when she informed him his friend, who works for
Northwest Airlines, was in one of the hotels that were seized by
terrorists.
"I was like, 'Of all the places in the world, he's in that hotel?'" Allen said.
His
friend, Darryl Jones, reached Allen on the phone and asked what was
going on because he was stuck in a room on the 21st floor, and the
power was out. Jones actually left the room earlier, saw a mass of dead
bodies in the lobby and ran back upstairs to bunker down in the room.
Allen was giving him a play-by-play of the events while watching them
unfold on television, especially advising Jones not to let anyone know
he was from America because that's who the terrorists were targeting.
"You don't have a passport," Allen recalled telling Jones. "You're from Jamaica. You've got to use your accent."
Allen
said he was trying to tell Jones to find a way to the United States
consulate, which was nearby, but Jones didn't want to risk the move.
"He
said no way because there were still terrorists in the hotel, and he
didn't know who was what, so he was like, 'I don't want to take any
chances,'" Allen said.
When everything eventually cleared, Jones was transported to Amsterdam before flying to Germany and found his way home safely.
Tony Allen out
Posted by Jeff Howe, Dec 3, 7:10 p.m.
Tony
Allen is out of the lineup tonight with a sprained right ankle, an
injury he suffered in the Celtics' win against the Magic two nights
ago. Allen was hurt early in the second quarter, went to the locker
room for about five minutes to do some stretching with trainer Ed
Lacerte, taped his ankle a little tighter and returned to the court. He
actually came back and played pretty well in the fourth quarter when
the Celtics' bench extended the lead in what turned out to be an easy
victory. In retrospect, Allen said he shouldn't have gone back in the
game but, "I didn't want to go down like that."
He said he woke
up yesterday morning and could barely walk, and he had a very
noticeable limp while moving through the locker room tonight. Doc
Rivers hasn't ruled out Allen playing Friday against the Blazers, but
said he's more hopeful to see him on the court Sunday in Indiana. Allen
said he'll undergo a precautionary MRI, which will most likely take
place tomorrow. There are no plans for him to return to the court on
any date, as it's a wait-and-see type of injury.
Pace yourselves
Posted by Jeff Howe, Dec 3, 6:56 p.m.
There's
quite a bit going on tonight, so check back often as I trust to keep
the posts coming in the next hour or so. The Celtics (17-2) and Pacers
(7-10) are about 45 minutes away from tip-off at the Garden, and don't
laugh off the Pacers' dreary record thinking this will be a walk in the
park for the flying C's. The Pacers hold the mighty distinction of
being the only team in the NBA this season to have beaten both the
Celtics (Nov. 1) and Lakers (last night). Indiana erased a 15-point
fourth-quarter deficit and won on a last-second tip-in to hand L.A. its
second loss of the season.
Former Celtics coach and current
Pacers coach Jim O'Brien is obviously impressed with his team's marquee
victories, but he's also taking them with a grain of salt. First, he
noted they've both been at home. He said the Celtics were coming off an
emotional week following the raising of the banner and coming off an 8
p.m. start against the Bulls the night before, and he noted the Lakers
last night were making their first trip east and may have been a little
more tired than usual, hence the fourth-quarter collapse. Either way,
the Pacers are shaping up to be one of those teams that annoys a bunch
of playoff contenders throughout the season and could find themselves
battling for an eighth seed in April.
As for some Celtics news,
Tony Allen will not play tonight due to his sprained ankle. I'll have
more coming on that in a few minutes.
The Breakdown
Posted by Jeff Howe, Dec 1, 11:41 p.m.
Analysis after the Celtics beat the Magic, 107-88, to improve to 17-2 tonight at the Garden:
Runnin’ Rajon. When I asked Paul Pierce why the offense
looks so much better now than it did just a few weeks ago, he made it sound
pretty simple. Pierce said Rajon Rondo is just shredding defenses, “causing
havoc” and setting everyone up in position to keep things running smoothly. And
when he plays like that, Pierce said the offense is “unstoppable.” Rondo had 16
points and 12 assists tonight and tore up an Orlando
team that was without its starting point guard in Jameer Nelson. The third-year
floor general had some trouble staying consistent last season, particularly in
the playoffs, but he’s been on a streak of late that is the best of his career,
which Ray Allen noted afterward, too. There have been two occasions in the last
week when Rondo has broken his man off the dribble to the point where Pierce
and Allen have been laughing while walking back up the court, and it’s only a
matter of time before he is mentioned among the league’s elite point guards.
I’m not saying Rondo is as good as Deron Williams or Chris Paul, or has the
potential of Derrick Rose, but he’s got a place in the discussion similar to
the way Pierce belongs in the same status as LeBron James and Kobe Bryant. Through
19 games, Rondo is a certifiable All-Star, and Doc Rivers added, “If everyone
doesn’t see it, it’s a shame.”
Magic matchups. With the imposing presence of Dwight Howard
in the paint, this was a game the Celtics had to win on the perimeter, and
that’s exactly what they did. Howard, the most physically imposing center in
the league — sorry, Yao , but Howard
knows how to use his size — was held to 14 points, 15 rebounds and four blocks.
Great numbers, for sure, but Howard never took over control of the game with a
5-for-12 night from the floor. The Celtics can thank Kendrick Perkins (eight
points, 13 rebounds) and Kevin Garnett (15 points, nine rebounds) for that.
Perkins and Garnett were called on to keep Howard out of the paint because he’s
nearly impossible to contain once he’s got an alley to the basket, and the
Celtics’ duo expended a ton of energy getting that done.
That left Pierce and
Allen to lead the way on offense. Allen came out of the gates with nine points
in the first quarter, and Pierce dropped 17 in the third. Rashard Lewis and
Hedo Turkoglu are average defenders who spent the night trying to contain
Pierce, but Allen was left to toil with the likes of J.J. Redick and Courtney
Lee, who won’t ever find themselves on any All-NBA defensive teams. Magic coach
Stan Van Gundy pointed to that as the difference, saying, “Their guards (including
Pierce) were outstanding.”
Benchmark production. Doc Rivers called out the bench for a
bad first-half performance in a win against the Warriors last Wednesday, which
was surprising in that it was true. Even though the Celtics’ bench is
constantly ridiculed by those around the league (clearly by those who watch
30-second highlights and don’t spend time observing the team for a game or
two), I strongly believe it’s the most important second unit in the NBA. They
don’t have James Posey anymore, there’s no sixth-man superstar like Manu
Ginobili and they don’t have the appeal of the Lakers, but this group does
exactly what the Celtics need them to do. They bring an incredible amount of
energy, stay on target with their defense, make hustle plays that change games
— drawing charges, causing jump balls, diving on the floor for loose balls —
and can get timely points from guys like Eddie House, Leon Powe and Tony Allen.
Anyway, they had a mini-slump last week, and it happened again in the first half
tonight, as they allowed a 15-point lead dwindle to two points at the half.
Rivers said they weren’t making those hustle plays on defense, and they were
playing too much like individuals on offense, refusing to make the second,
third and fourth reads on plays and trying to get the scoring on their own. As
a result, Rivers looked tentative going to his bench in the second half. Glen
Davis replaced Kendrick Perkins midway through the third quarter due to Perkins
picking up his fourth foul, but the next subs didn’t enter until there were 27
seconds remaining. Clearly, they got the message, as the bench scored 14 of the
first 16 Celtics points in the fourth quarter, capped off by Eddie House’s
3-pointer that put them ahead, 92-75, and iced the game.
C-Notes. There were eight technical fouls called tonight,
including five on the Celtics. Two of those went to Sam Cassell, who now has
two more technicals than minutes played this season. … The Celtics outscored
the Magic, 12-0, in fastbreak points.
Easy victory for Celtics
Posted by Jeff Howe, Dec 1, 9:54 p.m.
The Celtics cruised late and beat the Magic, 107-88, tonight at the Garden. I'll have The Breakdown coming shortly.
Celtics reclaim control
Posted by Jeff Howe, Dec 1, 9:25 p.m.
Paul
Pierce scored 17 points in the third quarter to help the Celtics
reestablish their double-digit lead, as they're up, 77-65, after three.
The Celtics used an 11-1 run in the first four minutes of the third
quarter to grab a 59-47 advantage, and Doc Rivers was slow to go to his
bench in the quarter after the reserves lost the C's momentum in the
first half. Rivers usually starts his substitutions with about two or
three minutes remaining in the third. He took out Kendrick Perkins with
5:24 remaining because he picked up his fourth foul but didn't go back
to the bench until there were 27 seconds to play in the quarter.
Magic back in it
Posted by Jeff Howe, Dec 1, 8:38 p.m.
The
Magic jumped all over the Celtics' second unit in the second quarter
and turned a 15-point deficit into a two-point hole, as the C's lead
Orlando, 48-46, at the half.
Cassell tossed
Posted by Jeff Howe, Dec 1, 8:28 p.m.
Sam
Cassell celebrated being active for the second time this season by
getting ejected for yelling at the officials during the second quarter.
And to update the Tony Allen injury, the Celtics' written release about
his right ankle sprain reads "expected to return," which means I need
to get my hearing checked.
Allen back
Posted by Jeff Howe, Dec 1, 8:26 p.m.
Tony
Allen returned to the court, missing about three minutes of game time.
Whether or not I misunderstood the message from the Celtics or Allen
had a miraculous ankle recovery since my last post is unclear.
Tony Allen to the locker room
Posted by Jeff Howe, Dec 1, 8:18 p.m.
Tony
Allen came out of the game and limped to the locker room with trainer
Ed Lacerte with 8:17 remaining in the second quarter. Celtics PR
director Jeff Twiss just came around and told the media he has a right
ankle sprain and will return.
(Post edited at 8:30 p.m.)
Celtics lead after one
Posted by Jeff Howe, Dec 1, 8:05 p.m.
The
Celtics jumped out to a fast start and have a 28-18 lead against the
Magic after one. Rajon Rondo has been the igniter with eight points,
four assists and three rebounds, and Ray Allen has a game-high nine
points. Dwight Howard is 0-for-4 from the floor and has one point and
four rebounds.
I'm curious what the purpose J.J. Redick serves
on the floor for the Magic. I joked before the game that the Celtics
should re-sign Jackie Manuel to hover around Redick tonight just to
mess with him a little bit, but that's not even necessary. He camps out
in the corner on the offensive end to the point where you'd think the
Celtics have honored him with a statue on the parquet, and he doesn't
even attempt to make Allen do the least bit of defensive work. As a
result, Allen has been extremely active and full of energy offensively,
leading to his nine first-quarter points. Defensively, Redick can't
hang with Allen's cuts through screens, and he's constantly looking to
find his assignment. I understand the Magic are facing a rash of
injuries, but Redick is Garbage with a capital G.
Doc recognized, Celtics and Magic set to tip off
Posted by Jeff Howe, Dec 1, 6:59 p.m.
Doc
Rivers today was named Eastern Conference Coach of the Month for
November. The Celtics are 16-2 entering tonight and have gone 11-1
against teams with a record of .500 or better. When told of the news,
Kendrick Perkins said bluntly, "I figured that."
It's almost
fitting Rivers was given the honor on a day when he is coaching against
the Magic, his former team. Rivers was named the NBA Coach of the Year
with Orlando in 1999-2000, his first season as a coach, and he's the
only person in the history of the league to win the award without
taking that team to the playoffs. Rivers was later fired by the Magic,
and he still makes his home in Orlando, where he was last week for
Thanksgiving.
As for tonight's game, the Magic (13-4) will again
be without starting point guard Jameer Nelson, who has a strained right
hip flexor. Orlando coach Stan Van Gundy said Nelson looked good during
his pregame workout and wanted Nelson to play tonight, but the trainers
immediately nixed that idea. The Magic are also without Keith Bogans
and Mickael Pietrus.
The Celtics (16-2) have won a season-high
eight consecutive games, including four in a row at home. Their lone
loss to an Eastern Conference team was at Indiana a month ago tonight.
Orlando has the third-best record in the East and is riding a four-game
winning streak, and the Magic went 13-2 in November. Fifth-year center
Dwight Howard is the biggest force on the team and the best young
center in the league, and he's averaging 21.8 points, 13.9 rebounds and
3.9 blocks per game.
The Breakdown
Posted by Jeff Howe, Nov. 28, 11:30 p.m.
Analysis after the Celtics beat the 76ers, 102-78, tonight at the Garden:
Celtics in a rhythm.
The Celtics have won a season-high seven games in a row, and they've
won their last six by an average of 15 points (that number would be
significantly higher if the starters hadn't sat the entire fourth
quarter in wins against Detroit and Philly). After struggling to get
past a few teams earlier in the season -- Cleveland, Houston,
Milwaukee, Atlanta, Toronto -- the C's are flying past teams and are in
a rhythm that looks much like the one they had to start last season.
Defensively, they were as sound as they've been on several occasions
this season, but they're really starting to click on the offensive end.
The scary thing is they haven't had all three superstars shine in the
same game, and they've still got a lot of room to improve. You can
credit the recent rhythm to their intense willingness to keep getting
better. They could have hung their hats on their 8-1 start after a
one-point win against the Hawks, knowing they're the champs and had
laid claim to a handful of wins over playoff-caliber teams, margin of
victory aside. But they were more frustrated with their own play than
happy with their record. This team understands better than anyone --
except maybe the Patriots -- that great starts don't equate to anything
when the playoffs come around. They worked hard to get better, and
they're making things look easier as a result.
Half-court offenses don't hold up.
Even if the Sixers aren't the running team they were last year, they
still can run the court pretty effectively when they're given the
opportunity. Those opportunities, though, are limited when their
opponents have smart possessions and take care of the ball. By way of
the Celtics doing just that tonight, they instantly took the 76ers out
of their running attack, and Philly couldn't get it going in the half
court. That's pretty much an automatic loss when you're playing the
Celtics, who kill half-court offenses. The best example of that is last
season's playoff series against the Hawks and later the Pistons.
Atlanta stayed with Boston because it was an athletic group that
created its own energy in the open court. Detroit, though, played in
half-court sets and didn't stand a chance against Boston. Tonight, the
Celtics forced 16 turnovers, blocked six shots and swarmed the Sixers
on the perimeter, which ultimately forced a number of bad shots, wild
passes that took them out of their sets and caused havoc all over the
court. Thaddeus Young, whose 15.1 points per game are second on the
team, was 2-for-9 from the floor and scored four points. He said the
Celtics' pressure wreaked havoc on their offensive game plan.
Sugar Ray on fire.
Ray Allen had been 5-for-7 from 3-point range in each of his last two
games and went 3-for-5 from distance tonight. He scored 15 of his
game-high 23 points in the third quarter, when he also hit all three of
his 3-pointers. He hit three 3-pointers and scored all 11 of the
Celtics' points during a stretch of 2:15 in the third when the C's
extended their lead to 63-44 and effectively put the game to rest.
While Paul Pierce and Kevin Garnett can take over games in their own
way -- Garnett scored eight of the final 10 points for the C's in the
third quarter -- Allen is their home-run threat when he's hot from
beyond the arc. Pierce said he knew Allen was on fire tonight, and the
Celtics kept calling plays for their marksman to keep him going. There
are dozens of great scorers around the league, but those who can get
hot from 3-point range like Allen are the guys who are the biggest
threats for one-man scoring runs.
Sam I Am. Doc Rivers
has openly called Sam Cassell his player/coach, and until tonight
Cassell was strictly fulfilling the coaching portion of that title.
When Gabe Pruitt got sick and Rivers had to dress Cassell tonight,
though, it looked like a good opportunity to put Cassell in the game,
especially during the blowout when the starters didn't play in the
fourth quarter (aside from Allen's 56 seconds). But Cassell remained on
the bench -- contently, it appeared -- and that appears to be a sign
that he's in Boston to work with the younger guys, and his playing
opportunity will be only in the case of an injury. If reports were
accurate that the Celtics were trying to lure Antonio McDyess this
month (reports have since stated he's going back to Detroit), the
Celtics would have had to get rid of someone since their roster is
maxed out at 15 player. The two most obvious choices would be to
release Patrick O'Bryant or give Cassell strictly a coaching job.
(Unless Cassell really wants to play somewhere, in which case they'd
release him. But let's be serious, if he really wanted to play
significant minutes somewhere, he wouldn't be in Boston right now.)
However, Cassell's coaching job looks like it's already in full swing.
C-Notes. Nothing here tonight, but check out my theory below about the scenario that could bring LeBron James to Boston in two years.
C's destroy Philly
Posted by Jeff Howe, Nov. 28, 9:50 p.m.
The
Celtics 86'd the 76ers tonight at the Garden, 102-78. Boston improved
to 15-2 by winning its season-high seventh consecutive game, including
its fourth straight at home. The 76ers dropped to 7-9 and are 7.5 games
behind the Celtics in the Atlantic Division. None of the Celtics'
starters played in the fourth quarter. Ray Allen led the way with a
game-high 23 points, while Rajon Rondo had six points, six rebounds and
a season-high 12 assists.
Blowout in Boston
Posted by Jeff Howe, Nov. 28, 9:17 p.m.
This
is a mismatch on both ends of the court. The Celtics lead the 76ers,
73-47, after three here at the Garden, with the highlight of the
quarter coming when Rajon Rondo fed Kevin Garnett with an alley-oop
that turned into a three-point play and closed out a 10-2 run. Garnett
followed by jumping into Celtics owner Wyc Grousbeck, who was sitting
under the basket. Ray Allen also scored 15 points in the third quarter
and has 23 in the game. And Rondo had four points and eight assists in
the third. There was also a point when Philly turned the ball over on
five straight possessions, two thanks to a pair of charges drawn by
Paul Pierce.
Celtics locking down
Posted by Jeff Howe, Nov. 28, 8:36 p.m.
The
Celtics suffocated the 76ers in the first half and have a 46-28 lead
after two. The Sixers simply don't have a chance with their half-court
offense against the Celtics' defense, which is putting forth a superior
effort tonight. Philly has 12 field goals, 10 turnovers and five
assists. Those aren't good splits no matter how you look at them. The
76ers' 28 points were the lowest for a Celtics opponent in any half
this season. It was also the lowest point total for the Sixers in any
half this season.
LeBron to Boston?
Posted by Jeff Howe, Nov. 28, 8:20 p.m.
I
had a little time to do some math before the game and thought I'd throw
the Celtics into the great chase for LeBron James, who will be a free
agent July 1, 2010. First off, it's got to be driving LeBron nuts for
him to be hearing his future being tied with teams like the Knicks and
Nets when he's still got a season and a half remaining in Cleveland.
But if that's how it's going to be, I'll play along, too.
There
are three numbers that are very important when it comes to these talks.
First of all, the NBA tries very hard to keep players with a team for
as long as possible, so the Cavs have the upper hand when it comes to
contract offers. In that case, they don't have to worry about the
salary cap because LeBron will have spent his five years in Cleveland
(the luxury tax is another thing, but that's all on the ownership), so
the Cavs will be able to offer him six years and about $133 million.
The league's other 29 teams are looking at a max of five years and a
figure of about $102 million, and they have to keep the salary cap in
mind. That's the third number. The cap in 2006-07 was $53.135 million.
It was $55.63 million in 2007-08, and it's $58.68 million this season.
The new cap number for each season comes out every July, so I'll
forecast the 2010-11 cap to be about $64.6 million.
The Celtics
have three players under contract for 2010-11 -- Kevin Garnett, Paul
Pierce and Kendrick Perkins -- who have a combined number of about
$44.6 million. If the Celtics retain Rajon Rondo, who will be a
restricted free agent after the 2009-10 season, for his minimum
qualifying offer of about $3.8 million, that'll bring them up to $48.4
million. That, in turn, will give the Celtics $16.2 million in cap
space. Since other teams can offer him an average salary of about $20
million, the Celtics are at a bit of a disadvantage in that department,
but they can escalate his salary throughout the remainder of the
contract and include other perks to bring his number up a bit. Now,
you're wondering who will come off the bench if the C's hit the cap.
Remember they only had eight players on the roster after trading for
Garnett, and Danny Ainge got creative with the mid-level exception,
which should be about $6.5-7 million in 2010-11.
With all that
said, if it's about guaranteed money in LeBron's NBA contract, there
isn't a team in the league that can compete with Cleveland. Therefore,
if he's willing to sacrifice money to go elsewhere, a few million
dollars won't be the ultimate factor between other teams an the
Celtics.
If he's concerned with winning a championship, there
likely won't be a better sell than a chance to play with Garnett,
Pierce and Rondo. If it's about his legacy, the Celtics obviously offer
him a chance to create one with the most storied franchise in the game.
Plus, he'd be 30 years old -- it's scary how young he really is -- when
that five-year contract expires in 2015. He could re-up with the
Celtics for an exorbitant amount of money by then, and it already would
have been his team for about two or three years. He saw first-hand what
kind of treatment Pierce and Garnett received when the Celtics got
their rings and raised the banner before beating the Cavs on opening
night last month. Legendary figures never die in Boston.
Finally,
there are the other, more highly discussed factors in New York, such as
marketing opportunities, a bigger spotlight, a unique celebrity status,
"his" Yankees and Jay-Z (a part owner of the Nets). If LeBron is more
concerned with his off-the-court lifestyle, the Celtics don't have a
chance. If he's serious about being the next Michael Jordan (things
didn't turn out so bad in that Chicago market), the Celtics could be
serious players.
Black Friday at the Garden
Posted by Jeff Howe, Nov. 28, 6:53 p.m.
We're
about 45 minutes from tip-off tonight at the Garden in a
post-Thanksgiving matchup between the Celtics (14-2) and 76ers (7-8).
Sam Cassell will suit up for the first time this season in place of
Gabe Pruitt, who isn't feeling well. Doc Rivers didn't say whether or
not his player/coach will get any game action.
The 76ers are
really underachieving through the early portion of the schedule, but
that can be chalked up to the adjustment period they're facing with
newly-signed forward Elton Brand, who inked an $80 million, five-year
contract over the summer. That event alone stirred a number of dramatic
storylines. It was thought that Brand had convinced Baron Davis to
leave the Warriors and sign with the Clippers so the two could play
together and perhaps give their Staples Center cohabitants some
competition. Well, that obviously didn't happen, Davis is alone in
L.A., and the Clippers are back to playing their traditional
embarrassing brand of basketball.
On the Philly side, it
looked like the 76ers were going to make a hard attempt to sign Josh
Smith away from Atlanta. Smith's high-flying style would have been a
perfect fit for the 76ers' system, and they likely would have been the
most exciting team to watch in the league. Then, the restricted free
agent Smith signed an offer sheet with the Grizzlies, the Hawks matched
it and he stayed in Atlanta. All of this was going down while Philly's
interest heightened with Brand, and that was that.
While I
maintain Smith would have been a better fit with Philly, there's still
not a bad thing to really say about Brand. He's got a similar offensive
arsenal as Kevin Garnett with a great low-post presence and good
mid-range jumper, but his defense and tenacity are clearly second rate
to KG. Philly also doesn't run the court as well as it did last year,
though the 76ers will still fly from end to end of Andre Miller, Andre
Iguodala or Thaddeus Young pull down a rebound. With that, it's
extremely important the Celtics don't take quick shots or
low-percentage shots that could allow the 76ers to get out on the
break. Iguodala and Young are superior offensive threats while running
the court, and if you make them play a halfcourt game, their talents
and athleticism are restricted. Still, the Sixers are very good with
their ball movement in both instances, and that's how they'll generate
the majority of their offense.
The last matchup to watch is in
the paint between Kendrick Perkins and Samuel Dalembert, who isn't an
offensive threat but can really clog the middle of the court. Dalembert
was a force against the Celtics last season, so the slimmer, more
improved Perkins will have another good test on his hands.
The Breakdown
Posted by Jeff Howe, Nov. 26, 10:34 p.m.
Analysis after the Celtics beat the Warriors, 119-111, tonight at the Garden:
Rondo's an All-Star.
At least in Paul Pierce's mind, Rajon Rondo deserves a spot on the
court in Phoenix in February, and it's hard to dispute that. Pierce
said Rondo "changed the game" in the third quarter, when he had 16
points and six rebounds. Rondo finished the night with a season-high 22
points, eight rebounds, seven assists and two steals. He was
instrumental defensively and on the fast break in the third quarter,
and Pierce said of Rondo, "When he's on like he was tonight, we're
unbeatable." Rondo also tied up Ronny Turiaf, who has nine inches and
72 pounds on the Celtics' point guard, to force a jump ball, among a
number of hustle plays. Kevin Garnett said, "Rajon's heart is bigger
than Africa."
Second chances are key. There was a point
late in the fourth quarter when the Celtics had a 20-0 lead in
second-chance points in the second half. The Celtics went through
stretches when they struggled to knock down good shots, but they
swarmed the rim for easy put-backs that really got them back into the
game and then put them over the top in the fourth quarter. I thought
the biggest play of the game happened with 6:43 remaining in the
fourth. Garnett missed a jumper in the paint, but Tony Allen grabbed
the rebound and quickly scored with one second remaining on the shot
clock. He was fouled, completed the three-point play and put the
Celtics ahead, 103-102.
C's go small. The Warriors are an
exceptional jump-shooting team that has very little size and loves to
run the floor. Doc Rivers shook things up in the fourth quarter, using
Tony Allen in place of Kendrick Perkins, and that move offset the
Warriors' biggest advantage. Allen was very active on defense, helping
limit Corey Maggette and Jamal Crawford in one-on-one matchups -- which
the Warriors go to way too often when possessions are most valuable --
and Golden State couldn't spread the floor as well. This might be a
package Rivers uses more often against quicker, more athletic teams.
C-Notes. Going
along with the theme of second-chance points, the Celtics outscored the
Warriors, 66-38, in the paint -- and 40-12 in the second half. ...
After Tony Allen, who scored nine points, hit a contested, leaning
lay-up to give the Celtics a 117-108 lead, Celtics owner Wyc Grousbeck
stood up out of his seat and began bowing. ... The C's held the
Warriors to 44 second-half points after surrendering 67 points in the
first. That was the most points any Celtics opponent has scored against
them in any half this season.
Easy as that
Posted by Jeff Howe, Nov. 26, 10:01 p.m.
The
Celtics blew the doors off an inferior team in the second half and beat
the Warriors, 119-111, tonight at the Garden. Rajon Rondo had a
season-high 22 points to go along with eight rebounds and seven
assists. The most impressive stat was second-chance points. The Celtics
finished with a 24-6 advantage in that regard and at one points held a
20-0 advantage in the second half alone. I'll have more in a bit.
Celtics back on top
Posted by Jeff Howe, Nov. 26, 9:26 p.m.
When
the Celtics smell blood, they're the most dangerous team in the league.
And when Rajon Rondo is on his game, it magnifies this team's talent
exponentially. Both happened in the third quarter, and the Celtics have
erased a 14-point deficit to take an 86-83 lead after three. The
Celtics closed the quarter on a 22-7 run, and Rondo had 16 points, six
rebounds and one assist in the quarter.
Early holiday for Celtics
Posted by Jeff Howe, Nov. 26, 8:45 p.m.
So
much for that great start. The Celtics led by as many as 10 points on
several occasions, but they've found themselves in a 67-54 hole at the
half. After leading 40-30 early in the second quarter, the Celtics got
flat-out sloppy on both ends, turning the ball over, missing lay-ups
and surrendering easy dribble drives on the defensive end. The Warriors
closed out the quarter on a 37-14 run, which included an 11-0 spurt,
and the 39 points Golden State scored in the quarter were the most by a
Celtics opponent in any quarter this season. This is very reminiscent
of the Nuggets game a couple weeks ago.
Celtics flying after one
Posted by Jeff Howe, Nov. 26, 8:09 p.m.
The
Celtics lead the Warriors, 35-28, after the first quarter at the
Garden. It was a predictably high-scoring quarter, as the Warriors
average 103.3 points per game, third in the league, and allow 106.1 per
game, the second-worst mark in the NBA. The Celtics' 35 points are the
highest they've scored in the first quarter all season.
Paul
Pierce passed JoJo White for seventh place in Celtics history for field
goals attempted. Pierce entered the game needed four to reach White's
total of 12,782, and he took six shots in the quarter.
There was
a moment of silence before the game in remembrance of Helen Heinsohn,
who died Monday morning. She was the wife of Celtics Hall of Famer and
television analyst Tommy Heinsohn. Helen was a fixture at Celtics
games, always walking in the arm of Tommy. Tommy is in the building but
is not working the game tonight or Friday.
Turkey Eve at the Garden
Posted by Jeff Howe, Nov. 26, 7:14 p.m.
We're
almost underway here at the Garden. The Celtics (13-2) have won five in
a row and are trying to match their season-best six-game winning streak
with a victory against the Warriors (5-9), who are making their lone
trip to the Garden this season. Golden State, the youngest team in the
NBA, has lost three straight and is coming off a terrible, horrible,
disgusting, inexcusable 24-point loss in Washington last night. Yes,
that's how I really feel.
Walker to D-League
Posted by Jeff Howe, Nov. 21, 2:19 p.m.
The
Celtics just announced they have sent rookie forward Billy Walker to
the Utah Flash of the NBA Development League. Walker has only appeared
in two games for the Celtics this season, and it's in his best interest
to get some work in rather than spending nights on the bench. With the
Celtics' intense schedule of games early this season, practice time has
been very limited, so this move makes a lot of sense. Fellow rookie
J.R. Giddens was assigned to the Flash last week.
Utah plays its lone preseason game tomorrow in Idaho before opening the regular season next Friday.
Going back to 'Sota
Posted by Jeff Howe, Nov. 20, 11:43 p.m.
Kevin
Garnett didn't get a chance to play against the Timberwolves during the
Celtics' lone trip to Minnesota last season because he was still
nursing his abdominal injury. He did take part in a pregame ceremony
that honored his 12-year tenure with them but then quickly ducked back
into the locker room to watch the game. Garnett said he's excited to
get back and finally play on his old home court tomorrow night.
"It
should be cool," he said. "It's always good to go back and see my own
personal friends in Minneapolis. It's always good to see the fans and
people. They've always been good to me. Other than that, it's just
another game, to be honest. I was locked into tonight, and I'll be
locked in tomorrow. It should be fun."
The Breakdown
Posted by Jeff Howe, Nov. 20, 11:22 p.m.
Analysis after the Celtics flattened the Pistons, 98-80, tonight at the Garden:
Iverson got Rondo'd.
Even if Rajon Rondo doesn't want to admit it, he looks like he matches
up a whole lot better with Allen Iverson than Chauncey Billups. Rondo
had 18 points, eight assists and three steals tonight, while Iverson
had 16 points, four assists and two steals. Iverson's most dangerous
asset is his speed, but the younger Rondo can match him stride for
stride and his defense hardly slips. I doubt the Celtics were going
into this game thinking Rondo had to match Iverson's point production,
but they clearly wanted him to keep Iverson from going off for 30. The
fact that Rondo out-played the potential Hall of Famer was instrumental
in the Celtics' blowout.
Best performance of the season.
The Celtics only had to play three quarters tonight, so it's hard to
call this their most complete game of the season, but this was
definitely their most dominant performance. They chased Detroit out of
the gym, and there wasn't one guy responsible for it, either. Five
players scored in double figures, including Rondo's game high of 18.
Two others came off the bench, as Tony Allen's biggest stretch came in
the second quarter when he scored five of his 13 points. Eddie House
got the stroke back, knocking down 3-of-4 3-pointers, including
consecutive 3s in the second quarter that sparked the 9-0 run for the
Celtics that first caused separation between the teams. Kendrick
Perkins was the force on the glass with a game-high 10 boards while
Kevin Garnett pulled down just four. Leon Powe had seven rebounds in
just 17:57 of play to match Tayshaun Prince's team high. Across the
board, each member of the Celtics showed up and played tonight.
These aren't the real Pistons.
Detroit coach Michael Curry said after the game the Pistons have
regressed defensively over the last two weeks, which about equals
Iverson's tenure in Motown. As I wrote earlier, these weren't the
Pistons who have been such a dominant force in the postseason for the
better part of the last decade. They aren't physical or intimidating,
and no one sent a message with a hard foul like we've grown accustomed
to seeing out of the "bad boys" from Detroit. Ray Allen seemed sure
before the game the Celtics would have to get through the Pistons once
the playoffs come around, and that could very well be the case.
Obviously, they're going to get better, too. But, better how? If they
improve offensively -- which they will with Iverson -- they're going to
change their identity. This team owned the Eastern Conference with
defense. Right now, Boston and Cleveland are far superior on that end
than Detroit.
C-Notes. The Celtics had an 18-2 edge in
fast-break points after three quarters. ... None of the Celtics'
starters played in the fourth quarter, which will help a bit since the
team won't be getting into Minnesota until about 4 a.m. EST. ... Tony
Allen wasn't his vintage self, but he started to get a little creative
during a fast-break dunk in the second quarter, a good sign for a guy
who is admittedly still shy on the break after his knee injury.
Garden blowout
Posted by Jeff Howe, Nov. 20, 10:45 p.m.
The
Celtics romped the Pistons tonight, 98-80. It was the Celtics' most
impressive three-quarter performance of the season. I'll have more
coming later.
All Celtics
Posted by Jeff Howe, Nov. 20, 10:13 p.m.
The
Celtics have blown the doors off this one and lead, 77-57, at the end
of three. I don't know if it's because this isn't a playoff game or the
Pistons just aren't as tough as they once were, but the Celtics are
getting a lot of easy lay-ups tonight. What happened to this team's no
lay-up policy?
Keep in mind
Posted by Jeff Howe, Nov. 20, 9:44 p.m.
The Pistons erased a 49-38 halftime deficit to beat the Cavs last night in Detroit.
TA leads the way
Posted by Jeff Howe, Nov. 20, 9:24 p.m.
The Celtics used runs of 7-0 and 9-0 to create a little separation from the Pistons, and they've got a 49-40 lead at the half.
Tony
Allen's best game of the season came in the Celtics' win at Detroit on
Nov. 9, and he's providing an ample encore tonight. Allen has nine
points, three steals, two blocks, one rebound and one assist at the
break, and his defense on Rip Hamilton has been phenomenal.
Back and forth in the first
Posted by Jeff Howe, Nov. 20, 8:46 p.m.
The
Celtics and Pistons are tied, 21-21, after the first quarter here at
the Garden. Detroit and Allen Iverson got off to a quick start and took
a 13-2 lead, but Rajon Rondo recovered from a poor first few minutes to
rally the Celtics back. Rondo had a tough stretch in the early going,
throwing the ball away and falling out of the play before Rasheed
Wallace hit an open 3-pointer on the other end (Kevin Garnett had to
leave Wallace to cover Iverson with Rondo still running up the court).
Rondo then started taking the ball to the hole and later hit a
3-pointer before the shot clock expired to knot the game at 19. He
finished the quarter with nine points and three assists.
C-Notes.
There is a pretty good contingent of Pistons fans here tonight. Doc
Rivers and the Celtics might believe referee Violet Palmer is one of
them. ... Rodney Stuckey looks like 50 Cent.
Playoff rematch
Posted by Jeff Howe, Nov. 20, 7:26 p.m.
The
Pistons (8-3) are returning to the Garden for the first time since Game
5 of the Eastern Conference Finals. The Celtics (10-2) are going for
their third straight win after falling to the Nuggets last Friday in
Boston.
Allen Iverson is also making his Pistons debut in Boston
after he was traded from Denver earlier this month. Since dropping
their first two games with Iverson in the lineup, including an 88-76
home loss to the Celtics on Nov. 9, the Pistons have gone 4-1 and are
coming off a seven-point win against Cleveland last night.
The
biggest effect Iverson has on the lineup is the pace of the game. While
Chauncey Billups ran more of a halfcourt offense, Iverson prefers to
fly up and down the court, and that's opening up more space for Rasheed
Wallace. Celtics coach Doc Rivers said he spent the entire Nov. 9 game
yelling at his team to get back on defense, which he said he never had
to do in prior matchups with the Pistons.
"He's a freak of
nature, really, when you think about the way he still plays and his
size," Rivers said. "It's amazing how long he's gone and done it. I
remember his rookie year, people saying there's no way he'll be able to
play this fast all year. Now, it's whatever years later, and we're
still talking about it. He really is an amazing guy. And from his own
admission, I don't think he practices a lot, so I don't know where he
gets the endurance. It's an amazing thing."
There wasn't much
activity in the Celtics' locker room, but Ray Allen spent a few minutes
talking with us about free-throw shooting. He said he really starting
concentrating on becoming a good free-throw shooter during his days at
UConn. Jim Calhoun broke the team up before each practice and had
free-throw competitions, and the losers were forced to run while the
winners watched. Allen also said he didn't become the free-throw
shooter he is today -- he's tied for fourth in the league at 94.44
percent, and the league leader among players who attempt at least three
free throws per game -- until his rookie year in Milwaukee.
One
thing to keep an eye on tonight is Allen's arms. He began wearing white
sleeves in the middle of last season's playoff series with the Pistons
because he was being clawed all over the court by Rip Hamilton.
The Breakdown
Posted by Jeff Howe, Nov. 18, 10:50 p.m.
Analysis after the Celtics beat the Knicks, 110-101, tonight at the Garden:
Celtics can pick each other up. The
C's weren't caught cold without Kevin Garnett tonight, as they went 7-2
during a nine-game stretch when Garnett was injured last season. It
also helped that the Knicks aren't overly impressive with their inside
game. Either way, this team doesn't end after Garnett, Paul Pierce and
Ray Allen. Kendrick Perkins came up with his most important offensive
performance of the season, scoring 16 points on 7-of-9 shooting. He
also pulled down eight rebounds, four on the offensive end, and had
three assists and three blocks. Brian Scalabrine started for Garnett
and knocked the back-breaking 3-pointer with 1:14 to play. And Leon
Powe was impressive in the first half, when he scored all 14 of his
points. While Pierce (5-of-13) and Allen (5-of-14) didn't have their
best shooting nights, they scored 22 and 15 points, respectively. The
final member of the starting five, Rajon Rondo, punished the defense by
consistently finding his way into the paint and had the line of the
night with 15 points, eight rebounds and seven assists.
C's in trouble when the ball sticks.
The Celtics went through a stretch early in the fourth quarter in which
11 of their 12 field-goal attempts were jump shots, and they were
1-of-12 as a result. The offense completely fell apart, and they
struggled to stay with the Knicks defensively, too. It's happened
throughout this season and last, and it's often never good for the
Celtics when the ball doesn't move or find its way to the paint because
seemingly 99 percent of the time it affects the Celtics on the
defensive end. By the time the Celtics started moving the ball again,
though, it took them a couple possessions to get into a rhythm, and the
Knicks had cut what was once a 15-point margin down to 103-99.
The Knicks seem to be more about talking than winning.
This isn't a revelation or anything, as I'm sure you can remember the
teams' meeting last year at Madison Square Garden. Zach Randolph has
made a career out of putting up numbers (18 points, eight rebounds
tonight), but his style of play (read: no defense, and missing
3-pointers by three feet) isn't conducive to winning. He also got T'd
up for getting into it with Leon Powe and later barked at Kendrick
Perkins after knocking him to the floor from behind on a lay-up
attempt. Anyway, the biggest reason for this point was for me to be
able to post Quentin Richardson's postgame comment:
"I think a
few of those guys know they can't just say anything to us. I'm just
real curious to see what those guys will be saying if we weren't in a
basketball league and didn't have referees. I mean, it wouldn't be the
same story. They are the world champions and rah-rah-rah, but the tough
part I don't factor. I come from a neighborhood where you can say what
you want to say, but until you do something, it don't mean nothing.
Some of those guys are happy to get a ring, but you haven't been in the
league long enough to talk to people like that. I don't have a lot of
respect for that. Like I said, I'd be curious to hear what they have to
say in a different setting. I'd be very curious to see that.
C-Notes.
Brian Scalabrine didn't sugarcoat it. He was really excited to get the
start tonight in place of Kevin Garnett, even admitting he didn't sleep
very well this afternoon after the shoot-around. Scalabrine, who scored
eight points and had three rebounds, also cleared up his comments about
the fans chanting his name the other day. When asked why he didn't like
it, Scalabrine said he did enjoy the crowd's affection, but he didn't
want it to be about him; he wanted it to be about the team. ... The
Celtics outscored the Knicks, 50-34, in the paint.
Celtics hang on
Posted by Jeff Howe, Nov. 18, 10:03 p.m.
Brian
Scalabrine hit a big 3-pointer down the stretch to help the Celtics
hang on to beat the Knicks, 110-101, tonight at the Garden. I'll have
more coming shortly.
Celtics in control
Posted by Jeff Howe, Nov. 18, 9:22 p.m.
The
Celtics have created a little space between them and the Knicks and
hold an 89-77 lead after three. Rajon Rondo paced the C's in the third
quarter with nine points, three rebounds and four assists.
Celtics lead at the break
Posted by Jeff Howe, Nov. 18, 8:39 p.m.
The
Celtics used a 21-7 run in the second quarter to take a 56-47 lead over
the Knicks at the half. Leon Powe scored eight points and played all 12
minutes in the second quarter, and he leads the Celtics with 14 points.
Also, Ray Allen hasn't come out of the game yet, and he's got seven
points, four assists and one rebound.
Knicks take early lead
Posted by Jeff Howe, Nov. 18, 8:07 p.m.
The
Knicks lead the Celtics, 28-26, after the first quarter. As advertised,
the Knicks have hit 3-of-8 3-pointers. Paul Pierce leads the Celtics
with nine points. Brian Scalabrine started for Kevin Garnett and had an
assist but was relieved by Leon Powe, who had six points and a rebound
in five minutes.
KG's suspension is 'ridiculous'
Posted by Jeff Howe, Nov. 18, 7:15 p.m.
Brian
Scalabrine will start against the Knicks tonight in place of Kevin
Garnett, who is serving his one-game suspension that was handed down by
the league for a dust-up with Andrew Bogut against the Bucks on
Saturday.
Predictably, the Celtics weren't big fans of the sentence.
"I
was just surprised," Doc Rivers said. "I thought it was a ridiculous
suspension. I really did. Anybody who's been around the game long
enough knows -- whether you played it or not, it doesn't even matter --
if you've got your head turned sideways and someone strikes you, not
once but twice, your reaction is almost a reflex. I can see if it's
somebody coming right in your face, but from the side, your reflex is
to flail, and I guess that constitutes a punch [to the league].
Clearly, he's not a good fighter if that's a punch, but it is what it
is. There's nothing you can do about it, but we have to play tonight so
we have to move forward."
Bogut was not suspended for the
incident, but his foul was upgraded to a Flagrant 1. League rules do
not allow players to appeal suspensions, but they can appeal fines.
Rivers
went on to compare the Garnett situation to what happened with
Shaquille O'Neal over the weekend. O'Neal clotheslined Rodney Stuckey
mid-air in the second quarter. O'Neal was given a Flagrant 2, which
comes with an immediate ejection, and he was fined $25,000 for his
reaction to the officials and not leaving the court in a timely
fashion. Rivers said Garnett was fined $200,000.
"I just wish
there was more consistency from our league," Rivers said. "I think they
have to look at things differently. I just looked at the Shaq thing,
and I hate to call out Shaq, but that was a hard foul where a guy was
suspended in the air and comes down on his face. [O'Neal] gets
[$25,000], and Kevin gets 200 grand and misses a game. To me, those two
things don't go together, so we have to pay the price."
Leon Powe is expected to see increased playing time in Garnett's absence.
"I
wouldn't have suspended him for that," Powe said. "But it's the league,
and it's their own rules. Whatever they decide, we've got to roll with.
Now we've got to go out there without KG."
Powe said incidents like this occur every night.
"I'm surprised I haven't been suspended then."
Start spreading the news
Posted by Jeff Howe, Nov. 18, 6:48 p.m.
The
Celtics (9-2) and Knicks (6-4) are about 45 minutes away from tip-off
tonight at the Garden. The Knicks have the highest scoring offense in
the league at 105.7 points per game, and they also lead the league in
3-pointers made per game (11.0) and attempted per game (28.3).
I'll
be back in a few minutes with the reaction to Kevin Garnett's one-game
suspension, which wasn't very favorable in the Celtics' locker room, as
you might expect. I do want to clear up one thing from my post
yesterday. I said Garnett would run the risk of missing Thursday's game
against the Pistons if he appealed the suspension. However, according
to Celtics PR director Jeff Twiss, players can not appeal suspensions
once they are handed down from the league. They can appeal fines,
though.
Garnett suspended
Posted by Jeff Howe, Nov. 17, 6:18 p.m.
Kevin
Garnett has been suspended one game, the NBA just announced. Garnett
was suspended "for striking Milwaukee Bucks center Andrew Bogut in the
face," according to the league. Bogut's foul was also upgraded to a
Flagrant Foul Penalty One, which could lead to an eventual suspension
if he tallies enough flagrant fouls.
The two were tangled under
the basket during the teams' meeting Saturday night in Milwaukee, which
the Celtics won in overtime, 102-97. Garnett appeared to be trying to
slap the ball away from Bogut, but his hand hit Bogut in the cheek.
When Bogut finished trying to shoot the ball, his right arm came down
and hit Garnett on the face, which seemed much more malicious -- and
definitely more intentional -- than Garnett's motion. With that said,
I'm pretty surprised Garnett wound up being the only one suspended for
the dust-up because they were equally guilty.
Garnett will
miss tomorrow night's game against the Knicks at the Garden. If he
appeals, he could run the risk of missing the Celtics' game against the
Pistons on Thursday at the Garden.
Giddens to Development League
Posted by Jeff Howe, Nov. 15, 1:31 p.m.
The
Celtics announced today they have sent rookie J.R. Giddens to the Utah
Flash of the NBA Development League. Giddens was the 30th pick in
June's draft, but he hadn't been active in any of the Celtics' 10 games
this season. This isn't a knock on Giddens' longterm future in Boston,
but he's way down the depth chart right now and doesn't figure to see
any action for the Celtics unless there are a number of injuries. It's
a good way to keep him in playing shape instead of letting him wilt
away on the bench. It proved to be a good move for Gabe Pruitt during
his stint in Utah last season, and it certainly helped his confidence
heading into 2008-09.
The Breakdown
Posted by Jeff Howe, Nov. 15, 12:31 a.m.
Ray of light. Nuggets coach George Karl hoped aloud before
the game that Ray Allen wouldn’t snap out of his shooting slump and burn his
team — again. Well, Allen burned all right, and it certainly wasn’t by
accident. Allen showed up to the Celtics’ practice facility in Waltham
yesterday three hours early to work on his shot, and it paid off right away. He
scored 18 of his 26 points and hit three of his five 3-pointers in the first
quarter to help the Celtics get off to an early lead. While Allen had been scoring
just fine in the past few games, his shot was off from beyond the arc. He had
been 2-of-16 (12.5 percent) from 3-point range the last two games and 5-of-25
(20 percent) over the last four contests. No one in the Celtics’ locker room
will every worry about an Allen slump — Allen included — but any early-season
struggles looked like a distant memory tonight.
Getting defensive. I ripped the Nuggets’ defense before the
game, and I’ll defend every word I said. It was more of a coincidence than
anything, but I had seen a handful of their games on television this season and
had enough of a sample size to make those claims. With that said, Denver ’s
defense was spectacular tonight. They play a different brand of defense than
the Celtics, locking down the perimeter and trapping high to avoid their
opposition take advantage of their deficiencies in the paint. In past games,
the Nuggets’ perimeter defense looked more like a welcoming party than a mode
of security. Chauncey Billups obviously deserves a lot of credit for that, and
Kevin Garnett said after the game Billups always seemed to know what the
Celtics were trying to do. “They did their homework,” Garnett added. There’s no
telling whether or not the Nuggets will continue playing this type of defense
in the Western Conference, which only has about three teams that play
legitimate D, but they found out tonight what a solid defensive effort will do
for their fortunes.
On the Celtics’ side, they just didn’t have it in lockdown
mode tonight. Garnett said they were a step slow all game. I actually thought
they played fairly well, but they couldn’t make the clutch stops down the
stretch that aided their title run last season. Consider this: Eddie House made
a 3-pointer early in the fourth quarter to give the Celtics a 70-67 lead, but
the Nuggets followed with an 11-0 run. The Celtics finally made a run of their
own to tie the score at 82, but Kenyon Martin scored on the Nuggets’ ensuing
possession. After the C’s tied it at 84, Martin scored again. And when the
Celtics turned it over on their next possession — due to great perimeter
defense from Denver — Billups
converted a three-point play that all but sealed the game. In one of the most
unlikely events in NBA history, the Nuggets played better defense when the game
was on the line than the Celtics.
Dietary performance. The Celtics haven’t put together a full
game yet this season. Until tonight, they were plagued by poor starts. In the
loss to the Nuggets, though, they surrendered runs of 19-2, 9-0, 11-0 and 10-0,
the last two coming in the fourth quarter. The C’s played catch-up three times,
but a fourth was way too much to ask, especially on the heels of two 16-point
comebacks in their last two games. “It’s going to catch up to you at some
point,” Rivers said of constantly fighting from behind. “It just has to.” Paul
Pierce added, “We can’t play in spurts when teams are coming at us for 48
minutes.” If it’s any consolation, Rivers said the Celtics didn’t play their
first full game last season until Game 6 of the Finals. In that case, the C’s
have some time to grow. Still, their offense has to flow better, regardless of
how they’re playing defensively. They’ll be the first ones to say their offense
comes from their defense, but they’ve been playing some damn solid defense this
season and the offense hasn’t always followed. It’s a good sign for this team
to be 8-2, coming off a championship and still feeling unsatisfied with their
performance through the first month of the season. “We’re the most miserable
8-2 team you’ve ever seen,” Rivers said.
C-Notes. Jason Varitek was at the Garden for the game, which
can only be a good sign for the Red Sox on the first day of the free agency
period. … After scoring 22 and 11 points in the last two fourth quarters,
respectively, Paul Pierce didn’t score at all in the fourth tonight, going
0-for-2 from the floor with a pair of turnovers. (I will say — even if I sound
like a broken record — I love the way he’s crashing the boards this season, and
he had seven rebounds tonight.) … The Celtics were outscored, 42-20, in the
paint tonight. … Six Nuggets, including four starters, scored in double
figures.
Shocker at the Garden
Posted by Jeff Howe, Nov. 14, 10:32 p.m.
The Celtics kept digging themselves into a hole tonight, and they
didn't have enough to overcome their last deficit, falling to the
Nuggets, 94-85, in their first loss at the Garden this season. What was
most surprising was the Nuggets actually played better defense down the
stretch than the Celtics, which goes against everything I thought was
true in the basketball world. I'll have more coming in a little while.
Anything you can do...
Posted by Jeff Howe, Nov. 14, 9:53 p.m.
The Celtics saw the Nuggets' 19-2, second-quarter run and answered with
a 21-5 spurt to end the third quarter and take a 65-64 lead heading
into the fourth. After going silent in the second quarter and much of
the third, Ray Allen knocked down a fade-away jumper with 4:11
remaining in the quarter, forced a turnover from Kenyon Martin on the
Nuggets' ensuing possession and assisted on Paul Pierce's 3-pointer on
the other end of the court to cut Denver's lead to 61-58.
Celtics go cold
Posted by Jeff Howe, Nov. 14, 9:05 p.m.
The Nuggets used a 19-2 run to swing the momentum in this one and take
a 48-42 lead into halftime. The Celtics missed 7-of-8 field-goal
attempts and had two turnovers during the six-minute stretch when the
Nuggets stole control of the game. Denver's perimeter defense is
definitely much improved with Chauncey Billups out at the point, but
the Celtics have to pass their way into the paint where Denver's bigs
are mostly unimpressive on the defensive side of the court.
Allen pacing Celtics
Posted by Jeff Howe, Nov. 14, 8:31 p.m.
Ray Allen has broken out of his slump in a big
way, scoring 18 points and hitting three 3-pointers in the first
quarter to help the Celtics grab a 29-23 lead over the Nuggets. The C's
finally got themselves off to a good start on the offensive end after
stringing together a bunch of off-shooting first quarters. They led 8-0
after their first three possessions before the Nuggets found their way
back into the game.
Here at the Garden
Posted by Jeff Howe, Nov. 14, 7:19 p.m.
We're about 45 minutes from tip-off tonight at
the Garden, the late start due to ESPN's national coverage of the game
between the Celtics and Nuggets. There wasn't much going on in the
Celtics' locker room, which is turning into a trend. One slight change,
though, Patrick O'Bryant will dress tonight in place of Billy Walker.
The C's are riding a six-game winning streak and are 5-0 at home this
season.
The Nuggets just announced 7-footer Steven Hunter
underwent arthroscopic surgery today on an injury that is being called
a "right inflammation." Whatever that means, it's going to cause Hunter
to miss a "minimum of 12 weeks." I also overheard Chris "Birdman"
Anderson is suffering from a chest injury, and it doesn't sound like
he'll be playing tonight, either.
The big news tonight is
Chauncey Billups' Denver debut at the Garden -- he was traded to the
Nuggets last week for Allen Iverson. Carmelo Anthony still sounds
excited about the trade, as much as he hated seeing Iverson leave town,
and believes it will make the Nuggets a better team in the long run.
Doc Rivers later said he wasn't surprised by the trade -- "because
nothing in this league surprises me," he added -- but he was surprised
he never heard anything leading up to the trade. Rivers said it's
typical for everyone around the league to be aware of moves this large,
but this one seemed to come from out of nowhere.
As for tonight,
the Nuggets don't figure to be much of a match for the Celtics. Last
season's 119-93 Celtics rout at the Garden aside, Denver is playing on
the second leg of a back-to-back (the Nuggets lost, 110-99, in
Cleveland last night) and will have a serious task at hand tonight.
I've gotten a chance to see Denver play quite a bit this season, and
the team still doesn't play any defense, particularly at the end of
close games. They traded former Defensive Player of the Year Marcus
Camby in an offseason salary dump, and the inside presence for Denver
is simply empty. The most maddening thing about Denver is its
unwillingness to play any defense with the game on the line. Trailing
by a few points late in the game last week against the Warriors, the
Nuggets continuously let Golden State penetrate the paint and score on
easy lay-ups. You've got to think a team that's trying to change its
defensive identity (read: just showing up on the defensive end of the
court would be an improvement) would at least buckle down late. Not so,
though. The Celtics should easily exploit the Nuggets' softness inside
on their way to a seventh consecutive victory.
The Breakdown
Posted by Jeff Howe, Nov. 13, 12:18 a.m.
Analysis after the Celtics beat the Hawks, 103-102, tonight at the Garden:
C is for 'Cool.' Tonight
was the first time this season the majority of the close calls have
gone against the Celtics, but they did a solid job of bottling their
emotions and staying in stride. Last season, it wasn't uncommon in
similar circumstances to see the Celtics let their emotions run wild,
which would cause swings in momentum. That never happened tonight,
which is a sign of how much more mature this team is this season. It's
not just in those situations, either. Paul Pierce and company look very
calm, cool and collected through adversity. They just don't look fazed,
and that helped them against a younger, fearless Hawks team. The
Celtics are the defending champs, and through nine games, they're
acting like it.
Hawks are for real. Their defense is a
mirror image of the Celtics' D. Their primary objective is keeping guys
out of the paint, rotating around the perimeter and helping on the weak
side. Al Horford, Marvin Williams (Josh Smith when he returns from his
sprained ankle) and the rest of the bigs are athletic enough for that
strategy to remain effective over the course of the season. It's
tougher for young teams to buy into defensive systems because the
players are still on their first or second contracts, and they haven't
made their big money yet. Thus, they tend to slide their efforts to the
offensive end, where the money is made. (James Posey's $25 million is
certainly nice, but anyone who has seen him play for the Heat and
Celtics knows how valuable his defense and leadership can be. He's
incredibly underpaid) Plus, the experience the young core of the team
gained in the playoffs last season. They had a swagger tonight that was
unquestionably absent last April. And finally, Mike Bibby will be
around for a full season. He was traded so late last season that he was
basically learning on the fly, and he had very few chances to learn the
team's plays in practice. Veteran leadership at the point is invaluable
for teams with lofty playoff aspirations.
C-Notes. Paul
Pierce dropped 23 points in the second half, including 11 in the fourth
quarter. He's averaging 16.5 points in the last two fourth quarters.
... Pierce's game-winning shot was over Al Horford, who is three inches
taller than Pierce. ... There were 21 lead changes and 18 ties in
tonight's game. Twenty of those lead changes and 14 of the ties
happened in the second half.
Pierce does it again
Posted by Jeff Howe, Nov. 12, 10:24 p.m.
Paul Pierce knocked down the game-winning shot
with 0.5 seconds to play to give the Celtics a 103-102 win against the
Hawks tonight at the Garden. I'll follow up after I hit the train ride
home.
Setting up for a great finish
Posted by Jeff Howe, Nov. 12, 9:36 p.m.
Neither team led by more than three points in the
third quarter, and the Hawks hold a 77-76 advantage heading into the
fourth. Paul Pierce is heading for his second straight 30-point night,
as he's got 23 points through three.
Right where they wanted them
Posted by Jeff Howe, Nov. 12, 8:48 p.m.
I'm starting to think the Celtics are just toying
with teams by lulling them into a false sense of security with these
big leads early in games. OK, so that might not really be the case, but
the Celtics are playing their best this season when they're faced with
a feeling of desperation. After trailing by 16 points midway through
the second quarter for the second time in as many games, the C's
stormed back and are tied, 51-51, at the break. Ray Allen scored eight
points during the Celtics' 18-2 run that tied the score at 46-46, and
Kevin Garnett's two-handed throwdown on an alley-oop from Rajon Rondo
led to a three-point play that gave the C's a 51-50 lead, their first
of the night.
Fast start at the Garden
Posted by Jeff Howe, Nov. 12, 8:09 p.m.
The
Hawks are playing with a lot more confidence than they had the last
time they came to the Garden and are carrying themselves like a team
that believes it should win rather than a team that hopes it
can win. As a result, they have a 31-24 lead after the first quarter,
thanks in part to Flip Murray's 3-pointer at the buzzer. Atlanta got
off to a hot start with a couple 3-pointers from Marvin Williams and
Joe Johnson and have moved the ball a little too easily against the
Celtics' defense.
Remember these guys?
Posted by Jeff Howe, Nov. 12, 6:48 p.m.
The
Hawks return to the Garden tonight for the first time since Game 7 of
the first round of the playoffs, when they were embarrassed by 34
points. While it was expected the Celtics (7-1) would get off to
another fast start, the same couldn't be said about the Hawks (6-0),
who are one of two remaining unbeaten teams (Lakers) in the league.
It's definitely no accident, either. The Hawks have taken down the
Magic, 76ers, Hornets, Raptors, Thunder and Bulls, which -- at least
early on -- is a tad more difficult schedule than the Celtics have
faced. Point guard Mike Bibby has a full training camp under his belt
after being traded to Atlanta late last season, and the Hawks are also
one of the best defensive units in the league.
One injury note: Hawks forward Josh Smith is out with a sprained ankle.
The Breakdown
Posted by Jeff Howe, Nov. 10, 11:59 p.m.
Analysis after the Celtics beat the Raptors, 94-87, tonight at the Garden:
The Truth about hardware. I’ve written it already this
season, but once again, I do believe Paul Pierce can find himself in the thick
of the MVP race next spring. Of course, it won’t help his cause playing
alongside Kevin Garnett and Ray Allen, but the league is paying closer
attention to Boston this year for
obvious reasons. That, in turn, will help Pierce, especially following his MVP
performance in the Finals. He was tremendous in the season opener against the
Cavs, but tonight was his breakout performance of 2008-09, dropping 22 of his
36 points in the fourth quarter. (Conversely, the Raptors scored 22 points as a
team in the fourth.) As was the case against the Bucks last Friday, Pierce
became a factor in the paint when the bigs had rebounding troubles. Tonight,
the Raptors had eight offensive rebounds and 11 second-chance points, which
thwarted the C’s early comeback attempts. Pierce, who finished 14th in the MVP
balloting last season, came up large with nine rebounds, including six in the
second half, when the Raptors only managed two offensive boards and three
second-chance points. Everyone knows Pierce can score at will, but his game is
much deeper than that. It’s only a matter of time before the national media
figures this out.
It’s going to be tough to beat the Celtics at the Garden.
The Raptors are a pretty good team, and they’ll find themselves – along with Philadelphia
and Orlando – vying for the fourth
seed in the Eastern Conference playoffs when it’s all said and done. They
played about as well as any team has against the Celtics this season, but they
still couldn’t put it all together in the second half to steal a victory. As
poorly as the Celtics played for two and a half quarters, they showed they are
still head and shoulders better than every opponent when they have it all
clicking (remember Game 6 of the Finals?). Even though that was only the case
for about 16 minutes tonight, they locked down on defense, got a blistering
performance from Pierce on the offensive end and closed out the game on a 52-30
run.
Baby in focus. Rather than traveling the world and kicking
back on the heels of a world championship, Glen Davis stayed in Waltham
all summer to work out and improve his game. The results, so far, have been
overwhelmingly positive, especially defensively. Davis
has trimmed down a bit, looks quicker to the ball and still has the same amount
of strength to control the paint. Despite his short frame – he’s listed at
6-foot-9 – he can more than hold his own against bigger guys, and that was true
tonight with Jermaine O’Neal and Chris Bosh. When Perkins came out of the game
twice in the first half, Davis was assigned to O’Neal, who’s every bit of two
inches taller than Davis , and did
an admirable job considering how hot O’Neal was out of the gate. Davis ’
primary focus has to be positioning because he can’t allow bigger players to
get over him in the paint. He’s a lot stronger than most people think,
particularly in his lower body, and his opponents have a difficult time
planting themselves in prime position on the block.
Slow starts don’t help. Doc Rivers held a pregame meeting to
address his team’s slow starts, which have developed into the most alarming
trend since the Celtics couldn’t win on the road last postseason. Obviously, it
won’t last all season, but it’s something that is creeping into each player’s
mind, whether they want to admit it or not. Once again, they came out flat
tonight. “Yeah, that went well,” Rivers said about his speech. “I meant in the
second half.” The C’s fell down 16-7 in the first quarter and shot 5-of-16 from
the floor. For the second straight time at home, an opposing player (O’Neal
tonight, Richard Jefferson last Friday) got off to a hot start. Teams will be
getting off to strong starts against the Celtics this season because they’re so
amped up to play against the world champs, but it’s a trend the C’s need to
squash sooner than later.
C-Notes. Pierce has been playing with a sprained right hand
for the last week, and he had it wrapped after the game tonight. … Kendrick
Perkins was getting killed in the paint by Jermaine O’Neal all night, but he
came back with a great stop late in the fourth quarter. It was a huge step
forward for Perkins, who hasn’t always been able to recoup when things aren’t
going his way.
The Truth answers
Posted by Jeff Howe, Nov. 10, 10:04 p.m.
Paul
Pierce scored 22 of his 36 points in the fourth quarter, and the
Celtics came back to beat the Raptors, 94-87, at the Garden. I'll have
more coming later.
It's getting tight at the Garden
Posted by Jeff Howe, Nov. 10, 9:25 p.m.
It's
going to be pretty difficult to beat the champs in this building this
season. The Celtics have picked up their defensive intensity, and it's
translating to the offensive end. Toronto is taking a 65-59 lead into
the fourth quarter -- thanks to Jason Kapono's 3-pointer with 3.8
seconds remaining in the third -- but the Celtics have the momentum,
and the building is finally alive. Things are set up for a good fourth
quarter.
Celtics struggling badly
Posted by Jeff Howe, Nov. 10, 8:42 p.m.
This
is like "Caddyshack 2," "Rocky V," and the 2006-07 Celtics all rolled
into one. The Raptors have a 48-36 lead at halftime, and the Celtics
are playing their worst offensive game of the young season, shooting 32
percent (12-for-37) from the floor, missing three lay-ups and 9-of-10
3-pointers in the process. They've got seven assists to six turnovers
and are being out-rebounded 25-18.
Raptors strike first
Posted by Jeff Howe, Nov. 10, 8:06 p.m.
Jermaine
O'Neal and the Raptors got off to a hot start and lead the Celtics,
23-18, after the first quarter. O'Neal has 10 points and five rebounds,
and Toronto led by as many as nine in yet another one of the Celtics'
slow starts. Ray Allen (eight points) helped the Celtics get back in
it, but it will be up to the bench to set the tone once again.
Busy night
Posted by Jeff Howe, Nov. 10, 7:26 p.m.
As I said before, there were a few things going on before the game tonight, which is a few more than most nights.
After
scoring a season-high 23 points last night against the Pistons, Tony
Allen drew a large crowd around his locker about an hour ago. Allen
said his knee still isn't back at full strength, but he is happy to be
where he is -- about 82 percent, according to Allen's scientific
formula. He said he was at a real low point last year at this time
because he was at practice and watching his teammates basically run in
circles around him. Allen also noted his breakaway attempt Friday night
against the Bucks when he wanted to throw down a tomahawk dunk but
decided against risking it and just laid the ball in. Either way,
Allen's impact has far away exceeded what anyone could have expected
after his struggles last season.
Rajon Rondo had his right elbow
wrapped before the game as a precautionary measure after hitting hit
last night in Detroit. He said it's not an injury, and we shouldn't
worry because "it won't affect my shooting percentage or my free-throw
percentage." His sense of humor is clearly still at 100 percent.
Raptors
coach Sam Mitchell was asked by a reporter if he was surprised Kevin
Garnett, Paul Pierce and Ray Allen "haven't let up" this season after
winning the title last season. Let's just say Bill Belichick would have
been proud of the way Mitchell handled the situation.
Welcome to the Jungle
Posted by Jeff Howe, Nov. 10, 7:15 p.m.
We're
about 20 minutes away from tip-off between the Celtics (6-1) and
Raptors (4-2) here at the Garden. This is a good test for the Celtics,
who are coming off a high-energy win in Detroit last night and have to
rebound with a tough game against the Raptors, who are trying to make
an early statement to the Eastern Conference that they might be a
contender after acquiring Jermaine O'Neal in the offseason.
I
really like the timing of this matchup because, in my opinion, Kendrick
Perkins is playing the best basketball of his career right now. He and
Kevin Garnett will have their hands full in the paint against O'Neal
and Chris Bosh (26.7 points per game, 11.0 rebounds per game). O'Neal's
numbers haven't been too impressive (fourth on the team with 10.5
points per game, second with 6.3 rebounds), but he's taking a lot of
attention away from Bosh, who is playing as well as anyone in the
league right now.
I'll be back in a few minutes to set the
pregame scene, which was a bit busier than normal and a result of me
starting a little later than usual.
The Breakdown
Posted by Jeff Howe, Nov. 7, 10:39 p.m.
Analysis from tonight's Celtics victory against the Bucks:
On point. Rajon Rondo’s killer instinct is what separates
him from a number of other point guards in the league, and that was far and
away the case tonight when he was up against Luke Ridnour. Rondo (eight points,
eight assists, three steals, two rebounds, one block) was his typical self,
flying all around the court on both ends of the court and making plays with and
without the ball. Ridnour, on the other hand, seems content with holding the
ball at the top of the arc and waiting for a play to develop, rather than
developing something himself. Neither team played its best game tonight, but
when they did struggle, Rondo was often able to create a play when Ridnour was
not. (Bonus points go to Eddie House — 11 points, three steals, two rebounds,
one assist — who kept the pressure on Milwaukee
when he was in the game for Rondo.)
Powe the closer. It’s been a regular occurrence to turn on
SportsCenter and see Leon Powe throwing down a huge dunk on a lesser man. In
case you haven’t noticed, almost every single one of those plays happens in the
fourth quarter, and that was true again tonight. Powe scored 10 points tonight,
including seven in the first four minutes of the final quarter. His personal
run catapulted the Celtics, who turned a five-point game entering the fourth
into a blowout. He’s got such a ridiculous amount of energy that I liken him to
a bruising running back. When defenses are tired as the game wears on, Powe
continues to punish the opposition over and again.
The Truth. Paul Pierce didn’t have his best shooting night
(6-of-16) but still managed to score 18 points. That’s not the story, though.
He was most effective in other areas, grabbing 10 rebounds and dishing out
seven assists. His rebounding was key, as the Celtics had some trouble in that
area through some stretches tonight. After his performance during last year’s
playoff run, Pierce will garner a little more attention next spring when people
are voting for end-of-season awards. It’s only natural they’ll see how
impressive Pierce is off the ball.
C-Notes. Rookie Billy Walker got the first game action of
his career in the fourth quarter. … Kendrick Perkins has been tremendous
defensively over the last week and had six points, eight rebounds, seven blocks
and one steal tonight. He can be emotional to a fault, which takes him out of
some plays, but he’s going to be a top-five defensive center by the end of the
season, if not better. … The Celtics outscored the Bucks, 60-36, in the paint
and had a 24-10 advantage in fast-break points.
Celtics win
Posted by Jeff Howe, Nov. 7, 9:56 p.m.
The Celtics had a great fourth quarter and beat the Bucks, 101-89. I'll have more in about a half hour.
Celtics hanging on
Posted by Jeff Howe, Nov. 7, 9:20 p.m.
This
isn't the Celtics' most consistent performance, but they'll take a
75-70 lead into the fourth quarter anyway. One side note, it's been
entertaining -- and hysterical at times -- to watch the head games
Kevin Garnett is playing on Bucks point guard Luke Ridnour, who looks
downright horrified to go anywhere near Garnett right now. Anyway, the
Celtics' bench has outscored the Bucks' bench, 25-9, to this point, so
the early portion of the fourth quarter will be a telling sign as to
where this game is going.
Rondo appears to be OK
Posted by Jeff Howe, Nov. 7, 9:00 p.m.
Rajon
Rondo came out of the game with 10:10 remaining in the third quarter
and walked to the bench favoring his ankle. The substitution was
initiated by Doc Rivers, who spoke briefly to Rondo before he sat down.
Trainer Ed Lacerte also went over to check on Rondo, but Rondo appeared
to tell Lacerte he was fine. Rondo was ready to check in two minutes
later and finally returned to the game with 7:31 to play in the quarter.
The Bucks stop here
Posted by Jeff Howe, Nov. 7, 8:01 p.m.
The
Celtics came alive in a big way in the second quarter and have a 55-47
lead at the half. They trailed by nine points early in the second but
closed the quarter on a 30-13 run while picking up their play on both
ends of the court. Paul Pierce's lay-in tied the game at 42-42 (the
first tie since it was 2-2), and Kevin Garnett's two-handed throw-down,
which caused Tony Allen to throw his towel high in the air and into the
third row behind him, put the Celtics ahead for the first time, 44-42.
The
C's were at their best on the defensive end, and they're getting great
contributions from Eddie House (three steals, two rebounds) and
Kendrick Perkins (five rebounds, four blocks, one steal) on that side
of the court. The Bucks took a 42-38 advantage with 5:50 remaining in
the half but only hit one more field goal the rest of the way.
Jefferson Airplane
Posted by Jeff Howe, Nov. 7, 8:01 p.m.
Richard
Jefferson has gotten off to a flying start, and the Bucks lead the
Celtics, 30-23, after the first quarter. Jefferson scored 14 of
Milwaukee's first 19 points while hitting his first six shots. He's
also got two assists for the Bucks, who led by as many as 13 in the
opening quarter.
Buck hunting
Posted by Jeff Howe, Nov. 7, 6:50 p.m.
There
wasn't a whole lot going on before tonight's game between the Celtics
(4-1) and Bucks (3-2) at the Garden. Most notably, Bucks leading scorer
Michael Redd (21.3 points per game) will miss his second straight game
with a sprained right ankle. The Bucks beat the visiting Wizards,
112-104, in overtime Wednesday night in their first game without Redd.
Rajon
Rondo spoke to reporters for a few minutes and addressed his struggles
from the free-throw line, which have him at a loss for words. Rondo is
shooting 46.2 percent from the stripe, and he said he's definitely
frustrated because he's spent so much time trying to improve his
free-throw shooting. He said he shot free throws every day over the
summer until he made 100, which he estimated took between 110-112
attempts. Rondo didn't just line up and shoot them consecutively,
though, as he worked on a specific drill or did some running before
getting himself back to the line to better simulate game conditions.
Rondo also said Sam Cassell told him to work on his breathing before
stepping to the line, especially after he gets knocked to the floor.
Cassell recommended that Rondo tie his sneakers before walking up to
the line to give him ample time to collect himself. Tonight will be the
first time Rondo works on that.
Doc Rivers said the team will be
challenged to find enough practice time over the next month. Their last
practice was in Houston -- a good one, according to Rivers -- and
they'll go through a very light practice tomorrow morning before
leaving for Detroit. He said he doesn't think they'll have another good
practice until about a month from now due to the game schedule.
Beginning tonight, the Celtics have six games in an eight-day stretch.
The Breakdown
Posted by Jeff Howe, Oct. 31, 11:11 p.m.
Analysis from tonight's 96-80 win for the Celtics:
Defense regains swagger. After allowing just 35 points in
the second half against the Cavs on Tuesday, the Celtics’ defense was again on
par tonight with last year’s unit. Like I wrote in an earlier post, they played
like they wanted to record a shutout, a rarity to say the least at any level of
basketball. They surrendered 31 points in the first half, and didn’t let the
Bulls sniff the paint, especially when Kevin Garnett was on the court. This was
especially important against the Bulls, who have slashers in Derrick Rose and
Ben Gordon.
Powe strong out of the gate. Leon Powe was a force off the
bench for the second straight game, registering 13 points and six rebounds
while serving as an imposing presence in the paint. He had 11 points and two
boards against the Cavs. Powe is also looking to be more of a force on the
offensive end. He takes the ball to the rim with Garnett-like authority after
collecting an offensive rebound or loose ball, but his back-to-the-basket
skills are definitely improving, too, as you could see with his hook shot off
the glass.
Contract day: The Celtics awarded Rajon Rondo today by
picking up his team option for next season, and he rewarded them by outplaying
the combination of Derrick Rose and Kirk Hinrich. Most significant was his play
defensively, flustering the Bulls’ two point guards (Rose especially at times)
with a ton of pressure in the half court. Offensively, Rondo breezed by both
(Hinrich mostly) and was able to attack the paint at will. With all of the hype
surrounding Rose, which he absolutely deserves, it’s got to be a huge
confidence booster for the Celtics to see their guy dismantle June’s No. 1
pick.
Good start: Aside from Tuesday’s first half, the Celtics
have established themselves through their first two home games as a team that
can repeat. They took down the Cavs in a playoff-like game and potential
Eastern Conference final preview, and completely outplayed the Bulls, who
should be in the playoff hunt at season’s end. Personally, if Vinny Del Negro
can get his team moving the ball more on offense, I think Rose is good enough
to lead the Bulls into the postseason. Anyway, the Celtics hit the road for the
first time this season when they visit the Pacers tomorrow night. It’ll be a
good test because it’s the Celtics’ first back-to-back this season -- although
Paul Pierce (35 minutes) and Rondo (30) were the only players who were on the
court for 30 minutes tonight – but a very winnable game against the young
Pacers. The C’s head out to Houston, a team looking to make a statement early
this season, especially since the Celtics ended their 22-game winning streak
last year, and conclude the three-game trip Wednesday in Oklahoma
City .
C-Note. The Celtics 30-of-39 free throws (76.9 percent) tonight
to raise their average through two games to 69.9 percent. Last season, they
shot 77.07 percent from the charity stripe, eighth in the league. No team shot
below 70 percent.
Celtics in cruise control
Posted by Jeff Howe, Oct. 31, 10:05 p.m.
The
Celtics hold a 70-54 lead heading into the fourth quarter, which is
good in a sense that they're up by 16, but not so great considering
they are merely a few minutes removed from being ahead by 26.
As
well as Bulls rookie Derrick Rose is playing, which could be skewed
since the rest of the Bulls are playing so poorly, he's being badly
outplayed by Rajon Rondo, who has been slicing through the Chicago
defense to a tune of 14 points and six assists. Rose has 14 points but
no assists. With that said, he's not getting any help.
KG turns 1,000
Posted by Jeff Howe, Oct. 31, 10:01 p.m.
Kevin
Garnett was just honored over the PA system for being the youngest
player in NBA history to play 1,000 career games, a milestone he
reached tonight. Garnett was given a standing ovation by the crowd, his
teammates and coaches.
Garnett is 32 years, 165 days old. Shawn
Kemp previously held the record, playing his 1,000th game on Dec. 20,
2002, when he was 33 years, 24 days old.
Intensity in focus
Posted by Jeff Howe, Oct. 31, 9:15 p.m.
I'm
putting a lock on this game. There is no way -- not a chance -- the
Celtics can lose tonight with the way they're playing right now, as
they lead the Bulls, 49-31, at halftime.
The Celtics are winning
every effort play and have been vultures in the paint and under the
basket on both ends of the court. It's gotten to the point where some
of the Bulls actually look scared to take the ball inside toward Kevin
Garnett, and Chicago is taking a lot of shots from the perimeter. With
the intensity the Celtics -- and Garnett, in particular -- are bringing
defensively, it looks like they're going to be angry when it's over
that they didn't shut out the Bulls. By the way, Garnett has 16 points
and seven rebounds. Both numbers have already surpassed his total in
the season opener.
Oh, Chica-No
Posted by Jeff Howe, Oct. 31, 8:36 p.m.
My
running joke all day was that the Bulls were going to dress up as an
NBA team for Halloween. Apparently, they forgot their costumes.
The
Celtics have a 24-13 lead after the first quarter tonight, and it
doesn't seem like it's even that close. The Bulls' offense involves
four players standing around inside the 3-point line, one guy with the
ball dribbling outside the 3-point line, more dribbling, more
dribbling, a crossover attempt and a shot. There is some slight
variation to that routine. Defensively, the Bulls have bitten on 100
percent of the Celtics' ball fakes, so there's also that.
Late
in the first quarter, the Celtics had a 22-10 lead, the Bulls were
shooting 3-for-20 (15.0 percent) from the floor, had seven turnovers
and one assist.
Campaign '08
Posted by Jeff Howe, Oct. 31, 7:41 p.m.
I
planned to go through the Celtics' locker room to ask anyone within
shouting distance who they were voting for next Tuesday, but Rajon
Rondo and Ray Allen served as the speakers of the house.
"I'm
voting for Obama, all day long," Rondo said right as Ray Allen (whose
locker is right next to Rondo's) draped a T-shirt with a giant picture
that displayed Barack Obama's face over Rondo. "There's, what, 15 guys
on the team. If everybody votes, I think about 14 are going to vote for
Obama."
Who's the 15th?
"Look around the room, and you tell me," Rondo said with a laugh.
You got Rondo'd
Posted by Jeff Howe, Oct. 31, 7:41 p.m.
Rajon
Rondo said he is "excited" the Celtics picked up his club option today
for the 2009-10 season. The Celtics have the ability to keep Rondo in
Boston through the 2010-11 season if they decide to pay his qualifying
offer in two summers.
When asked if Rondo wanted to play in Boston for the rest of his career, he gave a business-like answer.
"I
love the organization right now," Rondo said. "We're winning. That's
what it's all about. We'll see next summer or the summer after that,
whatever it takes to get an agreement. We still have to negotiate. It's
a business."
Rondo went on to say he
is happy with his current situation with the Celtics but didn't want to
speculate what could happen down the road.
"I
have an example," Rondo said. "Kevin Garnett, Ray Allen, those guys
gave all they had to those organizations. Kevin played with Minnesota
for [12] years, and he's in Boston now, so you can never say you want
to be in one particular place throughout your entire career because
general managers can change, coaches can change, you never know what
can happen."
Ole!
Posted by Jeff Howe, Oct. 31, 7:21 p.m.
The
Celtics and Bulls are about 45 minutes from tip-off tonight at the
Garden in a game between a pair of 1-0 teams. Aside from seeing how the
Celtics respond in a game without any emotional pregame distractions,
all eyes will be on No. 1 pick Derrick Rose, an extremely talented
point guard from the streets of Chicago and the University of Memphis.
I got to see Rose play last year during a trip to Memphis, and he's so
incredibly fun to watch.
He's
an imposing physical player who stands at 6-foot-3 and weighs 190
pounds, and he can jump out of the gym with his athletic ability. When
he plays defense, he's a bit like Rajon Rondo in the sense that he has
the basketball IQ to jump passing lanes and force turnovers.
Offensively, he seems to be a mix of Deron Williams and Chris Paul, a
guy who can score at will and distribute the ball to keep everyone
involved. Doc Rivers, a pretty solid point in his own day, compared
Rose's passing ability to Magic Johnson, LeBron James and John
Stockton. With that said, I can hear the employees in Springfield
clearing a space for Rose's Hall of Fame plaque.
Rondo
held court with the media for about 10 minutes earlier, and the brunt
of the questions involved the Celtics picking up his contract option
today. Scroll down two posts to get more details on that. I'll have a
little more on Rondo coming in a few minutes.
Top of the World
Posted by Jeff Howe, Oct. 28, 12:34 p.m.
I've
been getting through Peter May's new book, "Top of the World: The
Inside Story of the Boston Celtics' Amazing One-Year Turnaround to
Become NBA Champions." I expect to finish it at some point tomorrow or
Sunday, and I have to say, this is a must-read for all Celtics fans.
May had covered the Celtics for 25 years for the Hartford Courant and
Boston Globe, so his access to behind-the-scenes information is
top-notch. "Top of the World" mixes in the story of last season's
championship run with a number of anticdotes of Celtics history, and
there are a number of back stories every Celtics fan deserves to know.
I'd highly recommend spending the $25 to pick up this book.
Celtics pick up Rondo
Posted by Jeff Howe, Oct. 31, 12:24 p.m.
The
Celtics announced today they have picked up Rajon Rondo's contract
option for the 2009-10 season. He will make about $2.6 million next
season, a downright bargain for the 22-year-old point guard. Rondo is
making about $1.65 million this season, the eighth-highest salary on
the Celtics, behind Kevin Garnett ($24.75 million), Paul Pierce ($18
million), Ray Allen ($17.4 million), Kendrick Perkins ($4.1 million),
Brian Scalabrine ($3.2 million), Eddie House ($2.65 million) and Tony
Allen ($2.5 million).
Rondo will be
a restricted free agent after the 2009-10 season, and the Celtics can
retain him by offering him his qualifying offer of about $3.8 million.
If the Celtics don't offer him his qualifying offer (let's be serious,
he'll be here for a long time), Rondo would be an unrestricted free
agent, meaning he can sign with any team he chooses.
The Breakdown
Posted by Jeff Howe, Oct. 28, 11:30 p.m.
Analysis from tonight's Celtics victory against the Cavaliers in the season opener at the TD Banknorth Garden:
Ignore the first half:
There was an echo in the Celtics' locker room. They kept saying how
difficult it was to turn the switch from the emotional ceremony to the
actual game, and it hurt the Celtics early as a result. They were cold
from the floor, with two stretches in the first half in which they
missed at least five straight shots, and they only shot 40.5 percent
from the floor, including 0-for-9 from beyond the arc. Rajon Rondo's
foul trouble was a problem because the ball didn't move consistently on
the offensive end, and his presence was missed defensively, too.
Overall, they were probably lucky they only trailed 50-43 at the break.
Defense is key:
The Cavs scored 35 points in the second half, including a measly 13 in
the third quarter (when Paul Pierce scored 11 on his own). The Cavs
shot 14-for-36 (38.9 percent) from the floor in the second half and
turned it over 12 times, numbers that were all worse than what they put
up in the first half. Stemming from that, Doc Rivers pronounced, "Hey,
the Celtics are here."
C-Notes: Paul Pierce
averaged 35 points in the Celtics' last two home games against the Cavs
in the Eastern Conference semifinals, and he put up 27 tonight. ...
Zydrunas Ilgauskas continues to be a problem for the Celtics. The Cavs'
center had 15 points and eight rebounds, but he left them off the hook
by missing an open jumper -- one he usually makes -- late in the fourth
quarter. ... Speaking of letting the C's off the hook, LeBron James (22
points) took an ill-advised 3-pointer from the left corner with 1:37 to
play and the Cavs trailing 85-80. James was 0-for-4 from 3-point range
tonight and would have been much better off attacking the rim, where he
dominated tonight when he stayed aggressive. ... Leon Powe told a few
of us tonight in the locker room he was put in to punt during a junior
high school football game because he was booming the ball at practice.
Powe went on to kick the ball backwards, and the other team scored a
touchdown, ending his punting career.
Pierce leads the way
Posted by Jeff Howe, Oct. 28, 10:53 p.m.
The
Celtics held on for an intense, 90-85 win against the Cavs tonight in
the season opener. Paul Pierce was unstoppable in the third quarter and
scored a game-high 27 points. I'll have more in a bit.
These are the Celtics we've come to know
Posted by Jeff Howe, Oct. 28, 10:06 p.m.
The
Celtics looked a whole lot better in the third and have a 67-63 lead as
a result. Paul Pierce hit a pair of 3-pointers and dropped 11 on the
Cavs in the quarter to give him 25 for the game.
The Red Sox' ownership is here, along with Kevin Youkilis and Mike Lowell.
One
note I forgot to mention earlier: Sam Cassell, Billy Walker and J.R.
Giddens are the three Celtics who aren't active tonight.
One step behind
Posted by Jeff Howe, Oct. 28, 9:12 p.m.
The
Celtics aren't really playing as poorly as the score indicates, but
they still trail 50-43 at the half. They're moving the ball fairly well
on offense and getting a lot of open shots, but they can't knock
anything down. There hasn't been much of a flow to the game, mostly
because of the 23 personal fouls that have been called (14 on the
Celtics), which has made it difficult for either team to make much of a
run.
The Celtics have missed all
nine of their attempted 3-pointers, including four by Eddie House, and
Ray Allen missed his first five shots before scoring late in the second
quarter. Paul Pierce leads the way with a game-high 14 points.
Championship hangover
Posted by Jeff Howe, Oct. 28, 8:38 p.m.
The
Cavs jumped out to a quick lead, as the Celtics were probably a little
fat and happy after receiving their rings and going through that
emotional pregame ceremony. The Cavs led 28-22 after one, but the C's
looked a little better as the quarter went on, which differed greatly
from an early stretch in which they missed six straight shots, turned
the ball over twice and fell down by 10 points.
Early game notes
Posted by Jeff Howe, Oct. 28, 8:21 p.m.
The
Celtics are wearing championship edition uniforms, which look like
their traditional home whites but have a gold outline around the
letters and numbers. There is also a championship patch on the right
shoulder.
Rajon Rondo picked up two quick fouls (one offensive foul that was a shaky call), and Eddie House was the first off the bench.
Celtics celebrate in style
Posted by Jeff Howe, Oct. 28, 8:09 p.m.
Four
months of anticipation never felt so good for the Celtics, who just
collected their championship rings and rose the 17th banner to the
Garden rafters. Granted, this is the only time I've ever been a part of
something like this, but I can't imagine it being done any better.
After
a tribute video, a cast of Celtics legends -- John Havlicek, Jo Jo
White, K.C. Jones, Tommy Heinsohn and Bob Cousy -- paraded onto the
parquet while Queen's "We Are The Champions" blasted through the PA,
and Havlicek handed the Larry O'Brien Trophy to an emotional Paul
Pierce, who couldn't hold back his tears.
Scot
Pollard was the only former Celtic who returned for the ceremony, and
in true Pollard fashion, he was stuck on the wrong side of the court
when they called his name to collect his ring. Shortly after, the
Celtics rose the banner to U2's "Beautiful Day."
After
the starting lineups -- they're playing a new song this year, not
really a decision I agree with -- Pierce spent a couple minutes
addressing the crowd and thanked a number of people who have guided him
throughout his life, including his former high school coach and several
family members.
Introducing a new look
Posted by Jeff Howe, Oct. 28, 12:50 p.m.
We've
changed the font style a bit here at In the Paint for the start of the
2008-09 season, but that doesn't mean you'll be missing out on the same
great content (or that's what we hope to believe). If you're trying to
look up any of my old posts (such as yesterday's league predictions for
the upcoming season), you can click on the link below for all of my
archived content. If you've been reading the blog over the last month,
you've noticed I've added a post called "The Breakdown," which will
provide in-depth analysis following every home game and every
significant newsworthy item regarding the Celtics. If there's anything
else you'd like to see here at In the Paint, please send me an e-mail
at jeff.howe@metro.us. Thanks for coming back for a new season. Just
like last season, I'll do my best to add an extra dimension to the
city's coverage of the Boston Celtics.
Nice day for Ainge
Posted by Jeff Howe, Oct. 28, 11:19 a.m.
The
Boston Celtics announced today that they have promoted Celtics
Executive Director of Basketball Operations/General Manager Danny Ainge
to President of Basketball Operations. The team also announced
Ainge’s contract has been extended.
“Danny
has been a key part of building our World Championship team and
basketball program,” Boston Celtics Managing Partner and Co-owner
Stephen Pagliuca said in a statement. “He represents all that is the
best of Celtics Pride and we applaud his success.”
Ainge
was the 2007-08 NBA Executive of the Year and was named to the position
of Executive Director of Basketball Operations after the 2002-03
season. Ainge is currently in his sixth year in the position and his
14th overall with the organization.
“Danny
was visionary as he assembled the players who brought home our 17th
banner,” Managing Partner and CEO Wyc Grousbeck said in a statement.
“His work ethic, character and insight earned him Executive of the Year
and earned us a world title."