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Posts tagged: Dorell Wright

Morning Walkthrough: Celtics looking to delete Heat

The Celtics have gotten rid of their morning walkthrough, but that doesn’t mean we have to. Here are a few Celtics links, and maybe even an NBA link or two, to help wake you up and get you focused for the day.

A Celtics win tonight all but deletes the Heat.

Julian Benbow, Boston Globe – “For the first time since the start of the season, the Celtics are trying to demoralize an opponent. The Heat are trying to figure out if they were the team they thought they were, having won 18 of 22 coming into the postseason. The Celtics are at a point where they can play a game without their star forward, knowing that his understudy feels no pressure filling his role. Miami is at a point where its star player can feel the load on his shoulders getting heavier and heavier, and even though he says he has faith in his teammates, he’s growing tired of answering for them. Going into Game 3 tonight in Miami, the Celtics are taking a ‘nothing is guaranteed’ attitude even though they’ve won all five meetings this season with the Heat. Miami finds itself in a “must-win’’ position against a team it hasn’t been able to beat. Both teams have their finger on the button. Boston’s says ‘delete.’ Miami’s says ‘panic.’”

Jeff Clark, CelticsBlog – “Despite being up 2-0, I think this game is very important to the Celtics. Not a “must win” (perhaps the most overused phrase in sports around playoff time) but an important game for momentum purposes. Give the Heat a win with their home crowd behind them and they might just gain enough confidence to take another win. Then they’re the ones with the momentum headed back to Boston and the script is flipped. Does anyone have enough confidence in this team’s mental fortitude after watching them limp home with a .500 record since Christmas?”

Michael Wallace, Miami Herald – Home hasn’t necessarily been comfortable for either team this season. Boston and Miami both finished 24-17, which was tied for the worst home record among 16 playoff teams. But the Heat has won 10 of its past 13 at home and hopes to ride its ‘Black is Back’ theme to victories Friday and Sunday to even the series. Still, it’s going to take more than friendlier confines to help rally against the Celtics, who have won 13 of the past 14 matchups between the teams. ‘Being at home helps a lot,’ Heat center Jermaine O’Neal said. ‘It helps to have that energy in the building that’s for you and not against you. But for this team right now, it doesn’t matter if we played in the sand in South Beach or wherever. We have to bring a different focus.’”

Gary Washburn, Boston Globe – “The frustrated Wade has taken to scoring binges because he has lost faith in his teammates. And although he won’t publicly admonish O’Neal, Michael Beasley, Udonis Haslem, and Dorell Wright, they know they have let him down. Those customary Haslem baseline jumpers have rimmed off, and he has not been the defensive or rebounding menace of years past. ‘We’ve got to play a whole game,’ he said. ‘We haven’t played a complete game against these guys yet and that’s the most disappointing thing about it. Looking at the film and seeing some of the mistakes that we made that are so uncharacteristic of how we play, you know it’s disappointing. I’m not going to sit here and say all the mistakes are our mistakes and [the Celtics] have nothing to do with it. Just because we miss shots doesn’t mean we have to go from down 2 to down 20.’”

Steve Bulpett, Boston Herald
– “‘We’re not spring chickens,’ [Doc Rivers] said. Therefore, if they go weary into a series with Cleveland, they will be dead ducks. But therein lies the neatly placed mousetrap. The Celtics must heed the need to prepare for an impending series with the Cavaliers, but they have to concentrate totally on the Heat to accomplish the goal. ‘Yeah, I’m not even going there, though,’ said Rivers, whose team holds a 2-0 lead in this first-round matchup. ‘I’m not even talking about another series. I just won’t. We’ve just got to focus on Miami, and whatever happens after that . . . Getting a series over with quick is good for everyone, honestly. But yeah, it would be helpful for us.’”

A. Sherrod Blakely, CSNNE – “Udonis Haslem remembers a playoff series not that long ago in which the Heat were down 2-0 and, by all accounts, presumed dead on arrival when they returned home. It was the 2006 NBA Finals when they rallied from a 2-0 series hole to win the best-of-seven series in six games over the Dallas Mavericks. ‘I’ve been here before,’ Haslem said. ‘I’m not rattled or anything like that. A little disappointed. I felt we had an opportunity to get one game. But we’re still confident. We understand it’s a long series.’ But it won’t be long if they lose on Friday night, a point that is not lost on Wade. ‘It’s a game we have win. There’s no question about it,’ Wade said. ‘If they win the ball game, that’s the toughest series in the world right there, trying to come back from 3-0. You have to keep the perspective that the series doesn’t start until someone wins on the other team’s court. So we have to come home and take care of our home court.’”

Ira Winderman, South Florida Sun-Sentinel – “While he continually stressed vigor and force after Thursday’s practice, Spoelstra said there would be an effort to draw more out of center Jermaine O’Neal and forward Michael Beasley, who have combined for 29 total points over the first two games. ‘We do need to have more involvement,’ Spoelstra said. ‘Guys need to be aggressive within the system, take plays off the ball movement. I think you’ll see Jermaine and Michael much more involved. It’ll be a concerted effort, also, on our part, to get them involved, but then for them to be aggressive and make the appropriate reads.’”

Chris Forsberg, ESPNBoston – “Celtics forward Rasheed Wallace has been fined $35,000 for publicly criticizing game officials in comments made to the media on April 19. The announcement was made Thursday by NBA executive vice president of basketball operations Stu Jackson.”

Scott Howard Cooper, NBA.com – ““I wish I had it to do all over again and, starting 20 years ago, I’d be suspending Phil and Pat Riley for all the games they play in the media,” Stern said in a press conference at the Ford Center moments before Game 3 of the Lakers-Thunder series. “You guys know that our referees go out there and knock themselves out to do the best job they can, but we’ve got coaches who will do whatever takes to work them publicly. And what that does is erode fan confidence and then you get some of the situations that we have. So our coaches should be quiet, because this is a good business that makes them good livings and supports a lot of families. And if they don’t like it, they should go get a job someplace else. I don’t mean to be too subtle. [Laughter] And I think that Phil’s a great coach. He’s a friend of many years. I just came by and said, ‘Hi.’ And he said, ‘I don’t like you today.’ I said, ‘I like you.’ But it’s corrosive. It’s corrosive. Because of the pressure cooker that is the NBA playoffs, over the years I’ve let it go. But when you hear the Chicago coach [Jackson] say, ‘Oh, this game was lost because NBC wants an extra game,’ you hear a New York coach [Riley] say, ‘Well, you know, what are you gonna do? Jordan gets all the calls,’ it sounds like a lot of fun, etcetera. Or you hear a Stan Van Gundy do what he wants to say and then the players join. We know, inside the community, what it’s meant to do. So, OK, it’s playoff time, everyone’s crazy. Back off. But if I had to do it again, I wouldn’t. I would stop it and the price wouldn’t be a modest $35,000 fine. It would be whatever a day’s pay is, and then two days pay, and then a week’s pay. And if someone wants to try me the rest of this playoffs, make my day. The game is too important and I don’t think that the people who trash it are respecting it, and we’ll do what we have to do. Players and coaches alike. They give the impression to our fans that referees somehow have an agenda. Yeah, they have an agenda – to knock themselves out to give the best calls that they can give, and then to send their checks home to their mothers and give the rest to charity.’”

Have a link I might want to look at? Send it my way by email (jayking@celticstown.com) or Twitter.

categories Celtics Blog, Featured, Morning Walkthrough | Jay King | April 23, 2010 | comments Comments Off

categories Boston Celtics, Cleveland Cavaliers, Doc Rivers, Dorell Wright, Dwyane Wade, Erik Spoelstra, Jermaine O'Neal, Miami Heat, Michael Beasley, Pat Riley, Phil Jackson, Udonis Haslem

Jermaine O’Neal blames himself for Boston’s good ‘D’

"Kendrick, just listen. Please listen. It's not you... it's me."

Jermaine O’Neal was careful not to give much credit to the Boston Celtics, even after the C’s defense limited Miami to only 10 fourth-quarter points in Saturday’s Game One. (NBA.com)

“More than anything, [Game 1] wasn’t necessarily about what they did,” O’Neal said. “It was more about what I allowed to happen. And that’s guys shading off me to go help on other guys. And that hasn’t happened in years. And I just absolutely just sat on the other side and let them do it. That’s one thing that I was really disappointed about when I looked at the film. And I can guarantee that won’t happen again.”

To be fair to Jermaine, he wasn’t the only player who the Celtics could afford to help off.  Michael Beasley only scored 6 points and two major bench contributors, Dorell Wright and Mario Chalmers, combined for only 13 points on 3-14 shooting.

“We had a lot of guys who weren’t aggressive,” [Dwyane] Wade said. “I thought we relied on me too much at times to make the plays and get into the paint, when [the Celtics] weren’t allowing me to do that at certain times.”

Was it really Jermaine O’Neal’s fault the Celtics played lockdown defense over the past 20 minutes or so of Saturday’s game?  Not entirely.  But Miami wouldn’t mind if the big fella shot better than 3-14 next game.

categories Celtics Blog | Jay King | April 19, 2010 | comments Comments Off

categories Boston Celtics, Dorell Wright, Dwyane Wade, Jermaine O'Neal, Mario Chalmers, Miami Heat

Celtics-Heat breakdown

I'm anxious for tonight. Which Celtics team will show up?

I’ve never been so confused heading into a postseason.  Should I have hope?  Should I have given up a long time ago? Do the Celtics have another gear? Will they lose in the first round?  Win a championship?  Somewhere in between?

Anything could happen tonight. Anything.  And that’s what makes watching sports so fun.

Here’s a breakdown of the first-round matchups.  Enjoy Game One tonight, at 8:00 p.m. ET.

Point Guard: Rajon Rondo vs. Carlos Arroyo

It’s a waste of my time to write why this is a mismatch.  Rondo is one of the most electric players in the NBA, while Arroyo is mediocre at best.  Rondo can lead his teams to victories, while the only thing Arroyo can lead his team in is prayer. Even if Rondo’s puking on the floor because of his illness, he should be able to run circles around Arroyo.

But there is a twist: Doc Rivers said he expects Rondo to be defended by Dwyane Wade.  Either way, no matter who’s defending Rondo — and I feel that way about any player in the league, not just the players Miami can offer — he should have his way so long as he stays aggressive.

Shooting Guard: Ray Allen vs. Dwyane Wade

Wade, simply put, is a monster.  He’s a beast, a creature, an animal, whatever you want to call him.  The Celtics will not be able to stop him, no matter who they throw at him. Ray could play terrific defense and still get torched.  Ray’s job will be to contain Wade, make things difficult, and hopefully limit him to 30 ppg or so.    Against Wade, that’s all you can ask for.

On the other end, if Ray gets hot he has the ability to switch a series on its side.  When Ray drains three-balls left and right, the Celtics are a different team, a better team.  Of course, Ray usually gets hot when the Celtics are playing their best.  It’s like a chicken-or-the-egg type thing. But I don’t care what comes first; I just want to hear the sweet sound of Ray’s jumper splashing through the bucket, time after time.

Small Forward: Paul Pierce vs. Quentin Richardson

This is where the Celtics have their biggest advantage.  Richardson couldn’t hold Pierce’s jock strap if someone laid it in his hand.  Not that he’d want to, anyway, but still.  If Pierce is healthy, and his recent output says that he is, he should murder Richardson.  On the other end, Richardson won’t be much of a threat.

Power Forward: Kevin Garnett vs. Michael Beasley

The single most important matchup in the series. If Garnett was 2008 Garnett, this would be no contest.  Not only would Garnett score at will, but Beasley wouldn’t do anything all series.  Unfortunately, this is 2010, and Garnett’s a shell of his former self.  Beasley is now tough for Garnett to keep up with, because Beasley has speed to take advantage of KG’s ever-dwindling mobility.

Still, Garnett should be able to score over Beasley at will.  If Garnett is aggressive in the post, this is a matchup that should really favor him.  Beasley doesn’t have the height or defensive chops to stick with an aggressive KG.

Center: Kendrick Perkins vs. Jermaine O’Neal

Neither of these guys will get much offense run for them.  Both are there for height, defense, and rebounding.  Perkins, surprisingly, has killed the Heat so far this season, but Doc Rivers and Perk both attribute that to the Heat helping off Perk and not the matchup. This matchup should be a wash.  Neither guy will light the world on fire, but both will be solid.

Bench:

The Celtics are deeper and vastly more talented.  On paper, that is.  On the court, their Heat counterparts might have outplayed them.  Udonis Haslem is a good sixth man, Dorell Wright is starting to come into his own, and Joel Anthony, well, takes up space.   For the Celtics, inconsistency is the name of the game.  And someone needs to tell Sheed, “Playoffs don’t lie.”

The Verdict:

The Heat don’t have enough to take down Boston.  Not in four games out of seven, not in the playoffs.  Dwyane Wade is an unstoppable force, but doesn’t have enough help to take down the Celtics, no matter how old and ragged they have looked.  The Celtics may not have a flip to switch, but won’t need it against Miami.

Celtics in 6

categories Celtics Blog, Celtics Columns, Featured | Jay King | April 17, 2010 | comments Comments Off

categories Boston Celtics, Carlos Arroyo, Dorell Wright, Dwyane Wade, Jermaine O'Neal, Kendrick Perkins, Kevin Garnett, Miami Heat, Michael Beasley, Paul Pierce, Quentin Richardson, Rajon Rondo, Ray Allen, Udonis Haslem

The perils of Miami’s South Beach

South Beach, oh South Beach. No, not the diet — one of the most fun areas in the world, according to everyone who has gone there. South Beach is all about girls, booze, drugs, and more girls, booze and drugs. I asked an acquaintance of mine about South Beach after he returned, and all he could talk about was the purest cocaine he’d ever laid eyes on. I’m not condoning that, and I have never done cocaine in my life; I’m simply trying to paint a picture of South Beach. It’s crazy, out-of-control, sins-and-lawlessness-occurring-everywhere fun.

Unfortunately, it’s also in Miami. Which is fine, unless your favorite basketball team will be playing a playoff series there. On the court, the Miami Heat are all Dwyane Wade, with an improving but nonetheless mediocre supporting cast. But, aside from Wade’s potential to drop 40 points all series long, there is also that perilous South Beach to worry about. (Boston Herald)

Already the nightlife area is being called perhaps the toughest matchup in the series beyond Wade.

“Man, South Beach isn’t just the sixth man,” cracked Marquis Daniels. “It’s like the sixth, seventh and eighth man.”

In Miami’s case, the real sixth, seventh and eighth men are Udonis Haslem, Dorrell Wright and Mario Chalmers. If Daniels is comparing South Beach to them, maybe it isn’t so bad after all.

categories Celtics Blog | Jay King | April 15, 2010 | comments Comments Off

categories Boston Celtics, Dorell Wright, Dwyane Wade, Mario Chalmers, Marquis Daniels, Miami Heat, Udonis Haslem

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