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Posts tagged: Nene

Morning Walkthrough: Bring on Lebron

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.

He doesn't look so bad, does he?

Chris Gasper, Boston Globe – “Essentially, what the Celtics have been presented is a do-over of the 2009 playoffs, but with Garnett a go and Cleveland standing in for Orlando. The team is virtually identical because the additions of Rasheed Wallace, Marquis Daniels, and Nate Robinson have had no impact. Last year, the Celtics were ousted in the second round by Orlando in seven games. If that happens at the hands of Cleveland this year, then their run has run its course, and they’re the 1991 Detroit Pistons, who coincidentally went 50-32, to LeBron’s Michael Jordan. We were hard on the Celtics because we expected so much of them, but now they’re in a position to finally fulfill those expectations. Bring on LeBron.”

Bill Livingston, Cleveland Plain Dealer – “Hopes will have to wait that the Big Shillelagh will immediately break out the whuppin’ stick on the Boston Celtics, who begin their second-round series with the Cavs Saturday night at The Q. It was Celtic reserve Glen “Big Baby” Davis whose perfectly legal play on the ball led to Shaq’s torn thumb ligament — and whose tugging on the thumb afterward was both repulsive and typical of the Celtics. After the Bulls had been sent to their rooms, O’Neal fielded questions about Davis’ play with blandness. The two do share a background of playing for LSU, but old college ties mean nothing now. ‘Nothing bothers me,’ said the Big Serenity. ‘I don’t think [that the play was dirty]. I’m just glad I got my thumbs back. You need your thumbs. Your thumbs are very, very important.’”

Julian Benbow, Boston Globe – “Jamison averaged 19.3 points in Cleveland’s five-game first-round series against the Bulls, and he took nearly a third of his shots from 3-point range (7 of 23). He was spelled by Varejao, the sixth-year power forward who plays as if he’s never heard of inertia, making a living off hustle plays and feasting on the Celtics during the regular season by being quicker to get to open spots on the floor. It’s a matchup problem for the Celtics’ big men, who will have to flip the switch from guarding the post to jumping out to the perimeter, chasing Cleveland’s pseudo-bigs. Glen Davis put it this way: ‘Imagine if you had to bump Shaq [coming off a pick-and-roll] and then close out on Antawn Jamison when he just hit two in a row. Or with Rashard Lewis, you’ve got to bump Dwight [Howard] and get out to Rashard and force him left instead of right. You’re closing out to him and he can make you do anything he wants to, really. You’ve just got to have a feel for the game and just got to have a will to do a lot of things out there on guys like that.’”

Mark Murphy, Boston Herald – “There is the Davis who made all of the hustle plays Tuesday night, from drawing two huge second-half charges on Dwyane Wade and Udonis Haslem to grabbing most of the big rebounds down the stretch. And then there’s the young player who is still a little too intoxicated by the memory of his game-winning 20-footer in last May’s Game 4 in Orlando. That’s the player who doesn’t always make the extra pass. But he seems to be coming around. ‘He’s just got to stay there,’ coach Doc Rivers said. ‘We tell all of our players this: ‘You don’t need a parade out there every game. You’ve just got to continue to play. And then your body will work when it’s all said and done. Then you can have the festivities.’ And that’s Baby in a nutshell. He is so talented, and his IQ is ridiculous. It really is. But he lets up at times. He starts thinking about what he’s done well, instead of just keep playing. And he’s a young kid still. That’s the maturity part that is growing. And I think it’s getting better and better. He has proven over the long haul, though, that in big games he tends to play well. He did it in college and he’s done it here.’”

Steve Bulpett, Boston Herald – “‘I’ve maintained that I like this team,’ Rivers said. ‘You know, when we were struggling, no one wanted to hear that. I got that. I understood that, but I knew what I had, and I knew that my goal was to get them healthy. And if that meant . . . you know, I didn’t want to lose games, but you had to take that risk during the regular season. We had to choose health over anything, and I understood that. The first thing Erik (Spoelstra, the Miami coach) said was, ‘Boy, you had a hell of a fight trying to keep these guys healthy.’ And I said, ‘It was brutal.’ But it was the right move. It was. I mean, you had to. That’s our only chance. So now we’re healthy, we’re rested and we’re ready.’”

A. Sherrod Blakely, CSNNE – “”You definitely had your doubts at times because of the inconsistent play, injuries just seem to be mounting and mounting,” said Pierce, who was sidelined for 11 games this season. But he’s not griping. In fact, he embraces those times as moments that showcased this team’s character and resiliency. ‘The losing teams tend to point the finger, go to the media, says this guy need to do this better or do that better,’ Pierce said. ‘And we never held grudges with one another.’ Kevin Garnett also addressed some of the struggles Boston has endured this season, and it’s impact on the team moving forward. ‘If you want something to happen, you have to gather everybody and it’s a group effort,’ Garnett said. ‘But if you want something to work, you have to actually grab everybody, get everybody on the same page and work towards that goal.’”

Paul Flannery, WEEI – “The Cleveland Cavaliers have the best record in the NBA and the best player in the world on their roster. Of course this was the exact same scenario for the Cavs last season, and they ultimately lost to Orlando conference finals. General manager Danny Ferry bolstered his team with additions big (Shaquille O’Neal and Antawn Jamison) and small (Anthony Parker, Jamario Moon) and found improvement from within in young forward J.J. Hickson. Noted Celtic killer Anderson Varejao had the best season of his career, Mo Williams continued to shoot over 40 percent from 3-point range, effectively ending the necessity for Daniel Gibson to get playing time, and Delonte West re-emerged as a key third guard. Then, there is LeBron James, who has shattered the best player in the league argument and seems poised to truly rule the world if he can deliver a championship to his hometown team before engaging in the most frenzied free-agent courtship the league has ever known. Ah, but the Celtics have other ideas.”

Jessica Camerato, WEEI – “‘My role since I’ve been here really hasn’t changed. I can just be a little bit more vocal now that I’ve been here for a while,’ Finley explained. ‘I just didn’t want to come here right away and be the loud mouth of the locker room. But now the guys feel a little more comfortable with me. I’m able to pull guys to the side, tell them different situations, especially in these playoff series that are important, not only to them, but to our team. And they’re listening and they’re being receptive, and that’s been good.’ The 37-year-old is happy to share the veteran wisdom he has accumulated over the last 15 years, and the C’s are just as happy to receive it. ‘Mike is big,’ said Ray Allen. ‘Most people don’t realize the things that he’s saying, just his advice, just some of the things that he says coming out of timeouts, coming to the bench. You can always tell he wants to win. Even though he came here later on in the season, he’s invested now in what we’re doing. So he’s always making sure, ‘Look for this, this is what’s going to go down,’ or, ‘Ray, you need to do this,’ or ‘Paul you need to make sure …’ So that’s great coming from the bench and you know that he’s fielding us more information so when we go out there, we’re prepared.’”

Charles F. Gardner, Milwaukee Journal Sentinel – “Keep counting ‘em out, all you National Basketball Association experts. These Milwaukee Bucks will just keep fighting to the end. The Atlanta Hawks found that out the hard way on Wednesday night in Game 5 of the teams’ Eastern Conference series, as the Bucks got off the mat to grab a stunning 91-87 victory at Philips Arena. The Bucks have won three straight games against the third-seeded Hawks while taking a 3-2 lead in the first-round series, and Milwaukee can eliminate Atlanta in Game 6, scheduled for Friday night at the Bradley Center. Bucks forward Ersan Ilyasova showed his trademark hustle while grabbing offensive rebounds, and Milwaukee went on a dazzling 14-0 run in the final 4 minutes to erase an 82-73 deficit and end the Hawks’ 14-game home winning streak. ‘This is by far the biggest win of the season,’ said Bucks guard John Salmons. ‘We’ve still got business to take care of, so we’ve got to stay with it.’”

Mark Bradley, Atlanta Journal-Constitution – “This was the Falcons blowing the lead against Danny White and Dallas in January 1981. This was Mark Wohlers hanging the slider to Jim Leyritz in October 1996. Only it wasn’t. It was worse. Those opponents were top-class. The Hawks just blew a 13-point lead and probably a playoff series to Milwaukee, which is a No. 6 seed missing its All-Star center. They trail 3-2 in a series they led 2-0. They face elimination on the road, a place they’ve won once in 11 tries over the past three postseasons. Yeah, theoretically they could still pull this out, but how can you win in the Bradley Center when you can’t hold a nine-point lead inside the final four minutes with the series lead on the line? How can you put this colossal choke — I hate that word, but it applies here — behind you? Up nine, and here’s what happened: Josh Smith missed a dunk by hitting the ball on the underside of the backboard; Jamal Crawford short-armed a layup, the first of his five misses down the stretch; the Hawks watched as Ersan Ilyasova grabbed every loose ball and Joe Johnson fouled out on a charge. Nine points up with 3:55 left, the Hawks saw the lead disappear in 116 seconds. I say again: One hundred sixteen seconds. There are no excuses for this game, this series. The team with the better players is the one with one foot out the exit door. The Bucks have two chances to win once. The Hawks are down to their final shot.”

Benjamin Hochman, Denver Post – “Help? Melo got it. Selfish? Not the Nuggets, at least not this night. Game 6? A reality. For one night, all was right with the Nuggets, who played poised and possessed Wednesday during a 116-102 victory over Utah at the Pepsi Center. Overcoming the loss of Nene because of a knee injury, Denver forced Game 6 to be played Friday in Salt Lake City, with the Jazz leading the first-round playoff series 3-2. A source familiar with the situation said the Nuggets are fearful Nene tore the ACL in his left knee. He is scheduled to have an MRI on Thursday.”

J.A. Adande, ESPN – “Not only did Anthony receive the assistance from his teammates he all but Bat-signaled for from the dais last Sunday, he delivered 25 points and 11 rebounds. He managed to involve his teammates without too much dropoff of his own from his 39-point, 11-rebound Game 4. Sure the point total declined, but the number of turnovers also went from nine to one. A team official told Anthony he was as proud of him as he’d ever been after this game. If the Nuggets are going to exit the playoffs, apparently their disappearance won’t be traced back to Anthony. He already double his double-double total from all of last playoffs (anyone else craving In-N-Out Burger after that sentence?). And he’s put up a better resistance to elimination. In Game 6 of the Western Conference Finals against the Lakers last season, in what turned out to be the finale of his breakthrough playoffs, Anthony scored 25 points but shot only 35 percent and grabbed two rebounds.”

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 29, 2010 | comments Comments Off

categories Anderson Varejao, Antawn Jamison, Anthony Parker, Atlanta Hawks, Boston Celtics, Carmelo Anthony, Cleveland Cavaliers, Danny Ferry, Denver Nuggets, Doc Rivers, Dwight Howard, Dwyane Wade, Erik Spoelstra, Ersan Ilyasova, Glen Davis, J.J. Hickson, jamal crawford, Jamario Moon, Joe Johnson, John Salmons, Josh Smith, Kevin Garnett, Lebron James, Marquis Daniels, Miami Heat, Michael Jordan, Mike Woodson, Milwaukee Bucks, Mo Williams, Nate Robinson, Nene, Paul Pierce, Rashard Lewis, Rasheed Wallace, Ray Allen, Shaquille O'Neal, Udonis Haslem, Utah Jazz

Highlight Reel: James Johnson, meet Lebron James

Imagine playing the first significant minutes of your postseason career. Now, imagine becoming the laughingstock of America by getting posterized by Lebron James. How much of a laughingstock? People wrote your obituary before the game was even over. No, seriously.

The life of James Johnson, Lebron’s latest victim. If you don’t mind watching murder, here’s the tape.

And a little bonus footage, courtesy of Nene.

categories Around the NBA, Celtics Blog, Featured, Highlight Reel of the Day | Jay King | April 20, 2010 | comments Comments Off

categories Highlight Reel of the Day, James Johnson, Lebron James, Nene

Doc: Celtics ‘a completely different team’

Its good to be a Celtic again. (AP Photo/Charles Krupa)

God Dayum!, has it been nice to see.  After I’d all but written off the Celtics for now and ever, they have rebounded and are probably starting to instill a little fear in the team’s ahead of them in the standings.

Just about every Celtic has decided to hop in the Way Back Machine and headed back to the beginning of the season, when they were smacking fools around and 72 wins seemed almost realistic.  But Paul Pierce is leading the way.

“The Paul Pierce that you saw out in Denver wasn’t the Paul Pierce that usually shows up to play,’’ he said. “I’ve battled through a lot of injuries this year and right now I’m as healthy as I’ve been all year.’’

It’s the difference a month makes. The Celtics, who pulled down eight offensive rebounds in Denver, grabbed 17 last night. Kevin Garnett, still regaining his form a month ago, put up 20 points, 10 rebounds, and 5 assists last night, looking like a version of himself five years ago. Rajon Rondo, who may have felt like he had to do it all a month ago, did a little bit of everything last night, putting together a triple-double (his second of the season) of 11 points, 11 rebounds, and 15 assists.

“It’s a completely different team,’’ coach Doc Rivers said. “All of them are different. They’re better, they’re healthier. They’re feeling better.’’

It’s true. The Celtics are a completely different — and better — team now, compared to two months ago, or two weeks ago, or any time between Christmas and the loss to the Cavs on March 14. They are contenders again, a team to be reckoned with, to be certain.

But I have a problem with saying Kevin Garnett looked like “a version of himself five years ago.” Last night, he was active, he grabbed a lot of rebounds, and he was clearly moving far better than he did for the months of misery this team experienced during the middle of the season. But to say he looked like the Kevin Garnett from five years ago is insane, hyperbolic, and wrong. Five years ago, he didn’t miss chippies in the lane because Nene’s defense affected his shot. Nene would have had to strain his neck looking up at Garnett as Garnett shot it effortlessly over Nene’s head. Five years ago, KG didn’t softly lay balls in when he was around the hoop. He furiously tomahawked them through.

Garnett looked good last night, he’s been faring a lot better as of late, and the Celtics don’t need him to be a super-duper-star anymore. But he’s not what he was five years ago, and he never will be. He had trouble last night finishing around the hoop, trouble he never used to, trouble that resulted in 8-20 shooting from the floor.

Don’t get me wrong. Garnett is playing well enough to win basketball games, a championship even. He just isn’t nearly playing at the level he did back when they called him Da Kid. And that’s not even a knock against him. Five years ago, KG was consistently called one of the three or four best players on the planet, and he averaged 22.2 points and 13.5 rebounds. He was smooth, he was athletic, he could shoot, he could rebound, and he was as good defensively as he was offensively. Da Kid was as complete a player as they come, so being unable to match up to what he used to be is no sin. Far from it, actually. At damn near 34 years old, and with more than 1,000 regular season games under his belt, nobody should expect KG to be the same. I think it’s our fault that we ever did.

Still, he’s giving the Celtics more and more every night, and he’s adjusting to the limitations of age, wear and tear. KG won’t slap a 25 and 15 every night anymore, but he is still putting his 7’0 tall, wiry imprint on every facet of the game.

And the Celtics, as a whole? They’re looking good. Damn good.

2008 good, almost.

categories Celtics Blog, Featured | Jay King | March 25, 2010 | comments Comments (2)

categories Boston Celtics, Doc Rivers, Kevin Garnett, Nene, Paul Pierce

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