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Posts tagged: Wilt Chamberlain

Menino endorses bringing the NBA All-Star Game to Boston

Thirty-seven years after Boston last hosted an NBA All-Star game, Mayor Thomas Menino stated his desire to bring the NBA’s most worthless exhibition back to Bean Town. (Boston Globe)

“We haven’t had it since ’64 and I think we’re ready for it,’’ Menino said. “We have new ownership, new enthusiasm, the fan base out here for it, and I just think we have the facility and everything ready to go.

“I hope that the NBA makes the decision in the near future to bring the All-Star Game to our city.’’

The city has not hosted an All-Star game since 1964, when Bill Russell, Sam Jones and Tommy Heinsohn represented the Celtics for the Eastern Conference. The East prevailed by a 111-107 score and the MVP honors went to Oscar Robertson, who, not very surprisingly, posted a near-triple double. The Western Conference All-Stars featured Jerry West, Wilt Chamberlain, Elgin Baylor, and a lesser-known player named Don Ohl who was nicknamed Waxie due to his crew cut. In case you were wondering.

The Celtics will need to complete a formal proposal to bring the game back to Boston. The large financial commitment has been a barrier keeping many teams from hosting the event. The NBA also tends to host All-Star Games in warm climates, and Boston in February doesn’t exactly have beach weather. But according to the Boston Globe, Wyc Grousbeck said the Celtics are interested in joining the rotation.

“The Celtics would have to be the applicant for it, and as a city, I would endorse the idea,’’ Menino said. “As a city, I would endorse the idea of bringing it here with the Convention Center folks, get all the entities in our city working together to make sure the All-Star Game is a first-class game that people participate in and neighbors could participate. I just think it’s long overdue.

“The change in ownership, the change of attitudes, the change of spirit in our city – I look forward someday to having the NBA All-Star Game here and I hope the Celtics in the very near future make the application for it.’’

Now is my turn to play Debbie Downer. Not about the Celtics hosting the All-Star Game — that would be cool, I guess — but about the All-Star Game itself.  It’s about as captivating as the movie Gigli.

Maybe I’m in the minority for loathing the All-Star game. I’m sure some fans fall in love with off-the-backboard slams, alley-oops with no defenders in sight, and the same amount of defense as a criminal who pleads guilty. Surely, some people enjoy 155-147 scores, wide open shots on every possession, and the spectacle of 24 of the world’s best physical specimens sharing the same court. When I articulate it that way, it doesn’t sound so bad.

But the All-Star Game could be so much better. Imagine if the players actually cared about who won or lost. Then you would have Kevin Durant fighting for bragging rights against Lebron, Chris Paul hounding Derrick Rose around pick-and-rolls, Kobe Bryant trying to school Dwyane Wade, Dwight Howard banging down low with Pau Gasol and Amare Stoudemire attempting to dunk on Blake Griffin’s dome piece (not to mention vice versa, which could very well be even more exciting).

The caliber of play in the All-Star game — if all the players would just play their hardest — would be high enough to make fans forget about the lack of off-the-backboard dunks. Perhaps each All-Star game could even approach the legendary scrimmages of the original (and only) Dream Team.

The New York Times wrote a story of one such scrimmage, when Magic Johnson’s team leaped to a 14-2 lead before Johnson accidentally turned Michael Jordan’s competitive juices into overdrive.

Johnson told Jordan he needed to “get into his show” or the scrimmage was over.

“I don’t know why I said it,” said Johnson. “Michael just kind of took over for the next five minutes.”

Times writer Harvey Araton wrote, “A few dunks and jump shots later, the score was close and a riotous battle ensued, with no player or official immune to the baiting and the taunting. According to Johnson, there were titillating subplots to this theater, including Barkley mano-a-mano with Malone, Ewing with Robinson and so on.

” ‘It was like, Charles went down and dunked on Malone, and they said, ‘You can’t let him do that to you,’ and they gave the ball right to Malone, and he went down and, boom, turnaround jumper, and then Michael came down on me for a 3-pointer, and then I went down and scored on him!’ said Johnson, all in one breath.”

Charles Barkley called that scrimmage something you didn’t realize you enjoyed until later. Johnson called it probably as much fun as the actual Olympics. The players were so competitive, in part, because they had been disappointed by a 40-point win in an exhibition game against Italy — and in part, I guess, because the Dream Team players were the type of people who would drive a Maybach straight into a wall if it would help them win a Jenga game.

With the amount of talent in today’s NBA, what if every All-Star game became a “riotous battle” like that Dream Team scrimmage? What if, instead of becoming a barrage of uncontested dunks, the All-Star Game became 24 players deeply focused on winning, 24 players talking trash and trying to one-up each other and actually attempting to play defense?

I understand why All-Stars take it easy — fear of injury, desire for a bit of rest during a long season, parties and after-parties that probably leave more than a few All-Stars hungover or at least not feeling 100%. I am not naive enough to believe any of that will ever change.  But that doesn’t stop me from salivating whenever I close my eyes and imagine what a fierce, tightly-contested All-Star Game would look like.

P.S. — That last sentence was very over-dramatic. I don’t actually close my eyes and imagine fierce, tightly-contested All-Star Games, nor would I salivate if I did. That would be kind of strange.

categories Celtics Blog, Featured | Jay King | September 4, 2011 | comments Comments (1)

categories Bill Russell, Boston Celtics, Charles Barkley, Don Ohl, Elgin Baylor, Jerry West, karl malone, Larry Bird, Magic Johnson, Oscar Robertson, Patrick Ewing, Sam Jones, Tommy Heinsohn, Wilt Chamberlain, Wyc Grosubeck

On this day in Celtics history: Bill Russell’s unique contract

After hearing this, I’m thinking about holding out. My brother and I split all Celtics Town money evenly but I’m trying to get an extra dollar. Sorry, guys. Until someone forks over an additional 100 pennies, I’m not writing any more posts. It’s been real, though. I’ve enjoyed my run.

categories Celtics Blog | Jay King | August 25, 2010 | comments Comments Off

categories Bill Russell, Boston Celtics, Wilt Chamberlain

Afternoon Walkthrough: Jerry West sipping on some Kobe Kool-Aid

Normally we only do the Morning Walkthrough. But this is the Finals, damn it!, and there’s quite a bit of increased coverage today. I can’t write individual posts about ALL the great articles today, can I?

1. Jerry West is drinking some serious Kobe Kool-Aid. Wouldn’t you just love if the Celtics made West do a 180? (Sports Radio Interviews, via FoxSports Radio)

“He’s playing the best basketball I have ever seen him play to be honest with you. When he shoots shots a lot of people would probably think they are bad shots. For him, he is not only creative, but he is a shot maker. Some people are creative, but they’re not shot makers. He can make tough shots. He just seems to will the ball in the basket. I’ve never seen him play better… At this time of year, people talk about adjustments that people make. The adjustments that people make are not really the telling part of it. Your great players, this is their time to shine. You can’t really run your offense. After the first couple of games, everyone will be waiting on everyone. The team that has the best ability to beat people off the dribble and be creative will be successful. There’s no better player that I’ve ever seen than him… He’s the greatest Laker player that we have ever seen.”

2. Jason Whitlock isn’t sipping on the same Kool-Aid as West. (Fox Sports)

Now Jerry West starts popping off his mouth. Now I have a vested interest in Paul Pierce, Kevin Garnett, Ray Allen and Rajon Rondo stopping Kobe from getting his fifth title, which would give The Closer the same number of rings as Magic. Now I may be forced to crank out a few more vicious columns lambasting Bryant and ridiculing anyone who lumps the moody gunner in the same category as Magic and Larry.

Damn it. All of my unfair negative energy has been directed at LeBron James.

Jordan and Bird’s assault on Magic’s place in history transpired in two different decades. I hated Bird in the ‘80s and Jordan in the ‘90s. My hatred of Iverson peaked in the first half of the ‘00s.

I don’t need the hassle of disparaging two NBA legends during the first half of the ‘10s. I’ll risk sounding like a cranky old man who believes everything was better in the old days.

I need the Celtics to get Kobe off my lawn!

3. I’m still trying to find out what “choking in a good way” means. (Marc Spears, Yahoo!)

“Everyone wants to choke [Rondo] at times,” Celtics center Kendrick Perkins said, “but in a good way.”

The Celtics say Rondo has matured this season. And while he hasn’t stopped talking, his play also has spoken volumes.

“He might be the most arrogant guy on our team, and nobody really knows,” Perkins said. “He has a fiery edge. That’s always been him in a good way. Really, when he gets on the court he thinks he’s the best player on the court.”

Said Rondo: “I’m strong-willed. I’m a leader more than a follower. If I disagree with something, I’m going to say or voice my opinion. That’s just how I am. Either you like it, or you don’t.”

4. Kobe wants more and more titles, and he doesn’t think the Lakers’ ’08 team was good enough. (Adrian Wojnarowski, Yahoo!)

The biggest thing for Bryant now: Don’t leave titles on the table. Gobble them all. That’ll be his biggest regret. Bryant and the Lakers have the Celtics again now, a chance for vindication over that 39-point obliteration to end the ’08 Finals. Jerry West never beat the Celtics, nor did Wilt Chamberlain, Elgin Baylor. For all the discussion about Bryant chasing Jordan as the greatest player in history, remember this: In Los Angeles, some will always consider Magic Johnson the greatest Laker of all. Jerry West says it’s Kobe, but that’s a debate that’ll swing Bryant’s way once he takes down the Celtics, too.

As for two years ago, Bryant says simply, “We were just not good enough. That team we had was just not good enough. We had players who were skilled, but we couldn’t match up with them. I mean, they chumped us. They played tougher than us. They wanted it more. And on top of all that, they were just better.”

5. The origins of the Beat L.A. chant. (Boston Globe)

You’ll be hearing the simple yet powerful “Beat LA!, Beat LA!, Beat LA!” battle cry all over New England now that the Celtics-Lakers rivalry has been renewed for the Finals.

For most fans, the chant is reminiscent of the playoff games in the old Boston Garden in the 1980s, when Magic Johnson squared off against Larry Bird and the Celtics and Lakers dominated the NBA.

But that’s not when the chant took off in Boston. It actually started as a chant supporting the Philadelphia 76ers.

With 26 seconds to go in Game 7 of the 1982 Eastern Conference finals at the old Garden and the Sixers pulling away from the soon-to-be ex-champs, the crowd began to chant the now-famous phrase. Philadelphia, after all, would be facing the hated Lakers in the NBA Finals.

6. Kobe Bryant will spend time defending Rajon Rondo this series… but for entirely different reasons than he did in 2008. (Kevin Arnovitz, TrueHoop)

Phil Jackson said Wednesday that he expects Bryant to spend some time guarding Rondo. In 2008, the rationale for this assignment is the freedom it affords Bryant to use his instincts as an untethered ad hoc defender in the half court. The Lakers challenge Rondo to shoot as close as 15 feet and to finish at the rim against Odom. Rondo doesn’t fare well. His mechanics are jerky and when he’s able to break through the defense and get to the paint, he rushes his finishes.

Two years later, Bryant will get the defensive assignment for entirely different reasons. Rondo has emerged as the rudder of the Celtics’ offense. His penetration, orchestration of the pick-and-roll and playmaking — even in a crowded half court — generates dozens of quality looks for the Celtics per game. Rondo is also infinitely more confident as a shooter and finisher. Defensively, Rondo is the head of the snake for Boston. His lanky limbs and ability to deny entry passes help snarl the flow of opposing offenses and make it that much easier for the rest of the Celtics to crowd the paint.

7. And lastly, my least favorite picture of the day. I know — I just know! — Thibodeau either spit on his hand or failed to wash it after his previous poop or something. (Via Ball Don’t Lie)

categories Celtics Blog, Morning Walkthrough | Jay King | June 3, 2010 | comments Comments Off

categories Boston Celtics, Jason Whitlock, Jerry West, Kendrick Perkins, Kobe Bryant, Larry Bird, Los Angeles Lakers, Michael Jordan, Phil Jackson, Rajon Rondo, Tom Thibodeau, Wilt Chamberlain

Rajon Rondo no basketball historian

The other day, Rajon Rondo became only the third player in history to accumulate 29 points, 18 rebounds and 13 assists in a playoff game.  The other two?  Wilt Chamberlain and Oscar Robertson.  Of course, by now you probably already know that.

What you might not know is that Rajon Rondo couldn’t appreciate being in the company of the two all-time greats — Rondo wasn’t much of a basketball historian when he was younger.  From the sound of it, wasn’t much of a student either. (Boston Globe)

“I didn’t grow up watching basketball,’’ he said. “Never did my homework or history or all that stuff. For me to see that on ESPN, my name and Wilt, it’s definitely an honor and a compliment but maybe I don’t understand the magnitude of what I did. Right now I’m just trying to win the series.’’

The Celtics tied their Eastern Conference series with the Cavaliers at two games apiece.

“I didn’t want to have a game like that and then lose,’’ Rondo said. “That’s the worst feeling I’ve had. Had a triple-double and then lost. It’s like, ‘What more can you do to help your team win?’ But when you do that and then win, it’s like you did it all.

“You can do all that and still lose. If Tony Allen didn’t play the way he played, Kevin [Garnett], Paul [Pierce] made the dunk . . . It reminds you it’s a team game.’’

It’s a team game, yes, but Rondo’s performance was one for the ages. It’s a shame he can’t understand the full magnitude of his own greatness.

categories Celtics Blog | Jay King | May 11, 2010 | comments Comments (4)

categories Oscar Robertson, Rajon Rondo, Wilt Chamberlain

Morning Walkthrough: Celtics primed for quick elimination?

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.

Lebron is tough, but the Celtics have to offer SOME resistance. Right?

Gary Washburn, Boston Globe – “Boston was good enough to go 5-2 in its first seven playoff games and an argument can be made that the Celtics could have been 7-0. But no case can be made for last night’s effort because the Celtics played to lose. They were foolish enough to believe that TD Garden would provide a distinct advantage — it didn’t during the regular season — and last night was eerily reminiscent of the 108-88 drubbing by Cleveland here Feb. 25. Cavaliers coach Mike Brown astutely ripped into his team following Game 2, blaming everybody for the loss except Craig Ehlo. And that put his team on edge and on alert. So now the onus is on the Celtics to retaliate or fold, and Game 3 exemplified how quickly the mental edge can change in a playoff series. Two days ago the Celtics were back to their 2008 ways. Now they are a bunch of old guys who exhausted themselves with their Game 2 victory and are primed for quick elimination.”

Julian Benbow, Boston Globe – “‘You’ve got to know that the Cleveland Cavaliers are going to come out here with all the urgency in the world,’ said Paul Pierce. ‘It was embarrassing to tell you the truth. It’s embarrassing when you lose at home like that.’ From the time he swooped in for a reverse layup to make it 8-2 in the first quarter, James cashed in from wherever he wanted. Fadeaways from 18 feet. Pull-ups from 19 and 22 feet. He twisted around the rim and went 180 degrees for a dunk that made it 34-14 in the first quarter as the Cavaliers beat the Celtics until their offense went numb. When Michael Finley hit a 3-pointer in the second quarter that seemed to snap the Celtics out of their daze, James answered with a 25-foot hush-up three that knocked them right back into that stupor. The Celtics’ defense wasn’t an obstacle. ‘I didn’t think we gave [James] any resistance,’’ Rivers said. “He was playing H-O-R-S-E.’ James went on a 21-point first-quarter scoring spree, while the Celtics’ offense stood frozen. Pierce, Ray Allen, and Kevin Garnett were a collective 2 for 10 in the quarter. The Celtics fell into a 36-17 hole. ‘I think we just let our guard down,’ said Pierce. ‘They took the fight to us early and we didn’t respond.’”

Brian Windhorst, Cleveland Plain Dealer – “Doubt. For three days and three nights [Lebron James] drank it in, the Cavaliers being branded in serious danger because James and his teammates had a single bad playoff game last Monday night. Then Friday he spit it out in another masterpiece for his playoff files, exploding for a huge and mostly painless performance to put the Cavs back in control of their conference semifinal series with the Boston Celtics. Setting the example early that he was fine — for his teammates as much as the curious national audience — James scored 21 of his 38 points in the first quarter and the Cavs were off to 124-95 thrashing of the Celtics. It was a historical thrashing as the Cavs set new team playoffs records for points and field-goal percentage, which finished at a sizzling 59.5 percent. ‘We had three days to sit and feel the pressure and then bounce back,’ James said. ‘Rest helped me and we were able to have a complete game.’”

Christopher Gasper, Boston Globe – “There is no way that after the hurtin’ James put on the Celtics last night he or Cleveland can point to The Elbow as a caveat for the Cavaliers in this series. It would be nothing less than the height of hoops hypocrisy to do so, especially after the LeBrons embarrassed the Celtics, 124-95, in Game 3 of this Eastern Conference semifinals series to take a 2-1 lead. No one had ever handed the Celtics a worse home playoff loss, not Michael Jordan, not Julius Erving, not Wilt Chamberlain. None of them had hip-hop and R&B royalty on hand to watch such a rout either — James had pal Jay-Z and Beyonce cheering him on from the first row, with the rapper sporting camouflage shorts. Jay-Z has a song called “Takeover,’’ and that’s exactly what James did. Nothing could camouflage the fact that ’Bron wasn’t hampered by the bad ’bow. Forget another MRI, all you had to do was watch the first quarter and look at the final stat sheet. It was a typical transcendent performance from King James, who turned the TD Garden into his court with 38 points (on 14 of 22 from the field), 8 rebounds and 7 assists in 39 minutes of work. ‘I think he’s healthy,’ deadpanned Celtics coach Doc Rivers. ‘His elbow looked very good tonight, so enough with the elbow injury. I think he’s healthy now, and now we can go ahead and everybody can just focus on basketball.”

Chris Broussard, ESPN – “It ticked him off. All of it. The questions about his toughness when it was falsely reported that he might need three MRIs for his strained right elbow. The disregard for his team’s splendid 61-win regular season, after one bad loss. The idea that The King was buckling under pressure, overemphasizing his injury to create a convenient excuse for potential failure. Well, now we know what LeBron James — the media-friendly, quick-to-laugh, nice-guy superstar — plays like when he’s mad. He blocks shots with such abandon that it leaves a 6-foot-9-inch, 290-pound former football player sprawled out on the floor. He pours in points in every conceivable way, outscoring a team full of future Hall of Famers by himself. He makes a Big Three, Gigantic Four, or whatever cute nickname folks give his opponents, look infinitesimal, smaller than the lion’s face on his signature sneakers.”

Chris Forsberg, ESPNBoston – “Here’s what the Boston Celtics have to look forward to on Saturday: Reliving the entire 2-hour and 33-minute nightmare that was Friday’s Game 3 loss to the Cleveland Cavaliers all over again on video. Cruel and unusual punishment? Probably. Scarier than the latest edition of “Nightmare on Elm Street”? Most definitely. Kevin Garnett and the Celtics have a lot to reflect on after Friday night’s stinker at the Garden. But the way Doc Rivers sees it, the Celtics can’t just forget what happened and move on. ‘You don’t throw it out because, defensively, I don’t think there’s a lot of changing we have to do, but we do have to do it harder, better,’ said Rivers. ‘We have to do it and be on the same page. So, videowise, they need to see it. They need to see how they moved and how we moved. And then if there are adjustments, we can make them.’”

Steve Bulpett, Boston Herald
– “Embarrassing, yes. Unexpected? Based on the full season’s evidence, no. The Celts had seemed to shake off the malaise that ran through them in the regular season like an antibiotic-resistant illness. The playoffs were the different story, they promised. They had a bad game against Miami and a bad quarter and a half against Cleveland, but there was nothing to portend the swan dive from the rafters to the parquet last night. Or maybe there was. ‘You could see it early,’ said Doc Rivers. Or earlier. ‘I thought we had two lousy practices,’ he said. ‘I thought our preparation was pulling nails. And, so, that was the result.’”

Chris Forsberg, ESPNBoston – “When a player puts up 18 points and 8 assists, it’s hard to say the opposing team shut him down. But considering the way Celtics point guard Rajon Rondo devoured the Cavaliers in the first two games of this series, Cleveland was overjoyed with the job it did against Boston’s spark plug. The Cavaliers employed Anthony Parker, who — deservedly or not — earned much of the praise for slowing Rondo in the second half of Game 1, to pressure Rondo off the inbound and it at least slowed down Boston’s speed point guard a bit. ‘Obviously, he was kind of picking us apart offensively, and it was something that [Parker] suggested,’ said Cavaliers coach Mike Brown. ‘He said, ‘I am going to pick him up, work the ball some and see what happens.’ I said, ‘Great.””

Ron Borges, Boston Herald – “This is the kind of night it was for the Celtics. They shot 60 percent in the second quarter and lost ground to the Cavaliers in Game 3 of the Eastern Conference semifinals. Of course, by then why not? They’d already lost the game. You go down to the Cavs by 22 points at halftime you do so at your own peril. Hell, you go down 22 to the Nets at halftime you do so at your own peril. Go down 22 at halftime to the Cavs and you go home, which is what the C’s did last night. Actually, no they didn’t. They never came to the Garden in the first place.”

Peter May, ESPNBoston – “No one expects Pierce to match LeBron basket for basket or to smother him defensively. But what was a pretty good matchup two years ago — remember the epic Game 7 Pierce delivered — has turned into a one-man show. James had outscored the entire Celtics team by the time Pierce made his first exit with 3:15 left in the first quarter, having missed all five of his shots. It was a trend that would continue throughout, ending only when the final horn sounded and the Cavaliers had a stunning 124-95 victory and a 2-1 lead in the series. Paul Pierce and his teammates watch the closing moments of Friday’s Game 3 debacle against the Cavaliers. Pierce didn’t exactly dazzle against Miami, but he was good enough (19.6 ppg) and shot well enough (45.7 percent) to be a factor. He was instrumental in turning around Game 1 with an 11-point third quarter and then knocked down the game winner at the end of Game 3. He started out strong in this series, connecting on four of his first five shots. Since then? He has made only 9 of 37 shots. He was 4-of-15 in Game 3. In only two of the 12 quarters in this series has Pierce made more than one basket. In three of the quarters, he has pitched a shutout. He finished with 11 points in Game 3 and is averaging a Kendrick Perkins-like 12.7 points and shooting an un-Piercelike 31 percent from the field. Not to belabor the point, but the estimable James is averaging 32.3 points a game and shooting 54 percent. He had 38 in Game 3, with 21 of them coming in the first quarter. Celtics coach Doc Rivers rarely calls out a player. Probably the harshest thing Rivers will ever say about anyone is that the certain individual has to play better. And that is exactly what Rivers said about Pierce after the Game 3 debacle.”

Mark Murphy, Boston Herald – “The captain, who scored 11 points on 4-for-15 shooting in last night’s 124-95 Game 3 loss, has shot just 13-for-42 (31 percent) in the series. ‘He’s got to get more involved,’ coach Doc Rivers said of Pierce. ‘He’s got to play better. And defensively, as a group, we have to help him more (against Cavaliers star LeBron James). And then Paul has to get into LeBron more. It’s a combination.’ Pierce had a slightly different view of the situation. ‘It doesn’t matter what I do offensively, individually,’ Pierce said. ‘I could have scored 30 tonight and we would have lost, the way we played defense. The focus is not on me to score 20 or 30 points. Obviously I’ve got to shoot the ball a lot better. Get into my spots and do a better job at that. But it’s not about one person. We played well the first two games and I still haven’t had a big game. So that’s nothing I’m worried about. I know it’s going to come as the series goes on. And it’s just about being in the situation.’”

Dan Duggan, Boston Herald – “‘We need to understand that we have to play with a little more sense of urgency from the start,’ James said. ‘We did tonight. We didn’t wait to be down, we didn’t wait until we got up. Once we got up, we just kept the pedal down.’ It’s James’ foot on the gas for the Cavs and he has no plans on letting up. ‘We haven’t had consistent play all playoffs, but we’ve played well enough to win,’ James said. ‘We don’t just want to play well enough to win.’ As for that headline-grabbing elbow, James did his best to downplay the issue. ‘I think it was much bigger than what it was, but I think that’s what happens sometimes in the whole media circuit,’ James said. ‘But it didn’t bother me at all. I wasn’t tired of hearing about it. I didn’t really focus on it that much. My only focus was on Game 3, just having a whole (turnaround) of what we did in Game 2.’”

Art Garcia, NBA.com – “Steve Nash and Dragic had a case of role reversal in the fourth. Phoenix starters, including Nash, normally begin the final period on the bench, and Alvin Gentry prefers to ride his reserves to the 6-minute mark if possible. Nash probably didn’t have to go back into Game 3, as Dragic single-handedly knocked San Antonio out. Nash played cheerleader as Dragic dropped-stepped, scooped, slipped by and stung the Spurs. ‘It was beautiful,’ Nash beamed. ‘I didn’t think I would have to go back in.’ The Spurs would have taken an early sub. Dragic and Leandro Barbosa, another original San Antonio draftee dealt to Phoenix in a prearranged deal, began the fourth in the backcourt. Together, they began the onslaught before Dragic etched his name in playoff lore. The second of his four fourth-quarter 3-pointers opened it all up. Set in the corner, he brought the ball up through George Hill’s outstretched arms and heaved a two-handed push at the basket. Count it. ‘I didn’t expect the shot to fall, I was just going for the foul,’ Dragic said. ‘After that shot, the rim was huge.’ The shots kept falling and the Spurs’ deficit kept growing. Down as much 18 in the first half, the Suns were up as many as 16 in garbage time. Dragic played the entire fourth quarter, scoring 23 of his 26 two nights after offering up a goose egg in Game 2. Gentry told Dragic to stay aggressive and not worry about making mistakes. Nash’s apprentice felt his confidence grow with each basket. ‘I don’t know how many guys in the history of the game that have had a fourth quarter like that,’ Nash said. ‘It was pretty remarkable. I am incredibly proud of him.’ Those 23 rung familiar with Kerr, who also made sure to take photos with his BlackBerry of Dragic engrossed in the locker room media scrum. ‘Other than MJ, I don’t remember anybody doing something like that in a huge game under pressure, especially a young kid,’ Michael Jordan’s former teammate said. ‘It’s ridiculous.’”

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 | May 8, 2010 | comments Comments Off

categories Alvin Gentry, Boston Celtics, Cleveland Cavaliers, Doc Rivers, Goran Dragic, Julius Erving, Kendrick Perkins, Kevin Garnett, Lebron James, Michael Jordan, Mike Brown, Paul Pierce, Rajon Rondo, Ray Allen, steve nash, Wilt Chamberlain

Perkins’ admission explains a lot

Want to know why Kendrick Perkins went from looking like a young Wilt Chamberlain to just your regular old Erick Dampier type? Tendinitis, obviously. It’s been bothering him for the last two months. (And I know he never resembled a young Wilt Chamberlain, but if Dan Shaughnessy can give that label to DeMarcus Cousins, why can’t Perk get it too? The only way Cousins is like a young Wilt the Stilt, Dan, is if he mates like a dog in heat 24/7.)

“I felt alright, I thought I played pretty good at practice today,” said Perkins. “My knee felt better. I’m looking forward to going out there and playing [Wednesday].

“There’s a little bit [of stiffness]. It’s probably something I’ll have to deal with the rest of the season. I’ll continue to get treatment, continue to come in at night and get that treatment.”

Perkins also admitted he’s been battling the tendinitis for as much as two months before he finally took the advice of Rivers and the training staff and shut it down for the week. Perkins begrudgingly noted the injury has likely affected his game.

“I can’t get up and block shots like I want to, I can’t get up for the rebounds,” said Perkins. “But I’m out there, so I gotta get the job done. I’m not making excuses, but I think it has [affected his play] in a way.”

Perk’s admission explains a lot. His numbers have been down across the board, and we attributed them to the return of Kevin Garnett and Perk’s struggle to return to his former role.

But now we really know why his play plummetted. It’s too bad he’ll have to deal with it the rest of the season, but it’s nice that he was afforded a couple games of rest. Perhaps the rest will equate to better basketball from here out.

categories Celtics Blog | Jay King | March 31, 2010 | comments Comments Off

categories Boston Celtics, DeMarcus Cousins, Kendrick Perkins, Wilt Chamberlain

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