4.28.2008

Morning Mix

What do playoff losses mean?

Unless you lose the series or get physically beat up winning a series, losing a game or two in an NBA playoff series doesn’t necessarily bode ill for that team during the rest of the playoffs. Nor does the fact that you sweep a playoff series necessarily bode well for the rest of the playoffs.

Take the Los Angeles Lakers for example.

In 1989 the Lakers swept their way through the Western Conferences playoffs, compiling an 11-0 record. In the Finals, however, they played a vastly superior Piston team that turned the trick on the purple, sweeping the Lakers in four straight. The year before, the Lakers won their first series 3-0, but then had to pull-off three consecutive game-7 clinchers to win the title.

Below is set forth the teams who have breezed through the playoffs on their way to a championship. They can be counted on two hands. This tells me that there is little to gleaned from the Pistons getting their noses bloodied by Philadelphia in round 1 this year, and very little to be gained from the Lakers sweep of the Nuggets in their round 1 match-up.

It is entirely possible, in fact, that the Pistons and Lakers first-round experiences could have the exact opposite effect of what one might imagine. The Pistons could become a mentally tougher team heading into round 2, while the Lakers could be a mentally softer team.

It all depends on how teams respond to their winning and losing and what they bring to the table on a given night.

Best Playoff Records

Midday Music

4.27.2008

Morning Mix

NBAI: National Basketball Association of Intensity

The effort Saturday night might have been enough to win game 4...if game 4 had been preceded by a Celtic win in game 3. Now to win game 4, the Celtics will need to put on their NBA Finals game-face, the one they bring out for big games. Doc told the media that the Celtics weren't playing great basketball in games 1 and 2, but the media wasn't buying. One more game like Saturday night, and the media won't need any more persuasion. Neither will the rest of us.

Box Score

The Celtics only turned the ball over 10 times. They tallied 24 assists on 32 baskets, and shot 92% from the stripe. KG scored 32 points on 11-19 shooting, to go along with 10 rebounds, three assists, two steals, and one block. Sounds pretty good to me. Yes, the Hawks shot 47% from the field, but even that number isn't earth-shattering. However, Atlanta did shoot 56% from three, going 10-18. The Celtics lost by nine. The Celts got out-rebounded by 8, and gave up 12 offensive rebounds. Bad, but not necessarily difference makers. Bottom line? The game was winnable, but the Hawks wanted it more.

Paul Pierce

Pierce was only 5-13 in game 3. He clearly needs to be more productive on Monday. What we need out of him is a performance like he turned in for Celtics-Lakers II, or, better yet, Celtics-Spurs I. It's time for Pierce to dust off his bad-self, and get down to business. Maybe this idiocy by Horford will help.

Ray Allen

Ray Allen was 5-14 in game 3, including 1-6 from 3. Like Pierce, we need to see the big-game, playoff version of Jesus. Is there such a thing? It's time to find out. If there is one, we'll need to see a lot more of him the deeper we go into the playoffs. At the very least, Air Allen may want to start backing out of the gate and taxiing down the runway, cuz we may need to see full liftoff by round 2.

Great Teams Win Big Games

On the count of three, everyone yell "human highlight film" if you want to go back to Atlanta for a game 6. If you restrained yourself, then you know what needs to happen tonight. Great teams aren't made during the regular season. Great teams win big playoff games. Tonight is a big playoff game. Let's see how this team rises to the challenge.

Celtics 2 Hawks 1



Game Notes

Kendrick Perkins

"From the start, you could tell they wanted it more."

Rajon Rondo

"We went away from what we've been doing all year. Monday is a must win"

Kevin Garnett

Led Boston with 32 points, but the NBA's youngest playoff team had him kneeling over, looking totally exhausted, by the end of the game.

Al Horford

Got his teammates fired-up by showing them a video of Muhammad Ali's stunning win over George Foreman in 1974's "Rumble in the Jungle."

Midday Music

4.26.2008

A Look at the Lakers +/- Numbers

The other day I got roasted by a reader who suggested my take on the Celtics plus or minus numbers from Game 1 was less than earthshaking. Point taken. I'm new to these particular stats. Still, the Celtics won the game by 21, and the Celtics were +29 with Garnett and -8 without him.

As much as everyone has been praising our bench, this surprised me. It also surprised me that Garnett was the top plus or minus guy, because, as I pointed out last week, Pierce was our top plus-or-minus guy during the regular season (and was again in Game 2).

Not discouraged by the criticism, I delve into the same territory again, this time for the Lakers. Now here we have something truly interesting. Kobe's was plus 3 in game 1, a game that the Lakers won by 14. So that means without Kobe, the team was plus 11. In game 2, Kobe was a plus 13 in a fifteen-point win. Plus thirteen was fourth best on the team, even though Bryant went for 49 points.

In Game 1 the Lakers bench registered an over all minus, while in Game 2 they registered an over all plus, with even two bench players eclipsing Kobe in the plus category. In Game 1, the Celtics bench scored 36 points, and registered an overall plus, but drifted downward in minus territory for game 2.

I won't draw any conclusions from these numbers as I did last time, but as I study them, I do expect to start spotting trends as the playoffs move forward.

Morning Mix

Bob Ryan Predicted the Hawks Would Win Game 3

First Quarter Dunks

I thought I was in a time warp for most of the first quarter last night. There were so many dunks that I kept waiting for Fred Roberts to check into the game so the Hawks could start dunking on him too.

The Iverson-to-Boston Deal that Never Was

I'm not one to dwell much on things that never came to fruition. But I have to admit watching Allen Iverson and the Denver Nuggets in the first round of the 2008 NBA playoffs leaves me no choice but to do just that. Take game 3. It's the third quarter and Iverson leads the Nuggets in scoring with 15. Of course, he's 5-15 from the field and his team is down 20, but, you know, the Answer is getting his. Better yet is the work ethic, or lack thereof, he has instilled in his teammates: Gasol gets the ball eight feet from the basket (yes, that's eight feet, not eighteen). Gasol is standing still. The closest Nugget is three feet away. If your George Karl, you're glad that defender is between Gasol and the basket, but it might be nice if he was putting some pressure on Pao. No matter, Luke Walton back doors someone (it's unclear who, because no one was really guarding him either) Gasol hits the cutter for two points. Now compare that with the impact KG has had on the Celtics.


Hubie Brown Called It: Doc Excludes Talented Vets from Rotation

“I ain’t happy with it but what it’s about is doing it for the team,” said Tony Allen, who averaged 18.3 minutes per game during the regular season. “I’m still cheering on the sidelines and being ready. I’m still clapping hands, passing out water, throwing towels, jumping up for my teammates for something good, just basically trying to stay loose for whenever he calls me to go out there.”

Eddie House, who has seen his minutes steadily diminish following the acquisition of point guard Sam Cassell, regrets that he has been relegated to mop-up duty. “I really haven’t had a role in this series,” he said. “I’ve pretty much been used for end-of-quarter situations and that’s pretty much it, other than spelling the guys at the end of the game, when we’re up by 20.”

Howard Blocks Eight Shots in Magic Win

Yankees (12-13) Lose

1986 NBA Finals DVD Update


Still the first half of Game 1. Larry Bird and DJ go to Robert Parish 7 straight times, and the Chief converts six. If this had been Bill Walton, I would have passed out by now. Because it's the Chief, however, I take it for granted. Similar to appreciating the 1986 playoffs as a "Coming out" party for Danny Ainge, I am starting to appreciate the Chief for who he was. I like to say KG's jump-shot is unblockable. That's an exaggeration. Not so for Parish. If Ralph Sampson couldn't get a finger on his shot, let's face it, who could? Good thing double-zero learned how to shoot his jumper over defender holding a broom stick.

Interesting Electoral College Take on Obama v. Clinton

ALL democratic systems have their quirks, and America's is the electoral college, an 18th-century oddity whose principal effect is to ensure that the president is chosen not by the overall popular vote, but by the outcome in a handful of big “swing states.” Hillary Clinton's nine-point win on April 22nd means she has now bested Mr. Obama in Florida, Ohio and Pennsylvania—the three most important swing states. This has been giving Democratic Superdelegates, who had been making verbal commitments for Obama, reason to pause. If the Democrats cannot hold Pennsylvania and move Ohio from the Republican column into their own, they can kiss the election goodbye. --Economist

Ike Doesn't Make the Cut

Over the last two weeks, John McCain has been telling prospective voters that his is the party of Abraham Lincoln, Theodore Roosevelt, and Ronald Reagan. As a former political-science and history major, I'd be curious to know why his advisers, speech writers, and handlers exclude Eisenhower from the litany. Disowning the general who led the D-Day Invasion is historically curious.


The Quotable Celtic

The playoffs don't start until you win one on the road.

--Rajon Rondo

Not bad for a first-timer. Rondo's probably just repeating a Doc mantra. Regardless of origin, the axiom is a good one.

No keys to tonight's game other than persevere.


Midday Music

Morning Mix

Laker Fan Praises Kobe (sort of)

For one of the few times, Kobe did not take what I call "ESPN shots" in Game 2 and the results speak for themselves. Whenever he tries those shots with the degree of difficulty beyond even his skills, his shooting percentage suffers. His ego only gets in the way when he wants to be on the highlight reel. --George Okamura, Sacramento

Lakers' Defense a Work in Progress

That offense has become something to behold. The defense, ranked 19th in the league during the regular season, is still work in progress. It can frustrate the Denver Nuggets to death, at times. It can also fade. Take a serious siesta here and there. Be slow to rotate, fail to fill the lanes, to help, to simply play tight, in-your-face `D.'

Stackhouse rips Byron Scott

Sixers go up 2-1 in 95-75 rout.

LeBron says there's no rivalry with Stevenson

A-Rod goes 0-4 in Yankees (12-12) loss

Red Sox (15-10) also lose

4.25.2008

Red on Roundball

In 1952, years before he won his first NBA title, Auerbach wrote a book titled Basketball for the Player, the Fan and the Coach. Here's what he wrote in a section called Attitude of Player to His Teammates:

1. You must think of getting along with your teammates, because if you are not well-liked, it is easy for them to "freeze you out" [not give you the ball].

2. Show a desire to block or screen for your teammates so that they will do the same for you.

3. Show your teammates that you will take the good shots. Don't appear too "hungry" [by taking bad shots].

4. Don't hold the ball. Look for [teammates] cutting.

5. Dribble with a purpose. Don't just stand there hugging the ball or dribbling aimlessly while your teammates continually cut.

6. Help your teammates on defense. Switch whenever necessary.

7. Don't chide [criticize] a teammate whose man happens to score. Often, it's the fault of your whole team.

8. Don't be too chummy with one or two players. Avoid obvious cliques.

9. Don't discuss the faults of any teammate with the other members of the team.

10. Don't give the impression that you are always hanging around the coach and discussing your teammates with him, unless, of course, you are the captain and the coach asks your opinion.

11. When scrimmaging, don't loaf or take it easy. This will keep the high respect of your teammates.

Celtics-Lakers Hatred Interrupted

It is generally agreed that the Boston Celtics and Los Angeles Lakers shared an abiding dislike for each other in the 1980s, and "dislike" might be an understatement. To be sure, Magic and Bird now sing praises for the other, but not so much back then.

ML Carr called them the "Fakers," while Cornbread Maxwell taunted Laker foul-shooters by clutching his throat in late-game situations. When the Lakers finally defeated the Celtics in the 1985 NBA Finals, after losing 8 straight championship match-ups, the first words out of Pat Riley's mouth were "maybe they won't mock us now."

The repartee continued the next season. In 1986 Bill Walton never hesitated to remind Jerry West that Walton had given the Lakers first crack at his services. After Walton injured his foot for the 22nd time in 1987, Byron Scott began publicly referring to Walton as "Dr. Shoals."

On a few occasions, however, players on both teams put aside their allegiances to celebrate the greatness of the other.

During the 1987 Eastern Conference Finals, the Celtics and Pistons were playing another hotly contested game when Bird hit a shot that swung the momentum irrevocably back in his team's favor.

Catching the ball at the elbow, Bird turned left and drove toward the baseline, slightly trailing away from the basket. The defender overplayed Bird to his right, trying to keep him from getting to the paint.

Bird had other things in mind.

Now fifteen feet from the hoop, Bird flung a left-handed jumper that banked off the back board and went in.

At this moment, according to those who were present, Magic and Worthy, both in a hotel room, jumped from their chairs and began screaming and giving each other high fives.

Not everyone in the room was as pleased by the shot.

Byron Scott apparently remained seated and didn't break a smile.

"They Can Score with Anyone"

That's what Magic Johnson told Charles Barkley the other night.

"The Celtics can score with anyone, but teams fear their defense."

Curious.

Sometime in the near future I plan to weigh in on the prevailing forecasts of basketball punditry regarding the likely outcome of a Celtics-Lakers Final. Let's just say that if Bynum comes back, it won't be pretty for the Green. If he doesn't return, they still like the Purple, just not as decisively.

I'm confused.

The Celtics have the most stifling defense in the NBA, and, if you believe the likes of John Hollinger, the Celtics have one of the most stifling defenses in the history of modern professional basketball.

The Lakers?

They can score the rock.

Do they play defense?

Not so much.

If you read between the lines, then, the Lakers and Celtics are a push on the offensive end, while the Celtics enjoy a considerable advantage on the defensive end.

So why on earth does everyone from Bill Simmons to Reggie Miller have the Lakers defeating the Celtics comfortably in June?

I wish I had an answer.

My undeveloped theory is that it's related to the Kobe-for-MVP campaign.

The NBA marketing machine loves the purple.

Collected Thoughts: Celtics-Lakers Edition

Trust me, man — we're not going to let anybody forget. We've got to let them know: We don't like them and they don't like us. Roll up your sleeves.

--Magic Johnson


I still have a hard time looking at Michael Cooper.

--Larry Bird


The fierce Boston-Los Angeles confrontations were all you saw and it's all you ever wanted to see, really. They were great games; they really didn't like each other. Honestly, that's what the Finals should be — intense. You're both fighting for something that you desperately want.

--Doc Rivers

The memo from the Lakers owner read: 'Upon winning the championship, we will serve champagne and release balloons.' Sam Jones got a hold of the memo and brought it to Bill. Our battle cry became, 'What is Jack Kent Cooke going to do with all those balloons?'

--Tommy Heinsohn

I remember taunting Worthy by clutching my throat after he missed a free-throw in the final minute. I just wanted to rub it in as much as I could. I thought it was funny. After that, it got personal. If they were on fire, I don't think we would've thrown water on them. Gas maybe.

--Cornbread Maxwell

Wake up, folks -- this is one of the best teams of all time, and you might be surprised how easily they roll through the playoffs. I realize this is raining on the parade a bit since everybody is so jacked up about the competition in store this postseason, but I have to warn you there's a chance the Celtics are just going to flat-out destroy everybody. The Western Conference is where all of the excitement and most of the quality resides, but I'd be very surprised if the West champs can beat Boston in the Finals ... and even more surprised if somebody besides Boston was their opponent.

--John Hollinger

Midday Music

KG in the Post III

KG in the Post II

KG in the Post I

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4.24.2008

Ainge: C's Haven't Been Approached about Thibodeau

Link

1972-73 Player Salaries

Salaries

AboutCSVPRE
Rk Player Salary
1 John Havlicek $250,000
2 Dave Cowens $151,000
3 Jo Jo White $125,000
4 Don Nelson $75,000
5 Steve Kuberski $70,000
6 Paul Westphal $60,000
7 Hank Finkel $52,500
8 Don Chaney $50,000

Morning Mix

Marginal Celtics-Lakers Piece (I'm a libertarian, and thus not in favor of government regulation. But if something ever deserved to be regulated, it is the bullpen of writers allowed to cover Celtics-Lakers. This piece isn't egregious, but it's not very good. The best line--or worst--is that the Shaq hasn't had a memorable moment since leaving the Fakers. Um, he won a title with Miami, didn't he?)

Larry Brown quits as Sixers VP

Raptors, Rockets, and Wiz all Win

The way it looks right now, KG will either win the title or commit an on-court homicide.

1986 DVD Update

With Wedman out for the Finals, Greg Kite gets inserted early in second quarter, and plays good defense on Hakeem. Despite any memories to the contrary, Mr. Kite was not just a 12th man who drew cheers in garbage time for trying hard.

The 1986 playoffs were a coming out party for Danny Ainge. This was the year that Ainge went from "that baseball guy Red took a chance on" to a viable weapon at both ends of the floor. Ainge played so well in the playoffs that KC Jones was forced to reduce Jerry Sichting's minutes, even though Mr. Sichting shot .92 from the line and .56 from the field during the season.

The 1986 Celtics were human. After jumping out to a huge lead in game 1, the Celtics started throwing the ball away and going to sleep on defense. The Rockets ran off an 11-2 run in less than 3 minutes.

Yankees (12-11) and Red Sox (15-9) both lose

Goaltender makes 98 saves

Defendant Tells Judge to "Let it Be"

Kobe & Kevin Blackistone

After listening to Kevin Blackistone drone on about all the things Kobe Bryant can do on a basketball court, I think I understand why the MVP voters in the media are so drawn to Kobe.

"He can score at will."

Cool.

He couldn't really do it against the Cs this year, having shot 12 of 46 over the course of two games in which the Lakers lost by a combined total of more than 30 points.

But I will concede that against everybody else, Kobe can score the rock.

And that makes him MVP?

It makes him fun to watch, no doubt. Just like it made Dominique fun to watch in 1988 when the Hawks won 50+ games.

But MVP?

Whatever.

Former Celtics Weigh In

Larry Bird

When we're out of it, I'm rooting for the Celtics. The only time I ever root against them is when we're playing against them. They're very talented. They've got a lot of great parts. It'll be interesting to see how the young guys play as they get deeper into the playoffs, but they've done a great job all year. I think they're awesome to watch. Obviously their defense is very impressive. They're physical, they're on the ball and they make things happen. They've got a legitimate chance to win the whole thing. No question about it.

Kevin McHale

They've got a nice mix. They've got James Posey coming in off a championship, and seeing what happened down there with some of the chemistry issues and stuff like that. They've got Eddie House coming in saying, `I make shots. This is what I do.' They've got Rajon Rondo trying to prove himself. They've got KG, Paul Pierce and Ray Allen hungry and wanting to win. They've got guys that all fit in together. I think they got their veterans at good times in their careers. That's a nice, positive combination. But in basketball it's how healthy you are and how you're rolling in May that makes all the difference. The year after Portland won the title in '77, they were like 56-6, something utterly ridiculous. Then Bill Walton gets hurt and some things happen, and it all goes away.

Jerry Sichting

They play hard and they play together. They look like they've been on a mission all year, and that's going to benefit them when the tough times come in the playoffs.I think whoever wins the East is going to have an advantage. There's so much of a dogfight in the West that whoever wins out here probably won't have much left in the Finals.

KC Jones

When KG and Ray came in, it just perked up the rest of the players on the team - more particularly Pierce. All of a sudden Pierce is playing a whole different game than he was before. Then that just goes right down the line. But KG . . . his energy and his effort have been impressed on everyone else. I like that KG is great on offense and he also plays hard on the defensive end. That's where the money is at. And defense is what's made this team really good. It all comes from the coaches and then to the captains and the rest of the players. When people respect each other, that's when you have unity.

Sam Vincent

They've got a lot of weapons, but they've got a couple of weapons, Garnett is a big weapon. But I think the thing that's different from 1986 is our front line was so good. That Parish-McHale-Bird front line is, you know, a pretty damn good front line. So it's hard to compare that team to this team, but I still give the old team the slight edge because of Larry Legend.

Danny Ainge

My unbiased opinion is that the 1986 Celtics team is still the best team in the history of the game. This team has to win before it even deserves to be in the discussion.

Game 2 Jottings

Dick Stockton

Watching Dick Stockton call the game last night immediately after watching him call Game 1 of the 1986 NBA finals was a tad bit surreal. A couple of years ago, when Stockton reemerged from broadcaster oblivion, I was anxious to see if he still had game. My first thought was, no, this guy sounds like they found him in a nursing home. But two years on, he has regained his chops, and routinely holds his own with the Czar in their playful banter. On the other hand, did anyone else hear Stockton refer to the Hawk’s number 15 as Tito, as in Tito Horford, Al’s Dad?

Doc

Coverage of last night's game starts in the locker-room with Doc giving the Green his best Lombardi. “We haven’t peaked yet. We haven’t played our best basketball. We can still improve.” I’m encouraged to see that Doc is still prodding along the 68-16 Celtics. Whaddya say we make it 70-16? In a future piece, I plan to discuss what makes great teams great, and one answer seems obvious: They win big games against other great teams. So while Doc continues to exhort, the real tests lay ahead.

KG, Rondo, and Sam

Watching KG take the time to coach Rondo while the two are on the bench is a kick. Not as good as watching the KG and Cassell get reunited and work together in tandem, but still pretty cool. The other week Pacer Coach Jim O”Brien winced when asked whether Rondo might be as good as Deron Williams and Chris Paul. He probably isn’t. But the question is getting less far fetched. Meanwhile, Cassell had 6 points in his first minute of the game. As I said yesterday, it does appear he is assuming the role not only of floor general for the second unit, but also undertaking the role and responsibilities once carried out by Eddie House, namely second-unit gunner. I’m cool with this, but remain surprised by Eddie’s sparse playing time.

Tony Allen

Speaking of sparse PT, yesterday I opined that TA might start seeing some guaranteed minutes in preparation for coming off the bench to guard LeBron, Kobe, and the Piston wings. Yet he only played 2 minutes last night. I guess he’ll be well rested whenever Doc does step up his minutes.

Powe on Joe

Well, I must confess this one was not something I would have predicted. I suppose Doc may be trying to see whether Powe is a viable defensive option against the LeBron’s of the world. Personally, I don’t see it, and am not sure what’s accomplished by sticking Powe on Joe Johnson. But I guess we have no choice but to watch and see what happens.

Jo Jo

Number 10 still looks like he could play if called into action. He must be 60ish, but could pass for 40ish.

Nothing but Net

Is there a sweeter sound than a Paul Pierce shot that catches nothing but the twine? No other made basket sounds like his.

KG doing his Best DJ Impersonation

Man, I think KG must have been playing with ice cubes in his shorts because I certainly don’t recall him ever having a night like he did last night, at least not since he’s been wearing the GREEN. After about the fourth or fifth brick in a row, I just started laughing out loud. He’s got DJ Disease, clanking shots off the rim during irrelevant stretches of games. When the game is on the line, I’d still put my money on both of them, though for different reasons.

God Disguised as Michael Jordan: A Sidebar

''Sixty Threeeeee."

The truth, the beauty and the light only now was being absorbed by the Chicago Bulls' Orlando Woolridge. Thirty minutes after the game, sitting there by his locker, stat sheet finally in hand, Orlando Woolridge could only shake his head slowly from side to side. He was reading the numbers by Michael Jordan's name; numbers in play-off basketball never have said so much, so much said that Woolridge could say little.

"Wow."

Woolridge kept staring at the piece of cheap mimeograph paper with the blue numbers running on and on with the ink. It was as if Woolridge had been with you and me, a fan mesmerized by the sights of Michael Jordan soaring past Elgin Baylor, instead of sharing the basketball court, as a teammate, as a participant. Woolridge stared some more at the stat sheet.

Jordan, Michael -- 53 minutes, 22 of 41 from the field, 19 of 21 from the line, 6 assists, 3 steals, 63 points.

"Incredible."

Every few seconds a new superlative would spill out. Every few seconds the magic of this day would imprint itself on Woolridge. Every time Woolridge looked at the stat sheet, out popped another exclamation. Points, so many of them.

"My God."

Woolridge had been saying earlier that this had been one of the greatest games in which he had ever played or seen. Woolridge had been saying that the game was so much above the threshold of normal NBA basketball that he found himself walking over to Larry Bird after the game to shake Bird's hand "because it was just a thrill for me being out there playing." All that was before the stat sheet.

"Sixty-threeeeeee," Woolridge said softly. "I'm going to have to change my opinion of today. This was one of the most incredible games I . . ."

Again Woolridge stopped for another peek at the stat sheet. Another shake of the head.

"I knew Michael was playing well, but . . . wow . . . sixty-threeeeee . . . wow."

It was when Michael Jordan had stopped so suddenly and so softly arched a 20-footer from the right corner over a flailing Kevin McHale, putting the Bulls up in the third quarter, 65-55, that Jordan raced upcourt, knowing so well he had it on. "All day, baby," Jordan said to himself. "Allllll day."

This was not a boast. This was humbling. This was startling. This was graceful. This was the best team in basketball unable to stop one player, all the Celtic starters at one time or another having a go at Jordan, singly or in a group grope at defense, much of it for naught, Jordan merely going where he pleased. It has never been done better in the history of NBA play-offs.

"As you can see," said Boston's Dennis Johnson, "there's nothing anybody can do to stop him."

It starts with a tease. Jordan dribbling the ball, then suddenly a dribble through his legs and next a tornado of a first step that is so quick and so long that Jordan is gone, so long, long gone. By now, his tongue is out, signaling the move, but what move and what shot? The Fred Astaire glide to the lane? The Sam Jones pullup jumper? The Elgin Baylor double-pump leaner? The elegant Baryshnikov glide to the finale of a slam-bang Dawkins stuff? The Larry Bird stepback jumper? The repertoire of so many fine pieces.

"The points didn't mean that much to me," Jordan kept saying, ever humble to each new crowd to ask. "I'd give all the points back to win the game. I wanted to win the game so badly that the points don't even dignify anything, don't even mean anything to me. It's something maybe when I have kids, 15 years down the line, I can look back then and be happy about it . . . but not now."

Do not misunderstand. This was not Wilt Chamberlain in Hershey against the Knicks purposely going for his 100, this was not George Gervin at the corral in San Antonio, unholstering shot after shot, not caring if his team was shot down with him. This was not a gunner; this was the best the Bulls have played this season and Michael Jordan was leading them. This, as several players and one K.C. Jones said, is a game for the VCR and fond memories.

"Michael was doing so much and so well that I found myself just wanting to stop and watch him . . . and I was playing," said the Bulls' John Paxson. "I'm out there, concentrating on my job, which was making sure I knew where Michael was and getting him the ball and letting him do his thing. Maybe some day I'll get a tape of this game, sit down and just marvel at it."

How good was Jordan?

"I'll say this," said Paxson, Chicago's other guard through much of the heartbreak of this marathon of a basketball game. "I've never seen Michael play better than this. I mean, in a pressure situation such as this play-off game, in a place like this . . . you know, Boston Garden . . . against a team like this, the Celtics. The Celtics won this game but I'm sure there are some heads over there in the Celtics' locker room who can't believe the things he did today."

True.

"I didn't think anyone was capable of doing what Michael has done to us the past two games," said Bird. "Jordan," said the Celtics' Robert Parish, "does anything he wants to do on a basketball court," while Jones described the afternoon panorama as "always seeing this giant Jordan in the foreground while everyone else is sort of in the background."

Jordan tied the game with no time left in regulation after McHale ("There was no foul") was called for a foul on a three-point attempt by Jordan ("The referee called a foul and that's how I'll take it"). With McHale waving his arms to lead the crowd in distracting Jordan, Danny Ainge whispering sweet nothings ("Danny kept saying '17 seconds left' to just rattle my brain because I had joked about 17 seconds left once on a golf course with him"), the Garden in a frenzy, Jordan calmly made both free throws.

Yet, with six seconds left in the first overtime and the game tied at 125, perhaps Jordan's most open shot of his 41, a 15-footer to the left of the foul line, "not quite as long" as his freshman jumper for North Carolina that beat Georgetown and took the NCAAs, did not fall. The shot "felt good," said Jordan, "and I should have made it. I was wide open and I had a lot of time to concentrate on the shot. It just was not meant to be."

So it was meant to be that the Bulls did not win and Jordan could take little solace for his efforts. Yet, when Jordan had knotted his tie and pulled on his suit jacket, saying for one last time the points meant nothing without a victory, he left an empty locker room.

The stat sheet that Orlando Woolridge had marveled at was still at the foot of his locker. In a fit of pique, Woolridge had crumpled it up into a ball and tossed it aside. Too bad, said Woolridge, "that we didn't win. Then . . ."

Then it would have been a wow with a smile.

Jordan had to move out to guard Johnson, had to stay at home. The game opened underneath for the Celts' tall timbers. That was that.

"DJ got hot," Jordan said with the resigned look of a man who was handed his tax statement by his accountant and did not like the numbers. "My job was to go underneath and double the other people. When he got hot, that changed things."

The final statistics showed that Michael Jordan scored 49 points. He was everything he was supposed to be. He was more. Half the people in the Garden left with their tongues sticking out -- something he does -- and heading for the nearest store to buy a pair of his high-wire shoes. He was a definite star-quality package.

The final statistics showed that Dennis Johnson also scored 26 points, 24 of them in the second half. The final statistics also showed that the Celts won by 19.

"I don't care about the numbers," the Celts guard said. "All I care about is the win."

"Still, you have to feel good about coming back to score all those points," someone said.

"Not really," Dennis Johnson said from the fringe of the spotlight. "No. I'm just glad we won."

1986 Cs Outlast Bulls and Jordan, Go up 2-0

"God Disguised as Michael Jordan" Not Enough to Overcome C's

Only one man in the history of the NBA play-offs knows what it feels like to score 63 points at the highest level of competition and be denied the sweet smell of team success. But the hoop world knows that every other player and every other team is on borrowed time. The Celtics , Lakers, Hawks, Rockets and every other 1986 title aspirant had better seize whatever opportunity they can -- Now! -- because we are clearly at the dawn of the Age of Jordan.

"I would never have called him the greatest player I'd ever seen if I didn't mean it," said Larry Bird after yesterday's exhilarating, stimulating, emotional, exhausting and altogether brilliant contest. "It's just God disguised as Michael Jordan."

Bird's equation of Jordan to the Deity is understandable in light of Jordan's record-breaking 63-point effort in the Garden (a display that surpassed Elgin Baylor's 1962 play-off standard of 61), but let the record show that Bird was able to speak in the pleasant afterglow of victory. Despite all Jordan's virtuosity, the Celtics constructed a 2-0 series lead by walking (staggering would be a more apt description) off with a 135-131 double- overtime triumph in what could accurately be described as an epic contest.

They play 'em and we rate 'em, and there is no question that this game will make the Top 5, and maybe even the Top 3, of Greatest Celtic Play-off Games Ever among the Garden cognoscenti. This was pure athletic theater, and not until Orlando Woolridge air-balled a desperation three-pointer with two seconds remaining in the second OT was there a legitimate chance for any Celtic owner, general manager, coach, player or fan to relax and light up that mental cigar. As long as Mr. Jordan is known to be present in this hemisphere, no rival lead is safe, no palm is dry, no throat swallows easily and no stomach is settled. A man who scores 63 points out of the flow is a man to fear, respect and idolize.

But justice, as we witnessed in Holmes-Spinks II, has nothing to do with winning and losing, for despite Jordan's 22 field goals and 63 points, he didn't make the biggest basket of the long, long afternoon. Jerry Sichting, a player whose game is to Jordan's as a 1955 Studebaker is to a 1986 Porsche, had that honor. For it was Sichting who took an inside-out pass from Kevin McHale and did what he has done faithfully all year -- swished the foul line jumper. That basket broke the game's 13th tie and gave the Celtics a 133-131 lead with 57 seconds left in the second OT. And when Jordan missed a left baseline jumper on the next Chicago possession, Robert Parish rebounded.

The ball went to Bird (36 points, 12 rebounds, 8 assists), who orchestrated a two-man game on the right wing with Parish. "As soon as he set the pick and rolled, I gave it to him," said Bird, unconcerned that Parish had not scored a jumper all night and had established a bad case of the oopsies in his infrequent drives to the hoop. "When he goes, you've got to give him the ball. You don't worry about Robert Parish. I never do, because he's made a lot of big plays for this team."

That's no lie, and this time he took the pass and swished a 12-foot moon shot on the right baseline to give Boston a four-point lead (135-131) with nine seconds remaining.

The best shot Chicago could get was the weak Woolridge three-pointer. The ball was inbounded to Bird, who just stood with it to await the ending of a truly spectacular afternoon of play-off basketball.

In any game such as this, there is invariably an individual of whom it can safely be said, "Without him, this would definitely have been an L." Yesterday afternoon, that man was the oft-maligned Danny Ainge.

You never would have pegged Ainge as a potential hero midway through the third quarter. He hadn't even scored a point by the time the aggressive young Bulls claimed their final 10-point lead (69-59). But before the period was over, he had erupted for 13, including 11 in the final 2:36, the last three of which came on a three-pointer that brought the struggling Celtics within one at 84-83.

Ainge would wind up with 24, and he would score two giant baskets, the first a left-handed lane drive that would tie the score at 125-125 with 12 seconds left in the first OT, and the second an open 18-footer that would give Boston a brief 131-127 lead in the second OT, a lead that was quickly wiped out via two quick hoops by the irrepressible Jordan.

Chicago abandoned the first-game strategy of continual Jordan isolations, and he proved how brilliant he was by performing even better in the context of a normal offense than he did when 90 percent of the action was directed his way. The Bulls took the lead at 4-2 and clung to it stubbornly until a clock- beating 28-foot three-pointer by Bird gave Boston the lead at 93-92 and created the first of nine consecutive lead changes through 102-100, Boston (an inside-out three-pointer by Bird from McHale).

Boston did everything but summon the ghost of Walter Brown in an attempt to knock out the Bulls, but the visitors would not succumb. A 108-104 fourth- quarter lead soon turned into a 111-110 Chicago advantage on the Jordan basket that gave him an even 50 points. A 116-113 lead with 45 seconds remaining in regulation (an Ainge-to-McHale alley-oop) evaporated when Charles Oakley hit a free throw with 34 seconds left, leading to the sequence (Bird miss, Parish momentary rebound and Chicago steal/strip/maul/who- knows-what- but-no-call) that set up the game's most controversial happening.

Leading, 116-114, with six seconds left, the Celtics had to dig in one last time to preserve the lead. With about one second left, Jordan up-faked Dennis Johnson and threw up a three-pointer that clanged off the rim as McHale arrived on the scene. Referee Ed Middleton called a foul on McHale after the shot. Did Jordan get hit? Did he spread-eagle smartly upon release and hit McHale? Do you ever make a call like this? Middleton did, and Jordan, naturally, sank both shots to create OT No. 1.

The Bulls surged ahead by four (123-119) on a Jordan three-point play with 1:39 left, but Sichting canned a corner jumper (missing the affixed free throw) and Ainge came through with that clutch drive. Jordan missed an unmolested left-side jumper and Bird rebounded with two seconds left. A Bird three-pointer was long and the weary troops entered the second OT.

Way, way back in this one, many amazing things had gone on. For example, Bill Walton (who fouled out with 6:10 left in regulation) grabbed 13 rebounds in 13 first-half minutes. Sidney Green and Oakley had made breathtaking tap- ins. Bird, after going 0 for 5 in the first quarter and then hyperextending his right pinkie (forcing him to play with it taped to its neighbor), came out to hit nine of his next 11 shots, including two three-pointers. McHale scored a fourth-quarter basket while actually sitting on Dave Corzine. And every primary Celtic had gotten himself into foul trouble (the first six guys, Walton being No. 6, compiled 31 fouls).

All the while, Jordan just kept scoring. And scoring. And scoring. This way. That way. Horizontally. Vertically. Diagonally. In ways never conceived of by Hank Luisetti, Joe Fulks, Paul Arizin or even World B. Free. And, reminded Parish, "It's not like he was doing it in a summer league."

A question now arises: What is Michael Jordan capable of doing in his own building? Two-and-zero looks about 100 times better than 1-1 right now.

Celtics Acquire Walton

The NBA's biggest trade of the off-season began in a most unlikely way, with job-hunter Bill Walton calling the Boston Celtics and asking if they had any openings.

After three months of negotiations involving the Celtics, Walton and the Clippers--his former team--the 7-foot redhead was dealt for forward Cedric Maxwell , a first-round draft pick and cash. If Walton stays injury-free, he will join Robert Parish to give Boston a pivot combination capable of stopping Lakers center Kareem Abdul-Jabbar.

Walton and Maxwell were regarded as damaged goods--Walton with foot problems, Maxwell with a knee injury. But a healthy Walton had the most to offer--the potential for another Celtics' championship. And, after playing just 14 games over an injury-filled four-year period, the former UCLA star has increased his games each year from 33 to 55 to 67.

The acquisition of Walton excited Boston's Larry Bird, who attempted to pattern his game after Walton's.

"We just have to make sure we rest this guy, that we keep him from getting injured," said the league's MVP the past two years. "If we keep him healthy we can win a championship a lot easier than we could without him. He's the best passer I've ever seen in my life."

Maxwell, whose slow recovery from knee surgery was interpreted as laziness by Celtics officials, is believed healthy enough to be a major asset for the Clippers.

Los Angeles coach Don Chaney, a teammate of Maxwell's for three years in Boston, has faith that the Clippers received a quality player whose eight years in the league will be valuable to his club.

"He's taking a leadership role, that's already obvious to me." Chaney said.

The coach is not concerned that Maxwell, a defensive workhorse and MVP of the 1982 playoffs, was used infrequently by Boston the last half of the 1984-85 season.

"As long as Max is running, jumping and cutting, the rest will come," the Clipper coach said. "Players don't lose talent overnight."

The Celtics, unhappy over losing the NBA crown to Los Angeles, was the league's busiest team, making four trades. Along with the Walton-Maxwell deal, they traded guard Quinn Buckner to Indiana for a draft pick; acquired forward Sly Williams from Atlanta on a contingency deal; and picked up guard Jerry Sichting from Indiana for a pair of draft choices.

But the Lakers were not idle either, obtaining power forward Maurice Lucas from Phoenix for two draft selections.

The only other major trade was Washington's exchange of Bruise Brother Rick Mahorn and 6-10 reserve Mike Gibson for Detroit forward Dan Roundfield. Each team sought to strengthen a weakness, the Pistons needing power on the boards and the Bullets looking for good shooting at a forward spot.

The negatives are that Roundfield, 32, was injured much of last year, missing 26 games and averaging only 10.9 points a game in his only year with Detroit. Mahorn, 6-10, 240 pounds, averaged just 6.3 points per game with 608 rebounds as coach Gene Shue was disappointed with Mahorn's production.

Washington's other deal was to send nine-year forward Greg Ballard to Golden State for two draft picks.

Chicago shipped center Steve Johnson to San Antonio for forward Gene Banks. Johnson, a 6-10 fifth-year pro, averaged 10.0 points a game last year. The 6-7 Banks, also entering his fifth year, averaged 9.5 points.

On draft day, Cleveland and Chicago swung a four-player deal. The Bulls sent first-round pick Keith Lee, a 6-10 forward from Memphis State and guard Ennis Whately to Cleveland for rebounding forward Charles Oakley, a 6-9 product of Virginia Union, plus the Bulls' second-round draft choice.

Cornbread Compares this Turnaround to Last

Patriot Ledger


When the Boston Celtics arrived in Halifax, Nova Scotia, for a preseason game in September 1978, they discovered that forward Marvin Barnes had packed two left shoes - and no rights. At that point they discovered something else: impending disaster.

After many years of unprecedented success, the Celtics relapsed to 33 wins in 1977-78, a season that ended with John Havlicek's swan song at Boston Garden. But the following season was an unmitigated calamity. With such characters as Barnes, Bob McAdoo, Earl (The Twirl) Williams and Curtis Rowe, plus the franchise swap with the Clippers, an owner who was a scourge and an early-season coaching change, the Celtics fell to an embarrassing 29 wins.

It was Team Turmoil. "From top to bottom," said WEEI radio analyst Cedric Maxwell, a second-year forward with that 1978-79 team. "It was management - I remember (owner) John Y. Brown coming in giving us a lecture - all the characters we had. We had so many people: McAdoo, Marvin Barnes, Billy Knight."

Knight was a solid citizen, but 18 players came and/or went that season, including McAdoo, the prolific scorer who came over in the bizarre franchise swap that involved the Buffalo Braves moving to San Diego, and then the owners swapping themselves (Irv Levin for Brown) and seven players and two draft picks.

One year later, 1979-80, the Celtics won 61 games, the biggest turnaround in NBA history. Starting to see a parallel? Last season the Celtics, who'd been have-nots for many years, won 24 games. With the Utah Jazz in town tonight, the Celts are up to 51 and counting, having been the NBA's leader from opening day. They can clinch the Atlantic Division with a victory.

"It brings back memories in the way they're winning," Maxwell said, "because we were losing so many games and they lost so many games, so the comparison could easily be there. All of a sudden in one year you turn it around from being a laughingstock to being the cream of the crop. That similarity can definitely be there. As a player it makes you think how lucky you were and how far you were from where you were last year."

There were differences, of course. The team the Celtics fielded last season was not the bunch of misfits and disgruntled veterans that the 1978-79 team had.

"It was a bad team but I was a young player so I was trying it establish my own credentials," Maxwell said, "so I might have been playing for a different reason, trying to establish myself. But I had things happening around me with Jo Jo (White) getting traded (to Golden State), all the guys moving around, Bob McAdoo coming in my second year, becoming my roommate because he was so frustrated at being traded to the Celtics that he said he wasn't going to get an apartment and he slept on my couch in my apartment for a whole month and a half. So there was a bunch of different things going on."

Brown clashed often with GM Red Auerbach, and fired Satch Sanders 14 games into the season. To save a salary, the owner asked Dave Cowens to become player-coach. The team lost 12 of its last 14 games. After years of rousing successes, the Garden was dead. Auerbach threatened to leave the following summer, and nearly accepted a job with the Knicks, but, ultimately, was convinced to stay by a Boston cabbie. Shortly thereafter, Brown's partner, Harry Mangurian, bought him out and the team's fortunes began to turn.

Auerbach acquired defensive specialist ML Carr from Detroit, and gave the Pistons McAdoo in return for two first-round draft choices in 1980. They were used in the acquisitions of Kevin McHale and Robert Parish a year later. For that season, though, he had Larry Bird coming in thanks to a draft pick he made a year earlier. Chris Ford and Tiny Archibald were holdovers from the dreadful 1978-79 team.

"Harry Mangurian got the team and Red Auerbach and him meshed together along with (coach) Bill Fitch," Maxwell said, "and everything collectively kind of came together: the coach, the GM, the pride of the Celtics, Larry Bird, all the players we had. Everything meshed together and it made for a magical year, just like this year for the Celtics."

Last season, when the Celtics won 24 games, the new Garden was always jumping. Fans saw promise in a young group of players, including Al Jefferson, Tony Allen, Rajon Rondo and Delonte West. It was a solid team under Doc Rivers, but it wasn't happening because of youth.

"The only difference between those teams and my '78 team and transitioning was that most of the better players were younger," Maxwell said, "whereas on this team, Kevin Garnett, Ray Allen, Paul Pierce are all older and established veterans. There's some similarities in the way these guys have played, how the chemistry has come together."

Maxwell was asked if he could understand how Pierce felt, playing for so long under such difficult circumstances, but he pointed out that he was a second-year player just trying to establish himself. Pierce had tasted the playoffs and was trying to get back. "I'm sure he was very frustrated. I was frustrated because you're so used to winning, and on a team like the Celtics you just figure that's automatic. That's one of the guarantees that Red Auerbach gave me for not giving me as much (salary). He said, 'We make the playoffs all the time so you can get extra playoff money.' How'd that work out the first couple of years?"

But Maxwell can also relate to Pierce's rejuvenation this season. Coming to work was a chore in September, 1978, a year later it was unabashed joy.

"It was truly a college atmosphere because guys who had not won in the NBA, guys who were new to the NBA, everybody was cheering for everybody else. It became more than fun to come to work because you could see a sense of greatness, you could see a great picture about to be painted. You wanted to be there, you wanted to play hard, you wanted to play well and saw better things happening for this team."

Midday Music

Morning Mix

Rivers a Hawk In Celtics Clothing

Take what you remember of Doc Rivers as a Hawks point guard, sew it to the fact he still bleeds from Atlanta's playoff loss to the Celtics in 1988, and you may find it unthinkable that he's now part of Boston's fabric. He seems so quintessentially non-Celtic. But watch him run pro basketball's flagship, talk to him, pick the brain of the player who has been with him longest and add the fact he has presided over the biggest NBA turnaround ever -- from 24 wins last regular season to 66 this -- and you just might generate a new thesis: Rivers may be the right man in the right place at the right time, a golden giftee when Kevin Garnett and Ray Allen were traded to the Celtics. Coaching at this level is part ego management and massage, and Rivers is does these things extremely well. Atlanta Journal and Constitution

Bulls Interview Carlisle

A rumor-filled Wednesday basically ended with the Bulls' coaching search in the same place it began, with general manager John Paxson continuing his stated plan to explore different candidates and listen to different philosophies about personnel. One of those candidates is Rick Carlisle. Chicago Tribune

Nuggets Not Sharing Ball

They again topped the century mark in scoring, a lofty standard for many teams in the playoffs when the game inevitably slows to a grind.Still, not so much for the Denver Nuggets, who needed more -- much more -- to counter their turnstile-type defense.Nuggets Coach George Karl said his team needed to be more freewheeling in sharing the basketball."When we're not incorporating the pass, or trusting the pass or making the extra pass, whatever phrase you want to use, we seem to have a cloudy disposition," Karl said before the game.It got cloudier afterward.Only 12 assists were counted among Denver's 37 field goals. LA Times

Thorn Smart, Cuban Dumb

The best player in these NBA playoffs is Chris Paul, who is all over the floor and the boxscore, shooting and passing and dribbling the New Orleans Hornets past the Dallas Mavericks and toward the second round. He has many to thank for his good fortune, but one in particular: Rod Thorn. Thorn is responsible for putting Jason Kidd on Paul. Thorn is the New Jersey Nets' GM who traded Kidd to the Mavericks, who were certain, with Kidd, that they had found the solution for their championship dreams. In hindsight, the Mavericks probably found the solution for the Hornets' championship dreams.Soon after arriving in Dallas, Kidd revealed himself to be old, slow and a shell of the player he once was. And against a quick and frisky young point guard like Paul, Kidd has dropped a notch. In two games so far, Paul is torching Kidd for 33.5 points, 13.5 assists and a dozen breathtaking plays a game. He's taking advantage of Kidd almost as much as Thorn took advantage of the Mavericks."Well," said Thorn, "as much as I'd like to take credit, Jason did force our hand a bit by giving us an ultimatum. But in general, what anyone would like to do is trade a guy a year before he goes downhill. You think a guy's going to be great forever, but the reality is they aren't. The pull of gravity gets everyone. No one is immune." Newsday

Bynum Out for the Playoffs?

Los Angeles Lakers coach Phil Jackson indicated Monday the team doesn't expect injured center Andrew Bynum to make a serious contribution any time soon. When asked after practice if there was a risk of messing up team chemistry by playing 7-footers Bynum and Pau Gasol at the same time, Jackson replied: "I think without a doubt that Andrew would come off the bench and we would play him a little bit off the bench if there was any chance that he could come back and play again, but it's such a remote thing. We're not seriously thinking about it." LA Times

Celtics Win by Slow Strangulation

We've seen it before. Many, many times. It started on Opening Night, when they effortlessly dispatched the Wizards by 20, and it continues in the playoffs, where the Celtics have won the first two games of their first-round series with the Atlanta Hawks by 23 (104-81) and last night's 19 (96-77). The 2007-08 Celtics are the most subtly and ruthlessly efficient team the Celtics have ever had. Their M.O. is completely different than the methodology employed by all those other Celtics teams of yore, with all those gaudy win-loss records.When the Russell-Cousy teams beat you badly, you knew it. When the Havlicek-Cowens teams beat you badly, you knew it. When the Larry-Kevin-Chief-DJ teams beat you badly, you knew it. Somewhere in there they'd hit you with a 14-0 or 20-2 fast break-oriented run and the crowd would be exploding and you knew you were getting your butt kicked.

But this team doesn't operate that way.

With this team, you think you're in the game, even if you aren't. This team isn't about runs; it's about stops. Defensive stops aren't sexy. Points are sexy, and points in rapid succession are sexier still.Students of Atlanta Hawks history should know. The Celtics won Game 6 of a first-round series in 1973 with a devastating fourth-quarter run. The Celtics won the series-concluding fifth game of an Atlanta series in 1986 with a downright surreal 36-6 third quarter that concluded with a run of 24-0 on a Bill Walton trailer dunk. The 2008 Celtics don't deal in tsunamis. This team makes you feel as if you're tied up on the beach and the tide is coming in and coming in and coming in, and there's not a damn thing you can do about it. They get you with 6-2s, not 14-0s. They just keep making more stops than you, many more, in fact. Bob Ryan

Posey on the Youthful Members of the Bench

When Posey signed with the Celtics last Aug. 25, he knew that the top three players were already in place, and that Eddie House had signed. But as far as playing on a bench unit of youngsters, many of them completely untested, was concerned, he simply had no idea what to expect."Eddie had signed before me so I knew Eddie was here. That was another big reason why I came. But at that point it was just me and Eddie. You didn't really know how things were going to turn out, so just come in and work like you do night in and night out and you see what happens." "I knew I just controlled my own destiny. As it turned out, we have guys accepting their roles and they've done the best they can. I've been trying to tell these young guys that every team is not like this. You don't have guys that really care about you and want to help you, so they should appreciate it. It could always go the opposite way. You could always be on a team that's very selfish and is not into winning, not into teaching and not into trying to help the next man get better. That could really be a terrible thing, especially being young. So it should be no surprise that we have this much to show for the long haul of the season. Patriot Ledger

Dead Guy Cashes Check

That Virgilio Cintron was dead that day is not in doubt. But no one can say precisely when he died. Was Mr. Cintron breathing when his buddies, James P. O'Hare and David Daloia, pushed him in a chair to the Pay-O-Matic check-cashing store in Hell's Kitchen in Manhattan on Jan. 8? That's what they said. Never mind that in a detective's judgment, he was unresponsive, flopped around unsteadily in the chair, and appeared to show early signs of rigor mortis. The police said those clues indicated that Mr. Cintron, 66, had died earlier that day, and that Mr. O'Hare and Mr. Daloia had wheeled their friend's stiffening corpse to the office in a bold, if poorly thought-out, scheme to cash his $355 Social Security check. New York Times

4.23.2008

Celtics Acquire Sichting

October 3, 1985
Section: SPORTS
SICHTING A CELTIC INDIANA GETS TWO 2D-ROUND PICKS



The Celtics yesterday put the finishing touch on their off-season reconstruction job, acquiring guard Jerry Sichting from the Indiana Pacers for two second-round draft picks.

The Celtics' house is in order. Three and a half months after losing the championship series to the Lakers, Boston has re-signed free agent Dennis Johnson and added Bill Walton, Sly Williams, Sam Vincent and Sichting in place of Cedric Maxwell, M.L. Carr, Quinn Buckner and Ray Williams.

Sichting was the final piece. DJ and Danny Ainge are Boston's starting guards, but the Celts wanted a veteran third guard to take some of the heat off rookie Vincent.

"Hopefully I can provide some leadership on the floor," Sichting said before flying to Boston last night. "My strengths are my outside shooting and my ball handling."

Indiana's 6-foot-1-inch, five-year veteran fills Boston's need for an experienced shooting guard. A lifetime 50 percent pro shooter, he rarely turns the ball over and averaged almost six assists per game in 1983-84. Last year the Pacer captain shot 52 percent and averaged 11 points. His lifetime free throw percentage is a scintillating .852.

"I feel about four or five years younger," Sichting said after the trade was announced. "It's finally over and now I can get to work again. This is what I'd wanted and hoped for most of the summer. I thought it might happen and now it has."

Sichting is a native Hoosier who played his college ball at Purdue, but he'd grown weary of Pacer management and Indiana's losing records. He was a free agent this summer and inked a four-year, $850,000 offer sheet with the Celtics. The Pacers matched the offer last Friday, and asked Boston for a first-round draft pick in exchange for Sichting. The Celts offered two seconds and Indiana waited until yesterday to accept.

"This is what I thought was reasonable compensation all along," said Boston general manager Jan Volk. "So I'm not sure what happened."

The Pacers requested that the specifics of the two picks not be disclosed. However, one of them will not be Boston's 1986 second-rounder, which was shipped to the Knicks last season for Ray Williams.

Sichting, who did not report to the Pacers' camp, is scheduled to practice with the Celts today and could play in Boston's first exhibition at Boston Garden, against the Philadelphia 76ers, tomorrow night.

Like everyone else who's joined the Celtics lately, Sichting said it was nice to be playing for a winner.

"That's a whole new ballgame and it's what every player should play for," he said. "The opportunity to play for a contender is what I'm excited about."

Playing with fellow Hoosier Larry Bird also has some appeal.

"They have a lot of good players besides Bird," noted Sichting. "But Larry seems to make everyone he plays with a better player and he'll probably make me a better player."

The acquisition of Sichting means that (barring injuries or a mood shift by Sly Williams) there is only one job open on the roster. Rick Carlisle, Carlos Clark and David Thirdkill are the frontrunners for the final spot. Rookie hopefuls Ronnie Williams, Rick Lamb, Andre Battle and Tracy Mitchell face an uphill battle . . . Bird was white hot during yesterday's early scrimmage. He also unveiled the lefty jump hook he's been working on.

Celtics 2 Hawks 0


Game Notes

Rajon Rondo continues to shine, hitting jumpers from all over the floor. He finishes 6-11 from the field for 12 points, to go with 8 assists, 6 rebounds, and 4 steals, and only one turnover, his only turnover in 2 games. His counterpart, Mike Bibby, is 4-17 over the first two games.

Sam Cassell continues to be the leader of the second unit, both in terms of floor generalship and scoring.

KG finished with 19 points, 10 rebounds, 2 assists, 2 steals, and 2 blocks in 35 minutes.

James Posey provided another solid performance off the bench. In some ways, he is a poor-man's Dennis Rodman. He has an opt-out clause after this year. We need him on board for at least the next two years.

Ray Allen played 35 minutes, going 6-13 from the field, including 3-6 from three. His ankles must feel like gold with this one game every three days schedule.

Glen Davis fouled out in 14 minutes.

The DVDs Have Arrived


Dateline Boston Garden, 1986.

The old Gah-den.

No cheerleaders.

The floor creeks and moans, but looks like a million bucks on TV.

No air conditioning.

Dick Stockton and Tommy Heinsohn calling the game.

Crowd booing Fitch before opening tip of Game 1.

Bird--Healthy, mullet intact.

Walton--Healthy.

McHale--Healthy.

DJ--Alive.

KC Jones--Ready to make history.

Can we stop the tape, please?

++

Now, wait one minute.

Game one. First play. McHale turnover.

Houston ball.

Robert Reid lofts an uncontested deep two over Ainge, who doesn't even bother to raise an arm in defense.

2-0 Houston.

Celtics ball.

Second play.

Bird air ball???!!!

Clearly, Jerry West and Bryon Scott have doctored the tapes...

++

Bird nails the next two.

Houston starts overplaying Bird. Bird doesn't care, and proceeds to launch a bomb over rushing defenders.

Oh wait. It's a pass to the Chief for an easy dunk.

++

The NBA Hall of Fame committee needs to watch these DVDs.

I mean, is there a better guard in the NBA right now than Dennis Johnson?

Well, is there?

++

You forget the little things.

Unless your name was Mychal Thompson, McHale was undefendable.

What does that mean?

For one thing, it means if you blocked his shot, it was probably a goaltend.

More memorable, however, is the fact that as soon as you blocked his shot, McHale would lift one arm straight up, and wiggle two fingers, soon to be mimicked by the officials.

Goaltend.

Stuck in the 80s, you say?

No, no, no.

Stuck in June of 1986!!!

++

12-4 Celtics.

Fitch calls a time-out and the game's not even five minutes old.

++

After the time-out, Sampson picks up his third foul.

Sometimes I wonder how Fitch was ever considered a great coach.

Hey, Bill, you might want to consider removing the big fella after foul number two in the first quarter.

++

Bird rebounds a miss, and outlets to McHale (I kid you not), who proceeds to lead a 2-on-2 fast break. He's got DJ on his right. Instead, McHale drives to the hole, stops, and pops.

Swish.

Yes sir, that's Bob Cousy, er, I mean Kevin McHale leading the Celtics world-famous fast break.

Clearly, Red Auerbach has now wrestled control of the tapes back from West and Scott.

++

Walton enters the game for Parish.

Wait. What did I just write?

OMG!

It's him! It's Bill Walton!

He's running up and down the floor.

No sign of injury!

First trip down Bird zips a pass to a cutting Walton for an easy deuce.

Ok. I need to pause this thing and update my Last Will and Testament to leave specific instructions:

DEAR FAMILY, IF I BECOME INCAPACITATED FOR ANY REASON AND REQUIRE FULL-TIME CARE, PLEASE FEEL FREE TO FORGET ABOUT ME. BUT BEFORE DOING SO, MAKE SURE I HAVE A BIG SCREEN TV, A DVD PLAYER, AND A REMOTE. I'LL BRING THE DVDs. LOVE, LEX

++

Red must have been enjoying a cocktail with the most recent edits.

Walton somehow beats the entire Rockets team down court, recieves a Bird touchdown pass, and then dunks home two.

Come on, Red. The Rockets were the world's fastest team, and Walton beats them all down court? Who's gonna believe that?

++

McHale throws up a brick.

Walton, who was last seen doubled over at the other end of the court trying to catch his breath, comes crashing down the lane, out jumps Hakeem and Jim Peterson, catches the ball in his left hand, flicks it back up with the same hand.

Two points.

End of quarter.

I could watch this all night.

Bynum's Return in Doubt

Link

Wedman Leads Celtics to Win

March 14, 1985

Special stat teams and hoopology PhDs were flown in for historical perspective, and literary legends were summoned for fresh metaphors and hyperbole.

But none of the above was necessary. One night after the burning of Atlanta, Larry Bird & Co. returned to earth with a methodical, albeit powerful 123-106 victory over the Phoenix Suns at Boston Garden. And folks went home talking not about those wild scoring fools, Bird and Kevin McHale, but about Scott Wedman (19 points, 13 in the fourth quarter).

The Celts led from wire to wire as Bird (31 points, 12 rebounds, 7 assists) spread the wealth, and his frontcourt sequoia mates were happy to collect. McHale made his first nine shots, and finished with 25 points. Robert Parish also inflicted some wounds, scoring 22 points with 14 rebounds.

And then there was Wedman. A former All-Star and 10,000-point scorer, Wedman is often a forgotten man on this championship squad. His contributions since coming to Boston two years ago have been sparse, but he's adjusted to his limited role and is starting to look like the man who lit up scoreboards in NBA America from 1975-82.

Wedman's 15-of-24 shooting in the last two games was lost under the tonnage of Bird's and McHale's points, but the reserve forward came off the bench last night and hit nothing but net on four crucial jumpers at the start of the fourth.

"Larry's been going so well and our inside game's been going so well that they kind of laid off me," said Wedman, who has hit 61 percent (23-38) while averaging 16.3 points in his last three games. "That opened it up a bit . . . I went out and hit a couple of shots and got it going and kept looking for it."

Phoenix had trimmed Boston's 13-point first-half lead to 89-87 at the end of three quarters. Then Wedman struck.

His first three jumpers helped push the margin back to six, then Bird stole the ball, and Wedman fed Ray Williams for a hanging lane jumper in traffic. The Celts led, 102-94, with 9:48 left and Phoenix called time to regroup.

Wedman wasn't through, but the Suns were. Another Wedman bomb with 5:51 left made it 109-96. The Celts were safe and when cult hero M.L. Carr made an appearance with three minutes left, it was 115-101.

"We were very concerned about Wedman," Phoenix coach John MacLeod said. "We were aware of his ability when he played for Kansas City and we're still aware of his ability to shoot the ball . . . He's certainly going to help them down the stretch."

Wedman's shooting highlighted the final period, but the start was memorable for Bird's Lindberghesque return to the homeland. On the heels of his 60-point torching in New Orleans Tuesday, Bird was inundated with pregame interview requests from everyone this side of Phyllis George, then received one of the longest introductory standing ovations on record. Toss in a few candles and matches and it would have felt like the prelude to a rock concert.

Sir Larry rewarded the devoted masses, hitting a jumper on his first possession on the 14th second of play. He had six rebounds and four baskets in the first six minutes. Alvin Scott was overmatched.

Playing without Larry Nance (groin pull), the Suns were vulnerable underneath, and Boston's frontcourt torched Phoenix throughout the evening. Bird, McHale and Parish scored 33 in the first quarter and the Celts led, 36-24, after one. Bird had 11 with seven rebounds, while McHale scored 14 and Parish contributed eight.

"We were a little sluggish coming out, so we had to get everything down low," said Bird.

Bird fired the Celts to a 47-34 lead in the second. Phoenix got some inspired play from James Edwards (18) and reserves Charles Pittman (6 of 6) and Charles Jones (19), but couldn't get closer than seven for the rest of the half. Meanwhile, Boston's frontcourt domination continued, and the Celts led, 62-51, at intermission.

The Suns ran off six in a row at the start of the third. Dennis Johnson awoke with four consecutive jumpers, but Phoenix cut Boston's lead to two with 7:28 left in the third. Then Parish picked up his fourth foul. The Suns trimmed it to one before Wedman took over.

The Big One: KG's +/- Numbers a Bit Scary

In game one against Atlanta the Celtics were +29 when Kevin Garnett was in the game and -8 when he was out of the game. It's just one game, but the disparity is a little disconcerting.

The numbers suggest that the Celtics are championship caliber with him, and not terribly good without him. It also tells me that opposing teams will be doing two things throughout the playoffs.

--going directly at KG in hopes of getting him into foul trouble

--redoubling efforts to score, defend, and (god forbid) build leads while he is out

Our bench scored 36 points in the first game, which sounds impressive. But apparently they did much of their scoring with KG on the floor.

While all of this may be cause for concern, there was a reason Doc rested KG during the regular season. The playoffs are now here, Big Fella. So don't be surprised if your MPGs are amped up to more than 40 once the games start getting closer.

Just try to stay out of foul trouble, ok?

Game Three is Key to Sweep

I am going to assume that the result tonight will be similar to the result from game 1, which means we'll head into Atlanta up 2-0. Bob Ryan, pinch-hitting for Tony Kornheiser on PTI last week, predicted the Celtics would defeat the Hawks 4 games to 1. The Hawks will circle the wagons heading into their first home game, Joe Johnson will go off, and Atlanta will win game 3, according to Ryan.

Maybe, maybe not.

I don't really care if Joe Johnson goes off, no more than I care if LeBron averages 40 points per game against the Celtics in Round 2 or Kobe averages 40 in the Finals.

Individual performances, by themselves, do not defeat a superior collective effort. Michael Jordan went off against the Celtics in Round 1 of the 1986 playoffs. Dominique Wilkins in 1988. Wilt Chamberlain went off against Russell countless times.

But none of them could carry their team to victory by themselves.

So let Joe Johnson go off.

But let's get the W.

That would give the Celtics six straight wins against the Hawks, regular season and playoffs combined, and the only thing for Atlanta to gain from a victory in game 4 would be a trip back to Boston for a good old fashioned arse whoopin'.

In other words, the Hawks might lay down in game 4, assuming we can win games 2 and 3. Even if they didn't completely throw in the towel, closing the series out in 4 would be motivation enough for the Cs to do just that.

Midday Music

Morning Mix

Thibodeau to Interview with Knicks during playoffs

If there is a No. 1 contender to challenge the favorite, Mark Jackson, for the Knicks' coaching vacancy, it may be the widely respected Tom Thibodeau, who, like Jackson, is also a Jeff Van Gundy disciple. And Thibodeau, who has more than a decade of experience as an NBA assistant coach, doesn't need Van Gundy to campaign for him on national television.

Thibodeau, the associate head coach of the Boston Celtics who served on Van Gundy's staff in New York and Houston, was initially thought to be someone who might not be available for an interview until after the playoffs. But Sunday, Doc Rivers said he would allow his assistants to interview for available jobs during the playoffs. Rivers, however, won't allow one of his coaches to be named a head coach until after the Celtics' season is over. Thibodeau is signed only for this season. Newsday

Spend a Grand to See the Lakers

Even though Shona Jones' seats were near the ceiling, she couldn't stop smiling. Jones had driven from her San Diego home to Staples Center on Sunday with her two kids and one of her best friends. She took a breather before going to her seats, time enough to tally the damage. Tickets, gas, parking, hot dogs, sodas, T-shirts and Lakers Crocs for the kids -- she estimated that all together the day would cost near $1,000, a hefty chunk for a legal clerk and her waitress pal. "It's the playoffs," she said. "Kobe and Iverson." But $1,000?, she was asked. That's a lot for one game."I wouldn't miss this for anything," she said, her smile tightening. "It's just so much fun, and worth the memories . . . even in times like these, you can't put a price on that." LA Times

Steinbrenner Backpedals

The only thing worse than Hank Steinbrenner's impetuous demand that he wanted setup man Joba Chamberlain moved to the New York Yankees' starting rotation right away was the startling retreat that Steinbrenner made on Monday. Sure, criticism was pelting down on him. But since when does a Steinbrenner apologize? Pull yourself together, son. Do you have the onions for this gig or not? Did Atilla the Hun ever apologize for having a bad temper? Did General MacArthur tell the enemy forces he routed in World War II, "Hey, about those bridges we blew up? My bad."? Newsday

Russian Tennis Player Demands a Bleepin’ Break

Russia's Marat Safin suffered a bad-tempered exit at the Monte Carlo Masters on Wednesday as the lid blew spectacularly once again on his famously explosive temper.
The former world number one, and double Grand Slam title winner, destroyed his raquet against a courtside chair before screaming at Berado: 'Give me a f****** break!' as he debated another contentious call in the seventh game of the second set. Reuters

4.22.2008

That's What I'm Talkin' About!







M-V-P, M-V-P


Let's see here.

If I understand what just happened, the best defensive player on the best defensive team just won Defensive Player of the Year.

This part I get.

I'm on board.

Everything is cooool.

What I'm struggling with is the MVP debate.

In particular, I don't understand why we're even having a debate.

Who is the most valuable player on the best team?

Word.

KG Brings Home some Hardware

Kevin Garnett was named Defensive Player of the Year today. Congrats, Big Fella.

Is Cassell the New House?

The other day I said that Doc’s top seven rotational players were set for the playoffs, the five starters plus Posey and House. Everyone else would be played “situationally,” based on match-ups and foul trouble. We’ve only played one game, but it looks like I may have been all wet, at least as far as House being included in the core rotation and Cassell being excluded.

House played 5 minutes in a 23-point romp over the Hawks on Sunday, while Cassell played 16 minutes. It also appeared that Cassell was responsible for getting the second unit on the same page, and maintaining leads when the starters needed a breather or were in foul trouble.

On the one hand, this doesn’t surprise me. Doc and Danny acquired Cassell for this very purpose. On the other hand, House seemed like an all too integral piece of the puzzle to be marginalized this late in the game.

The key player in the equation, however, may be Tony Allen. Allen played nine minutes on Sunday, including his normal rotational minutes in the second quarter. With possible match-ups looming against the Cavs, Pistons, and Lakers on the horizon, T.Allen could be seeing some guaranteed minutes as the Celtics need extra defenders to guard King James, Kobe, and Detroit’s wings.

I don’t think we’ve heard the last from Eddie House in the 2008 NBA Playoffs. I’m confident that number 50, when called on, will continue to respond with both holsters. But the mantra this season has been defense. On this front, giving Tony Allen the nod over House makes some sense.

As for questions that may linger about Sam's aging shooting skills, let's revisit a moment from early in his Celtic career:

When Cassell first checked into the game with 3:36 to go in the first, his team was down 11. By early in the second, they were down 22, and it was an 18-point game when the 38-year old took over. He scored 12 points in less than six minutes, helping Boston cut the lead to 10 at halftime. He made Rivers comfortable enough to leave him in the entire second quarter.

With the Celtics down seven and less than four minutes to go in the game, Paul Pierce drove and found Cassell open for a long two to keep it close. And with less than a minute to go and Boston down one, another Pierce drive created (via Kevin Garnett) an open three for Cassell from the left wing. Cassell didn't hesitate, knocking down the jumper to give his team the lead for good.

In just his fourth game with his new team, he had hit the game-winner against the defending champs in their building.

"Late in the game," Pierce said, "that's what he does. He knocked down a big shot. And that's what you can expect out of him."