August 1, 2007
The New Big Three Great the Media
It
may be hard to remember a recent Celtic scene with more sheer optimism.
Kevin Garnett, fresh in from the Twin Cities (and not from a cruise) in
the middle of the table, a broad smile, flanked by a beaming Paul
Pierce and Ray Allen. No, they're not the new Big Three yet; Danny Ainge
made that clear yesterday. They haven't won anything.
But
the mere addition of the 6-foot-11-inch Garnett, who is under wraps for
five years, has shaken the foundation of the Eastern Conference and
awakened a somnolent Celtic nation like a 7.5 Richter scale earthquake.
Sportsbook.com has put the Celtics at 5-2 to win the Eastern Conference
(the favorite) and gulp - 5-1 - to win the 2008 NBA championship,
trailing only the Mavericks, Suns, and Spurs. "From low expectations to
high expectations, that's what we want," Doc Rivers said.
Or, as Pierce noted, "I asked for veterans. I didn't expect to get a 12-time All-Star."
Hey, he's only been to 10 All-Star Games, but who's counting?
Garnett
made his first appearance as a Celtic last night, capping a whirlwind
72 hours that he described as "like being in a Lamborghini driving 200
with your head stuck out of the window." He passed his physical at New
England Baptist Hospital, signed a three-year extension (for roughly $60
million) to the two years he had remaining, and then was hoping to find
a quiet spot in the North End for some dinner after his dinnertime news
conference.
He will wear No. 5 "because I was the No. 5
pick in '95." He also considered No. 4. He really wanted No. 2 (in
honor of his former teammate, the late Malik Sealy) but it wasn't
available. You can see his face in a Celtics jersey (sort of) on the
team's website in the link for tickets. As one season ticket-holder said
last night, "My seats will finally be worth what I'm paying."
Getting
Garnett was a monumental coup for Ainge and the Celtics, as was the
go-get-'em attitude by ownership, which now will have to deal with the
dreaded luxury tax down the road. So what? This is Kevin Garnett. "This
was an opportunity that came along," said Robert Epstein, one of the
team's owners. "How do you let something like this go by?"
They
couldn't. They didn't. They had Garnett in their grasp a month ago, but
the situation wasn't right. He didn't want any part of joining a 24-win
team. But after the draft-night addition of Ray Allen, and with the
rather transparent rebuilding effort about to happen in Minnesota,
Garnett started to think about moving for the first time in his career.
"Initially,
I had no interest leaving Minnesota," he said. "But after talking with
[owner] Glen Taylor, his vision of the future was very different from
mine. And when Boston [traded for] Ray Allen, the whole thing changed
for me. I could see myself in a Celtics jersey. I went to my summer home
[in Malibu, Calif.] and played some ball with Paul. He didn't say much.
"I
guess at the end of the day, I'm loyal to a point where I feel if
someone's loyal to me, then I have no problem with that. But when that
changes, it's pretty easy for me. But I got to thinking this may be the
best opportunity for me to win a ring. So, here we are."
It
wasn't easy. He had been unflaggingly loyal to the Timberwolves for his
entire career, but, as he noted, "I can't do young." And Minnesota is
definitely doing young. So he did some due diligence. He said he left
messages on all four of Pierce's cellphones, but didn't get a response.
"I didn't recognize the area code," Pierce said, rather lamely. "It was
the same on all four phones," Garnett quipped. He talked to Allen, with
whom he had played on the 1999 US Olympic qualifying team and the 2000
Olympic team.
He sounded out former Celtics like
Antoine Walker and Gary Payton for their views on life in Boston. He
liked what he heard. He talked once more to the Timberwolves. He didn't
like what he heard. So he made the call to get the process rolling
again.
"Slowly, but surely, I got more comfortable with
the situation," he said. "It feels good to be appreciated. It's good to
recognize that."
Ainge and Rivers did the appropriate
keening for the losses of the players dealt to the Wolves, Al Jefferson
in particular. But even though the Celtics surrendered five players and
two draft picks, they looked and felt like the winners last night.
Garnett has put up frightening numbers in Minnesota, been a perennial
All-NBAer, will be a dead bolt lock for the Hall of Fame, and - shock to
the system - is usually a representative on the league's All-Defensive
team. And he's going to be in Celtic green for five years.
Pierce
said he was so excited that felt like a rookie again. "A big load has
been taken off my back," he said. Garnett and Allen are only too willing
to take that load off Pierce's back and share it - and take the Celtics
where they haven't been in two decades and where none of the three ever
has been.
"We still have things to prove," Garnett cautioned. "But I will say this: We'll be a force to be reckoned with."
That's
something no one could have said 48 hours earlier without a laugh
track. Now, thanks to one man, it's pretty much gospel.
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