Showing posts with label celtics. Show all posts
Showing posts with label celtics. Show all posts

Wednesday, October 19, 2016

More NBA team previews than you can possibly imagine

Last month, I wrote a brief Celtics season preview as part of an NBA blog sharing program where everybody who contributes agrees to post each other's links.  Here they all are, in alphabetical order by team:


Atlanta Hawks
Boston Celtics
Brooklyn Nets
Charlotte Hornets
Chicago Bulls
Cleveland Cavaliers
Dallas Mavericks
Denver Nuggets
Detroit Pistons
Golden State Warriors
Houston Rockets
Indiana Pacers
LA Clippers
LA Lakers
Memphis Grizzlies
Miami Heat
Milwaukee Bucks
Minnesota Timberwolves
New Orleans Pelicans
New York Knicks
Oklahoma City Thunder
Orlando Magic
Philadelphia Sixers
Phoenix Suns
Portland Trail Blazers
Sacramento Kings
San Antonio Spurs
Toronto Raptors
Utah Jazz
Washington Wizards

Wednesday, October 12, 2016

I have a new goal in life: Get a Chipotle celebrity burrito card

Danny Ainge showed this off to Celtics media yesterday:


Since first seeing that tweet, here's what I've discovered about Chipotle's custom-made burrito cards:  They allow you to have one free burrito per day, for an entire year (or possibly for life).  Chipotle also doesn't like to talk about them and neglects to offer any info about the cards on its website.

From a 2013 Yahoo Sports Big League Stew article on Bryce Harper's:

"The celebrity card program is small," Chipotle communications director Chris Arnold told The Stew in an e-mail. "And we don't really share enough detail on it to make much of a story out of it."

New life goal: Reach a point where Chipotle deems it wise to give me one of these.


Monday, September 26, 2016

Boston Celtics 2016-17 Season Preview (all you need to know in just over 37 seconds)


Boston Celtics
Last Year's Record: 48-34 (tied for 3-6 in East)
Key Losses: Evan Turner, Jared Sullinger
Key Additions: Al Horford, Jaylen Brown, Gerald Green


1. What significant moves were made during the offseason?

Boston pulled off its biggest free-agency splash in team history, inking four-time All-Star Al Horford to a four-year max contract.  The C's also selected 19-year-old forward Jaylen Brown with the No. 3 pick in the draft.  Evan Turner and Jared Sullinger signed in Portland and Toronto, respectively, but the Celtics did pick up second-year options on Amir Johnson and Jonas Jerebko, while also re-signing Tyler Zeller.  In addition, Boston brought back veteran shooting guard Gerald Green on a one-year minimum deal.


2. What are the team's biggest strengths?

If you've been listening to Brad Stevens this offseason, it's evident that he's quite pleased with the ability of his players to "fly around."  Stevens has used that expression on multiple occasions when discussing the outlook of his 2016-17 squad.  Along those lines, defense and lineup versatility will be how this club wins games.  Consider the likely second five of Terry Rozier, Marcus Smart, Brown, Jerebko and Kelly Olynyk--Smart and Brown can play in the post with Kelly and Jonas drawing opponents' big men out to the three-point line.  The defense-first small-ball options available to Stevens are also quite intriguing.  Imagine Rozier, Avery Bradley, Smart, Brown and Jae Crowder on the floor together?


3. What is the team's biggest weakness?

When Isaiah Thomas and Horford are out of the game, scoring will be a problem.  Boston's bench will miss Turner's ability to get to the rim and create his own shots.  However, rebounding is the bigger issue.  The Celtics finished 19th in the NBA in rebound percentage last season and their best guy on the boards (Sullinger, 8.3 per game in 23.6 minutes) is now a Raptor.  While he is an elite center, attacking the glass is not Horford's strength.  He averaged only 7.3 rebounds in 32.1 minutes a night for the Hawks in 2015-16.


4. What are the goals for this team?

On the court, anything short of the No. 2 seed in the East and a Conference Finals berth will have to be considered a disappointment.  But, as far as the big picture goes, the C's just want to remain on track to take one more step forward next summer.  Thomas and Bradley will be free agents in 2018, so the window with this group could be closing.  Ideally the final piece of the puzzle will be added in 2017 to turn the current club into a legitimate title contender.


5. Prediction

Vegas set the Celtics' early over/under for wins at 51.5 and most Boston fans are likely expecting a total in the low-to-mid 50s.  I'm not convinced the C's are in line for another big improvement in 2016-17.  My guess for a regular-season record?  49-33.  Since the day Stevens joined the Celtics, he's been a master at doing the most with limited means.  However, for the first time his team has real talent and serious expectations.  The rest of the league is on to him.  Boston isn't going to take anybody by surprise anymore.  It's easy to go from bad to good, but from good to great is a much taller task.



Saturday, September 24, 2016

Ode to Kevin Garnett compilation blog


I didn't start seriously writing about the NBA until 2012, so everything I have on Kevin Garnett is from well past his prime--that doesn't mean there weren't still plenty of great moments though.  In mostly chronological order, here's my own personal KG highlight reel:




Kevin Garnett's last Gino Time?

2015-16 A Season Of Milestones For Kevin Garnett

Remember when Kevin Garnett and Stephon Marbury wanted an all-nude ESPN The Magazine?

Kevin Garnett is NOT interested in his coach's stories about the Raptors

Year 7 of a 3-year plan (which never happened because) It's a sad day for the Boston Celtics

The 18 greatest Celtics of all time (I admittedly missed on Pierce, we'll see about KG)

For Paul Pierce, Kevin Garnett, and the Garden crowd, it was a game unlike any other

Will KG and Pierce ever show there age?

Usain Bolt is a huge fan of Kevin Garnett and the Celtics

Kevin Garnett is rebounding at a historic rate, and he's getting better as the series goes on

Kevin Garnett and Paul Pierce used to "break vases" together twenty-some years ago

Here's why Kevin Garnett is done with All-Star Games

Is this as good as it gets? (Garnett finds his youth against his former ballclub)

Kevin Garnett plays point guard?

KG focused on his Secret Santa (and not getting a Christmas gift for Ray Allen)

Last Night I went to the weirdest NBA game I've ever seen (KG demolish Dwight Howard and Boston held the Magic to a record-low scoring output)

Celtics suffocate Magic on Monday, then rip their hearts out on Thursday


Saturday, September 10, 2016

Deep Thoughts, by Jaylen Brown (Part 2)


Take a look at a pair of Jaylen Brown's Instagram posts this past week:

A photo posted by Jaylen Brown (@fchwpo) on


A photo posted by Jaylen Brown (@fchwpo) on

Brown's recent selfies play right into the "deep thoughts" theme as well:

A photo posted by Jaylen Brown (@fchwpo) on


A photo posted by Jaylen Brown (@fchwpo) on


Here's the original Deep Thoughts, by Jaylen Brown.


Wednesday, September 7, 2016

Doc Rivers wishes Celtics kept '08 title team completely intact, sounds skeptical of Warriors' Durant signing


On a recent CSNNE podcast with Kyle Draper, former Celtics coach and current Clippers boss Doc Rivers sounded less than convinced that signing Kevin Durant was a smart move for the 73-win Warriors:

"You only get 95 shots a game--that's what they took last year, they're gonna get 95 this year. ... Is [Stephen] Curry going to take less shots? Is Klay Thompson going to take less? ... They lost a lot of guys, they lost a lot of their bench which I thought was huge for them. If I've learned anything, even like when we won in 2008, if I could have a redo I don't think we should've touched that team the following year. We made changes. We let [James] Posey go, and chemistry is a very tentative thing. When you have it, you've gotta keep it and I think, ah, we'll see..."

Other than wanting to teach Doc the difference between "less" and "fewer," I wholeheartedly agree with his premise.  The Warriors may well win the title in 2016-17, but odds are they won't be as good as they were last season.

The same podcast also includes an interview with Brad Stevens.  Among other things, Stevens shared his thoughts on the Celtics opting not to re-sign Jared Sullinger:

"I really like Jared and I thought Jared had a great year last year. He started most of our games throughout the regular season and into the playoffs. [He] did a lot of great things and he's a heck of a young player. Obviously when we got Al Horford we had to make tough decisions. That was a really hard decision for everybody."

Stevens always chooses his words wisely and never says anything bad about anyone.  Clearly there's more to the story here--if the C's wanted to keep Sully around they could've, regardless of Horford's arrival.


Friday, August 26, 2016

Phil Jackson's quote about missing out on trading for Jae Crowder sounds like revisionist history

In an interview published Friday by Today's Fastbreak, Knicks GM Phil Jackson said his biggest mistake in New York was passing up the opportunity to trade for Jae Crowder back in 2014.  Here's the full quote:

"I think the biggest mistake I made was actually this…One of the first deals I engineered when I came back to New York was to trade Tyson Chandler and Raymond Felton to Dallas for Shane Larkin, Jose Calderon, Wayne Ellington, Samuel Dalembert, plus a second-round pick that the Mavs owed to the Celtics. In talking with Boston, I was given the option of taking that pick or else taking Jae Crowder. I liked Crowder but I thought he wouldn’t get much of a chance to play behind Carmelo [Anthony], so I took the pick which turned out to be Cleanthony Early. While Cleanthony has missed lots of time in the past two seasons with us, he still has the potential to be a valuable player. Even so, I should have taken Crowder."

Sorry Phil, but I'm calling shenanigans on this.  The Rajon Rondo deal that brought Jae Crowder to Boston happened in December of 2014--Jackson dealt Chandler and Felton to the Mavericks in June, six months earlier.  Assuming Phil just misspoke and actually meant to say Dallas instead of Boston, It's still hard to believe his line about liking Crowder but being afraid he'd never get to play behind Carmelo.

In June of 2014, Crowder (picked in the second round a year earlier) was coming off a rookie season in which he averaged 5.0 points and 2.4 rebounds in 17.3 minutes per game while shooting 38 percent from the floor.  Jackson had been out of the NBA since 2011 (when he retired from coaching the Lakers) before taking the Knicks job three months earlier.  My guess is Jackson had no idea who Crowder was when he made the trade with Dallas.

Regardless of the sincerity of Jackson's story, Crowder's response on Instagram was perfect:


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