Jun
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From 50 Wins To 50 Wins What A Long Strange Trip It’s Been (Reprinted From March 13, 2008)
Filed Under NBA PLAYOFFS, SDC COMMENTARY | 1 Comment
Editor’s note: The following is a reprint of a column originally published on March 13, when the Boston Celtics eclipsed the 50 win mark. On the eve of the NBA Finals I thought this was an appropriate time to re-run it. If you read it the first time, hope you enjoy it again, if it’s the first time the same sentiment goes.
The Boston Celtics of 1985-1986 were in this observers opinion the greatest team assembled in the history of the NBA. Now you can make your arguments for 1966-1967 Philadelphia 76ers (great team) the 1986-1987 Los Angeles Lakers(great team) the Jordan era Bulls (no legitimate competition) but you won’t change my mind. The team that beat the Houston Rockets to win the NBA Finals was eight men deep, and could destroy you in a myriad of ways. Not only that did that team feature Bird, Parish, McHale, Johnson, and Ainge, it had the NBA Sixth Man Award Winner in Bill Walton. Add on forward Scott Wedman, and guard Jerry Sichting and this team was a steamroller. It was not only the apex, the peak of the Boston Celtics Dynasty, it was also the beginning of the end.
If you are not a Boston Celtics fan, then you probably hate Boston Celtics fans! Celtics fans are the ultimate schizophrenics, they are haughty about the franchise storied past. But they cry the blues that they have not won a championship since 1986. Outsiders have no sympathy for them, just ask someone from Cleveland, who have not won a Championship outside of the MISL since 1964. But when you have gone from living in the Penthouse for 30 years, it’s tough to take the outhouse for the next 20.
There are three distinct eras of Celtics greatness. The “Original Dynasty” of Russell, Cousy, Heinsohn, and the Jones duo, that won 11 championships in 13 years from 1957-1969 was the first era. The second era was the 1974, 1976 championship teams, that were the Havelicek, Cowens, Silas, JoJo White, era. If you are under forty (as is most of the world it seems) the era that you are most familiar with is the era of the “Big Three” which was 1980-1992. That was the era that along with the Los Angeles Lakers, and the Philadelphia 76ers saved the NBA in the 1980’s.
The NBA was a dying league in 1980, a fringe sport at best. They were relegated to having the NBA Finals broadcast on tape delay at 11:30 p.m. on CBS! And they did the same thing on the West Coast. So if you wanted to not know what the outcome of the game was until you watched it, you had to wait until six hours after the game started back East, for the broadcast to begin!? The Association had been racked by drug scandals in the late seventies and early eighties (not steroids, recreational drugs.) The league was starting to get some notice after the merger of the NBA and the ABA, and a young phenom by the name of Julius Erving AKA Dr. J started opening some eyes. Unfortunately because of the era that he played in, and the fact that he split his time between the two leagues, I don’t know that the Doctor gets the recognition and respect he deserves. But if you saw the young Dr. J play it was usually with your mouth wide open in shock,?at the amazing things he could do on the court. He “flew” long before M.J. ever did!
But the beginning of the true Renaissance of the NBA began in the 1979-1980 season when Earvin “Magic” Johnson, and Larry Joe Bird came into the league. The pair became instant celebrities, when Johnson’s team beat Bird’s team in the NCAA Finals. And the talk of a rivalry began then, one that would eventually revive the league, and take it to new heights they had never imagined.
The 1980’s may have been the true “Golden Age Of The NBA.” For the entire decade you had only two teams from the Western Conference that went to the NBA Finals. The Los Angeles Lakers, and the Houston Rockets. This in an era when you had the Doug Moe Denver Nuggets, George Gervin and the San Antonio Spurs, that were both superb teams, but they never could get out of the West. Being a Milwaukee Bucks fan must have been pure torture, your team won 50 games almost every season, and they never made it out of the East. From 1980-1987 only two teams represented the East, the Sixers, and the Celtics. From 1984-1987 the Celtics were in the Finals every year! But the 1986 team was the last team that won the title.
Things went sour pretty quickly for the Celtics, starting with the NBA Draft of 1986. The Celtics picking second, picked a young phenom who was being compared to Michael Jordan, Len Bias out of the University of Maryland. Less than 48 hours later Bias would be dead, victim of a fatal cocaine overdose. The good luck Leprechaun who watched over the Celtics, must have went away, because that was just the start.
?Soon after the 1986-1987 season started Scott Wedman broke his leg, ending his career. Not long after Walton started suffering foot problems, a malady that had plagued him throughout his career. He would never be the same. During the Post Season McHale suffered a stress fracture, the same injury that just ended Yao Ming’s season. Yao was smart, he had the surgery and ended his season to prolong his career. McHale was gutsy he played through it, his foot got far worse, and the surgery was far more severe. McHale would never be the same player again. The Legend, was the next one to get bit by the injury bug, Bird first tore his Achilles tendon, but it was his back that would end his career before? it should have concluded.
The last time the Boston Celtics won 50 or more games was back in the 1991-1992 season, when they went 51-31. That season was not only the last season that the ?Big Three? (Larry Bird, Robert Parish, Kevin McHale) played together, it was the season that a budding young star emerged in Boston, Number 35 the Late Great Reggie Lewis. Unfortunately a bad heart would claim Lewis a short time later, but he was looked at at that point, as the bridge to the next generation of Celtics greatness.
Things went from bad to worse over the next 15 years, as Boston tried a series of regimes. The Dave Gavitt regime, The M.L. Carr regime, The Rick Pitino regime, all abject failures. Pitino came in just before the 1997 NBA Draft expecting he would end up with the number one pick, and Tim Duncan. Instead he got the number three pick, and he chose Chauncey Billups, who inexplicably he traded away in the middle of the season! Pitino resigned as Team President and head coach on January 8, 2001, leaving 27 million dollars on the table. His assistant Jim O’Brien took over as coach, and had the Celtics in the NBA Eastern Conference Finals in 2002, which they lost to New?Jersey. Danny?Ainge came in that Summer as Director Of Basketball Operations, and proceeded to trade the team away. O’Brien quit, and then last season the Boston Celtics went 24-58, 12-29 at home, 12-29 on the road.
Ainge resurrected his reputation and the team this off-season as he acquired Ray Allen and Kevin Garnett.?Along with existing All-Star Paul Pierce the team is 51-12 as we go to print. Boston has gone from a moribund Basketball city to Hoopsville, USA this season. Who knows what lies ahead as the season concludes, but Boston is a Basketball Town again for the first time since 1992.
? Copyright 2008 thesackattack.net?
Jun
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Slam Dunk Central Columnist Kyle Stack?s NBA Finals Preview Thoughts
Filed Under NBA PLAYOFFS, SDC COMMENTARY | Leave a Comment
All I want are four more wins. The task is much tougher than that sentence makes it seem, but I’m just grateful to be able to write that first sentence during the first week of June. It means my favorite team, the Lakers, are in the Finals, the ultimate stage for every NBA fan to view his or her team.
I was checking out the NBA Store’s Web site this afternoon at work when I thought of something that I had to mention to a coworker: that I couldn’t be caught dead purchasing a hat, T-shirt or any other keepsake celebrating a conference championship. I mean, if I were a Sacramento Kings fan, then, sure, I could feel good about purchasing a Western Conference Champions pennant. But I’m a Lakers fan and I have loftier expectations. That might sound condescending, but it’s unfailingly true. It’s why I grew a bit concerned last Thursday night when the Lakers appeared a bit too giddy celebrating their conference championship on a stage at center court in Staples Center.
The last thing I want to see out of the Lakers is any sense of complacency. I doubt that any level of satisfaction has creeped in, considering that Kobe Bryant, Derek Fisher and the entire coaching staff has far too much experience and too many NBA championship rings to let that happen.
It’s imperative to have standards because once those are set, goals can be formed. Once goals are formed, an individual or group of individuals have something to work toward. And the Lakers are working toward a championship, just like Lakers fans are working their emotions towards, hopefully, celebrating a championship. And a conference championship just won’t do.
Jun
4
The “National Post” reported Wednesday that the name of Toronto Raptors point guard T.J. Ford surfaced quite frequently during the pre-draft camp that the NBA conducted last week in Orlando. Raptors General Manager Bryan Colangelo has been?quite vocal since Toronto was eliminated in the first round of the NBA Playoffs that the team plans on making Jose Calderon it’s number one point guard. This of course makes Ford a commodity the Raptors will likely try to move over the off-season. The report said that the Raptors are a bit concerned that given the former Texas player’s injury history, his value may be diminished. Ford had spinal surgery as a member of the Milwaukee Bucks, he was hurt this season in Atlanta after colliding with Hawks rookie Al Horford.
? Copyright 2008 thesackattack.net??
Jun
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Jun
4
ESPN: Doc Rivers Ready To Go Head To Head With Phil Jackson
Filed Under ESPN Reports, NBA PLAYOFFS | Leave a Comment
Jun
4
ESPN: Kobe’s Intensity Fueling Lakers’ Finals Prep
Filed Under ESPN Reports, NBA PLAYOFFS | Leave a Comment
Jun
4
ESPN: Inside The Celtics-Lakers Rivalry With Cedric Maxwell
Filed Under ESPN Reports, NBA PLAYOFFS | Leave a Comment





