There’s been a lot of griping recently over the state of Boston sports, serving (for me) as another ugly reminder of the developing, spoiled and cocksure nature of fans in this area. Let’s take a quick look, shall we?
Boston Celtics
4 February 2010
5 November 2009
Posted by Randolph Charlotin | No comments yet
3 November 2009
Earlier today, the Celtics awarded point guard Rajon Rondo with a 5-year contract extension believed to be in the neighborhood of $55 million. I like Rondo as a player but I’m a bit concerned about banking the future on a mercurial 23-year-old hot shot with a burgeoning prima donna complex and a history of instigating senseless scuffles.
Posted by Charles Bisbee | No comments yet
27 October 2009
Posted by Randolph Charlotin | No comments yet
15 October 2009
Its recently been brought to my attention that, over the past couple of weeks or so, my readership has doubled in volume, from 2 to 4. Thanks to these good natured and sympathetic followers, I’m left to wrestle with a serious question: Do I quit while on top (never had I anticipated the blog becoming this great a success), or do I continue to dribble out these “bi-weekly” blunderbusses, even though there is likely nowhere to go from here but down?
Posted by Charles Bisbee | 1 comment
3 May 2009
Posted by Ed West | No comments yet
28 April 2009
I'm at a loss for words. Literally speechless.
The consensus among the talking heads here in Boston is that this Celtics team isn't going too far this year. They're getting literally less than nothing from their bench? Check. Their defensive captain and the unquestioned heart of their team is out for the playoffs? Check. Their opponent is a young, athletic team with a lot of poise and a nasty streak to boot? Check.
Posted by Denizen of Titletown | 2 comments
26 April 2009
Another one of these games, and I'll be rooming with Danny Ainge down at Mass General.
With the exception of Game 3's blowout victory, neither team has had any breathing room at all in this series. And as I paced around the room with my heart in my throat while the teams traded blows, I realized that this could be a matchup we'll be seeing in the NBA playoffs for a while.
Posted by Denizen of Titletown | No comments yet
17 April 2009
I am not a morning person. I'm especially grouchy after being out late drinking $7 beers and watching the KG-free Celtics in a matchup with the Wizards that was much too hotly contested.
So you can imagine how I was feeling when I got an email entitled "Breaking Sports News" that confirmed my worst fears about Kevin Garnett's injury. To the co-workers I startled when I began screaming obscenities - my bad.
Posted by Denizen of Titletown | No comments yet
11 March 2009
Injuries are sweeping through the Boston Celtics locker-room quicker than the Rage Virus infected London in 28 Days Later. Since their February 8th home-defeat against the Spurs, the Celtics have lost Tony Allen, Kevin Garnett, Brian Scalabrine, Rajon Rondo and Big Baby Davis to one ailment or another. Tonight in Miami, Boston will dress a group of ten players that includes a pair of newcomers who have been on the team less than two weeks, two rookies who never play, and a second-year guard who no one knows if Doc even likes and recently returned from a DUI suspension.
Posted by Christian Mielcarek | No comments yet
22 February 2009
I have to admit, this edition of The Sports Don’s Sunday Musings was harder for me to compile than the previous two weeks. Maybe it’s because I’m still bull over Steven the Black Jack Dealer cheating me out of all of my money at Foxwoods or perhaps it’s because I’m trying to remember to DVR Dark Days in Monkey City. Either way, I still managed to ramble on especially long this weekend so I’ll keep the words typed in the remainder of my intro to a minimum...here it is.
Continue reading "The Sports Don's Sunday Musings: Volume III"
Posted by Christian Mielcarek | No comments yet
15 February 2009
5.) I challenge anyone who was beginning to think the Boston Celtics chances at championship 18 were in jeopardy to stand by that belief following the C’s double-digit come from behind victory in the second half against Dallas on Thursday night. It was quite impressive. Boston overcame five Kevin Garnett fouls in three quarters, Ray Allen’s hyper extended thumb, and playing without subs Tony Allen and Brian Scalabrine to enter the all-star break with the best record in basketball. The Mavericks may not be the superpower they were three seasons ago, but the Celtics didn’t make me regret staying up until 2 a.m. to finish watching the recording of the game after taking a break at the half to kill some zombies in Left 4 Dead. While it should have never been in doubt, Boston sent notice to everyone in the game that home losses to the Lakers and Spurs in a five day span was not a sign of their complacency with last year’s Larry O’Brien trophy. I also challenge anyone to tell me that Kendrick Perkins doesn’t look like a combination of John Thompson III and The Muppets’ Sam Eagle. These are the things I think about it. Is there something wrong with me?
Continue reading "The Sports Don's Sunday Musings: Volume II"
Posted by Christian Mielcarek | No comments yet
6 February 2009
I never had the opportunity to personally attend any of the classic Celtics-Lakers games of the 80s. I was actually only in the old Boston Garden twice, and neither occasion was for basketball. I can’t even claim to remember watching any of the historic battles live on television since I was just six when the decade ended. ESPN Classic provided me with the handful of Bird vs. Magic matchups I have seen, and while I could still feel the intensity between the two great franchises, the suspense was lacking because I already knew the outcomes prior to sitting down.
Posted by Christian Mielcarek | 2 comments
5 February 2009
The Boston Celtics completed a trade on July 31, 2007 that forever altered the complexion of their franchise. The Celtics swung five players, cash considerations and two first-round picks to the Minnesota Timberwolves in exchange for Kevin Garnett, and following some additional tweaking, as Celtics radio announcer Sean Grande so aptly put it, after 20 years of futility, “the game’s original monarchy has retaken the throne”.
Posted by Christian Mielcarek | No comments yet
28 January 2009
All-Star Reserves ballots were due yesterday at 3p.m., and for the all the Eastern Conference coaches who tune in to my blog, I provided some help, a cheat sheet if you will, to aid in their quest to make the proper selections. Call it an East Coast bias, but time did not allow me to do the same for the West. Hopefully, they managed on their own.
Posted by Christian Mielcarek | No comments yet
27 January 2009
F – LeBron James, Cleveland Cavaliers
F – Kevin Garnett, Boston Celtics
C – Dwight Howard, Orlando Magic
With the aforementioned guidelines adhered to, here are my selections...
Posted by Christian Mielcarek | 1 comment
26 January 2009
The Kobes and the LeBrons, excuse me, I mean, the Lakers and the Cavs met for the first time this season a week ago today in Los Angeles, and while the home team won by 17 in an uneventful game where James matched his number in points and Bryant’s 20 weren’t even a team-high, it did give basketball’s so-called pundits another opportunity to debate who’s better: Kobe or LeBron.
Continue reading "Kobe versus LeBron - The Battle for Superiority"
Posted by Christian Mielcarek | No comments yet
22 January 2009
Following a putrid stretch when the defending champions lost seven of nine, the Boston Celtics have regained much of their swagger with six consecutive wins by an average of 16 points per game. Thursday night, the Celtics venture to Orlando to play the hottest, and arguably best, team in the NBA. Regardless of the outcome, do Boston fans still have reason to worry about the chances of Green 18?
Posted by Christian Mielcarek | No comments yet
21 January 2009
1. Boston Celtics.
Why? Well let's see, they have the experience, they have the fire power, they have the adage that Kevin Garnett won't let this team down, they have the inside precense to offset any of the teams that can opose them. Yeah, they went through a slump, but face it, there was no way that they were going to continue on the run that they were on. They came out hotter than anytime, and it was almost certain that they were going to hit a slide. If anyone wants to make the arguement that they could easily be upset in the playoffs because they went to all those game 7's last year, well that was last year. They had three guys who had never won anything, and why wouldn't they be a little shaky? Once it gets to that ever-so-glorious playoff time, the Celtics will be settled down, knowing that they have done it before, and that nobody really believes they can do it two years in a row.
Posted by Jordan Newgard | No comments yet
15 January 2009
Anyone catch that Spurs Lakers game from last night? It was a fantastic, wonderful game from tip-off to final buzzer. It came down to the last possession, and there was a certain exchange that I found to be quite delightful that may just come in handy sometime later this year...
Posted by David Trageser | No comments yet
7 January 2009
I may be an over-the-top, totally subjective fan, but I know where to draw the line. Yes, I am always totally optimistic when it comes to my favorite teams, but when I sit down and think clearly about the broad outlook of things, I can do it objectively, and I hope I got the subjective and objective terms right and used them correctly.
Posted by Jordan Newgard | No comments yet
26 December 2008
The Celtics finally lost, and although many in the sports world would have you believe that the sky is falling, I for one am not entirely convinced. Give credit to Kobe and the Lakers, they played hard on Christmas day and earned their win. They were physical with the Celtics and very aggressive on both ends of the floor, forcing Boston turnovers and making big shots when it counted, but I'm not worried, and I don't believe that the Lakers have redeemed themselves at all for the turd egg they laid in last season's Finals. Since when does winning one regular season game at home count as a statement game? How does one victory on National TV even come close to making up for a humiliating 39 point ego-ectomy (to use the basketbawful terminology) of a defeat in basketball's biggest game of the year or the three embarassing losses that preceeded it?
Posted by David Trageser | No comments yet
15 December 2008
Posted by William Bogen | No comments yet
8 December 2008
Why Celtics 24/7? Because everything you could possibly want out of your favorite basketball team is right here on this site! Every inch of celtics247.com is fully interactive from our widely popular discussion forum where every detail about the Celtics can be discussed with other fans along with the Sox, Pats, and Bruins. Have a piece of graphics art work you want to display? Do you have your own announcement or suggestion for the C's 24/7 crew? You can do that on the forum as well! Our home page has enough features to keep every Celtics fan happy. With up to the minute breaking news and analysis on every event in the Celtics world from Scalabrine's shorts ripping to blockbuster trades you'll feel right at home.
Posted by Sports Fan | No comments yet
5 December 2008
First, check out this, it's super hilarious and well written. Now, on to the good stuff...
We're less than four hours away from the Blazers and Celtics tipping off in Boston (catch it on ESPN if you don't want to listen to Mike Rice gush over Channing Frye and you love Van Gundy/Jackson as much as I do), so I figured I'd provide a few nuggets of wisdom about what might be the keys to the game for both sides. Now before you all collectively groan in disgust, let me reassure you that what follows may actually prove insightful, unlike most other "key to tonight's match-up" pieces that simply say score, defend and rebound better than your opponent. There are a few things that I'm looking for as indicators of successful play by both sides which go much deeper than the usual mundane crap, so bear with me.
Posted by David Trageser | No comments yet
26 November 2008
(cue the Biggie...) I'm going out of town for the long holiday weekend, so all of you out there (if there are any of you) are going to have to survive for a few days without my wonderful and insightful analysis about all things basketball for a few days. (I'll pause for a moment to let you scream in anguish and control your sobbing...) But fear not, I will be back with even more opinions and prognostications about the realm of professional sports on Tuesday, and by then I should have plenty to write about.
Posted by David Trageser | No comments yet
22 November 2008
Posted by David Trageser | No comments yet
17 November 2008
Posted by David Trageser | 1 comment
You can't turn on a TV or pick up a newspaper in the greater Boston area these days without the same never-ending argument slapping you squarely in the face: Does Paul Pierce rank among the top 10 players in the NBA?
Posted by Keith Testa | No comments yet
10 November 2008
Continue reading "For Your Consideration: An Open Letter ..."
Posted by David Trageser | No comments yet
5 November 2008
Toyota Center was scattered with empty seats throughout the lower and upper bowls, which is disappointing since this is the Celtics' only stop through Houston this season. Anytime a team is facing the Champs the arena should be packed! This was also a NBATV game, so disappointing to see the low attendance. This of course probably had to do with the Election and whatnot, but what else can a basketball game offer having two of the top tier teams in the NBA going at it?
Posted by Jake Calenda | No comments yet
3 November 2008
It's been a while since the Detroit Pistons haven't been near the top of the league. Their players buy into the team concept, they play good defense, and they are consistently well coached and well managed from the front office.
Posted by Denizen of Titletown | No comments yet
2 November 2008
Weirder things has happened in the beginning of the season, the San Antonio Spurs are 0-2 and if you forgot already, they were champions a couple of years ago. Anyways, it's still too early to tell but if the Celtics really play as sloppy as today, then maybe they need to improve because there are more tougher teams than Indiana. What sucks more is that the Celtics lost even if Mike Dunleavy, Jr. did not play.
The Celtics must not feel complacent in every quarter. Eventhough they have the capability to catch up in the fourth quarter, still, they can't pull off that trick all the time. As Doc Rivers sat by the scorer's table in disbelief, the Boston fans were in awe with what happened in Indiana, their shots were always falling while the Celtics had a very hard time to get a ball sliding through the net. It looked as if there was a lid on the Celtics' basket at Conseco Field House.
Big Ups to Danny Granger and TJ Ford, but truth be told, all I can say is that they just really got lucky that the Celtics sucked today.
November 4 =
Posted by KC Castillo | No comments yet
28 October 2008
The Boston Celtics have definitely proven their worth as a championship team. Their cinderella story has came true the previous season and now comes the hard part. It's time to defend and it's time to prove that they are deserving to be called NBA Champions. Paul Pierce, Ray Allen and Kevin Garnett will have their hands full this season as many teams have improved their line-ups.
Posted by KC Castillo | No comments yet
EAST WINS OVER THE WEST
ROOKIES WIN OVER SOPHOMORES
PLAY-OFFS:
EASTERN CONFERENCE
1) Boston Celtics
2) Cleveland Cavaliers
3) Detroit Pistons
4) Orlando Magic
5) Philadelphia Sixers
Posted by KC Castillo | No comments yet
27 October 2008
Twenty-one and a half hours stand between us and the commencement of the Celtics season, and yours truly managed to score some tickest not only for tomorrow night's game, but for Friday night's as well.
Posted by Denizen of Titletown | 2 comments
25 October 2008
Many may doubt a repeat from the Boston Celtics due to the trades made out in the Eastern Conference. Definitely, many teams have improved with regards to their line-up. You have Toronto with two imposing big men, then you also have Philadelphia adding up Elton Brand. The Eastern Conference has beefed up for sure but as the saying goes, "Don't ever underestimate the heart of a champion."
Continue reading "Steps for the Celtics to Defend the Title (Part 1)"
Posted by KC Castillo | No comments yet
Here is the line-up for the 2008-2009 BOSTON CELTICS
Guards:
Rajon Rondo, Gabe Pruitt, J.R. Giddens, Eddie House, Sam Cassell, Tony Allen, Ray Allen
Forwards:
Paul Pierce, Leon Powe, Glen Davis, Kevin Garnett, Brian Scalabrine, Bill Walker
Posted by KC Castillo | No comments yet
24 October 2008
The Boston Celtics is the best team because they have come up with the winning formula to capture a crown. Though many say that the "Big Three" does it all, we can't just disregard the bench and the role players who's ready to step up in any given situation.
Continue reading "ABOUT ME & WHY THE CELTICS IS THE BEST TEAM"
Posted by KC Castillo | No comments yet
22 October 2008
I blinked my eyes and - poof - the Darius Miles experiment was over.
The Celtics waived the lanky forward this week, after a mini-audition throughout the pre-season that featured short bursts of minutes. He may have never amounted to anything legitimate, but now we'll never know. Everyone said the Celtics were "taking a gamble" by signing Miles in the off-season, but what kind of gamble is it if you never let the guy have a chance.
Posted by Keith Testa | No comments yet
17 October 2008
Continue reading "Welcome to my blog! Here's a little about me..."
Posted by Scott Sudikoff | 3 comments
14 October 2008
Don’t take this the wrong way, but I like a little violence, in sports that is. I think most people who like sports agree. The biggest reactions from spectators usually occur after a big coll
Posted by Seth Mott | No comments yet
13 October 2008
Fast forward to last week, and the first three pre-season games for the defending world champion Boston Celtics. Two things stood out in my mind almost immediately: Bill Walker can play in this league, and Gabe Pruitt could be a solid back-up combo guard. Whether either of those things happens in Boston remains to be seen, and one of the reasons that's an issue is Cassell.
Posted by Keith Testa | No comments yet
So why bring this up now? Because the 2007-08 Boston Celtics were the basketball version of the 2004 Red Sox. I've been a Celtics fan as long as I've been a Red Sox fan, and when I lived in Boston I was one of a few hundred people still interested enough to occasionally buy tickets and watch the Celtics live. I fell in love with Ryan Gomes and Al Jefferson and the spunky young players that made up the core of the team, and watched on a nightly basis, knowing full well I was watching the players develop at the expense of having a competitive team.
Posted by Keith Testa | No comments yet
10 October 2008
I don’t know why, but it occurred to me the other day that clothing really changed sports. In ancient Rome, sports were played in the nude. Seriously. That’s probably why there were no
Posted by Seth Mott | 1 comment
14 September 2008
Posted by David Trageser | No comments yet
19 August 2008
Posted by David Trageser | No comments yet
15 July 2008
Well, basketball is over and Major League Baseball is heading into the All Star break, which means that the real baseball season is about to begin. I know, I am waaaaaaaaaaayyyyy overdue for this year's first rabid Red Sox post, but honestly I've been a little bit preoccupied with the WORLD CHAMPION BOSTON CELTICS and basketball in general (it has overtaken baseball as my favorite sport, though the Red Sox are and always will be my first love) to really dive into the first three meaningless months of the grueling and arduous MLB season.
Posted by David Trageser | No comments yet
6 July 2008
You're probably asking yourself how I could make such a bold statement, especially considering the age of the three superstars who anchored this team.
I'm a Celtics hooligan - this is very true. But I also believe the fortunes for now and the immediate future changed dramatically on July 31, 2007.
Continue reading "Why the Celtics are set for the next 5 years"
Posted by Denizen of Titletown | No comments yet
1 July 2008
"The Big Three," "Drive for 17." With all the media attention focused on the two recently-added all-stars and the team's comeback this season, a young player's name may have gotten lost in the shuffle, Rajon Rondo. Sure, Paul Pierce, Ray Allen, and KG are the present heroes of the Celtics, but it's the young players like Rondo who are the future of this franchise. With his remarkable intelligence at the ripe age of 21, Rondo is a promising leader as point-guard for a team that will undoubtedly be successful in the playoffs for several more years. Look at where he's led his team so far. Although he makes some unwise decisions, this is to be expected from a second-year player. Some fans have criticized Rondo's inexperience as it was evident in game five of the finals against the LA Lakers. During one play, Rajon Rondo had an opening and took it to the paint, but instead of finishing, he dished the ball to Pierce for a jumper from beyond the arc, which missed.
Posted by Nay B | No comments yet
26 June 2008
Posted by David Trageser | No comments yet
Posted by Charles Bisbee | No comments yet
20 June 2008
Posted by Lok-Tin Yao | No comments yet
Posted by David Trageser | No comments yet
16 June 2008
I'm somewhat at a loss for words today (surprising, no?). All I can say is that the Lakers got lucky last night in more ways than just the favorable officiating (Kobe just about hacked Paul Pierce's arm off on the decisive steal, but the game was not lost there). The Lakers are lucky that KG missed two crucial free-throws (which, should the Celtics lose will become the mother of all albatrosses hanging around the Big TIcket's neck), and especially lucky that 3 of 5 Celtic starters are hurt during the biggest games of the entire season. Knowing that, the Lakers should be ahead, they should be cruising to a championship, but they aren't. The Celtics botched game five and spoiled a brilliant performance by Paul Pierce that could have, and should have clinched the series. The bad news for LA is that the Celtics know that, and they won't let it happen again.
Posted by David Trageser | No comments yet
14 June 2008
... (pause) ... Did that really happen? Was I dreaming (or possibly too fucked up to really see the TV)? You mean to tell me that the Celtics rallied from an 18-point halftime deficite to beat the Los Angeles Lakers 97-91 and put a hammer lock on this series? And Kobe only scored 17, in LA? You can't be serious.
Posted by David Trageser | No comments yet
10 June 2008
Posted by David Trageser | No comments yet
7 June 2008
Sorry about the delay in the game one post, but it wasn't until very recently that I was able to pick my jaw back up off the floor after Thursday's game one 98-88 Celtics win in game one of this year's NBA Finals. As giddy as I am about the Celtics' win, I am equally terrified for the health of Paul Pierce's knee and Boston's future in this series.
Posted by David Trageser | No comments yet
2 June 2008
I've been racking my brain for the past two days (and then some, here are some of my thoughts on the Lakers from April) trying to think of ways that the Celtics can beat the Lakers in the Finals that are only four days away at this point. Thus far I haven't been able to come up with anything really juicy, but I've got some beginnings of some ideas that might lead to successful strategies and/or game plans for the Celtics to employ against the mighty and dangerous (they're just mighty dangerous!) Los Angeles Lakers.
Posted by David Trageser | No comments yet
1 June 2008
Posted by David Trageser | No comments yet
31 May 2008
Posted by David Trageser | 2 comments
27 May 2008
I know, I know, that's a really convoluded headline for a basketball blog post, but there's a good reason for it that I'll hopefully be able to articulate somewhere in this rambling tangent of drivel (and besides, I know that if Ray is reading this that I got at least one good laugh out of the title). Want an explanation? Ok here it goes:
Continue reading "Bastardizing Physics Without Resorting ..."
Posted by David Trageser | No comments yet
24 May 2008
Now, onto the grimmer and infinitely less pleasant matter of what went wrong last night. The Celtics defense last night was abominable to say the least. The Pistons shot 49% from the floor and 50% from the land of three, and to top it all off, they absolutely killed the Celtics from the free throw line, converting 28 of 32 attempts. Detroit was aggressive and balanced in their offensive attack, continually punishing the Celtics defense by making the extra pass and finding open shooters.
Posted by David Trageser | 1 comment
22 May 2008
Today's tangent is inspired by Raymond (shockingly, with me on this one) and Matt Stauffer, who has posed a challenge to me by asserting that the Celtics will lose to either Detroit or the winner of the Western Conference for a few key reasons. Following the game one victory for Boston, I thought I'd address a few of his concerns (convenient that I waited until a resounding Celtics victory to start talking smack, isn't it?). Hey, hey, easy now, I'm not fixin' to start a war or anything, in fact I respect the feedback and the fact that somebody is actually reading my posts (anyone else? ...Beuller?). I'm only out to address the argument and provide as complete a rebuttal as I can, so without further delay, let's get started.
Posted by David Trageser | 1 comment
18 May 2008
I could officially care less about the Celtics road record this postseason. After seeing the way the Celtics have played at home against some tough competition, I don't think that anybody, not even the mighty Detroit Pistons can beat the Celtics in Boston this year. The players are hungry and the city is too, and we can all smell a championship now.
Posted by David Trageser | 1 comment
16 May 2008
Going into tonight's game 6 match up of Jeckel & Hyde the Boston Celtics vs. LeBron James & his handicap the Cleveland Cavaliers, I have some thoughts on how the Celtics might finally win a game on the road in this year's postseason. The problems on the road have been numerous for the Celtics (and everyone else) this postseason, however I believe that the key to victory for the Celtics tonight will be their aggression on offense and communication on defense.
Posted by David Trageser | No comments yet
13 May 2008
After dropping all three road games in their first round series against Atlanta (never mind that the Celtics' four home wins totaled a victory margin of over 100 points), the Celtics have most recently lost twice to LeBron James in Cleveland. This perceived weakness is an area for the media to yap about the Celtics woes and inject some additional drama into the postseason (and who really needs that when LeBron is barking at his mom on mother's day on national TV?), but upon further review, the media's talk appears to be meaningless (indicative of a larger trend within the media, perhaps?).
Posted by David Trageser | No comments yet
6 May 2008
Posted by David Trageser | No comments yet
5 May 2008
I'm upset that I didn't get to watch game 7 of the Celtics/Hawks Beatdown in Beantown on Sunday, but this gig doesn't exactly pay the bills, so alas I was working for the man instead of cheering loudly and laughing my ass off as the Hawks got served in brutal fashion in Boston. The game speaks for itself (likely won't stop me from speaking for it), and it provided a thunderous and definitive answer to all the doubters and haters (Zaza Pachulia got a personal notice of defeat, the back court pick from KG that leveled the untalented center).
Posted by David Trageser | No comments yet
The Celtics seven game series with the Hawks was a beneficial experience for the Celtics. A team that had never played with each other in the playoffs was able to see what they were really made of. The Hawks, granted they are an extremely young and inexperienced team, pushed the Celtics to their limit. But the Celtics responded admirably by absolutely pounding the Hawks in a decisive game seven, ending any hope at all that their team would win.
Posted by Michael Rothman | No comments yet
3 May 2008
Posted by David Trageser | No comments yet
2 May 2008
Only three hours and ten minutes until the Hawks and Celtics tip off game 6 in Atlanta, so until then I figure I'll spend the beautiful afternoon rambling on and on about other news in the basketball world. So I apologize, but this post will have little or nothing to do with my beloved hometown Celtics, but does concern another one of my favorite teams in the NBA, the Phoenix Suns.
Posted by David Trageser | No comments yet
1 May 2008
Now that's more like it. The Celtics have put the Hawks on the ropes with a resounding and convincing victory in game 5 last night. Everything that was going wrong for Boston in games 3 and 4 seems to have been solved by playing in front of their home crowd, and similarly, everything that was going right for the Hawks evaporated into thin air as the road team. I suppose that it just goes to show how huge an advantage a raucous home crowd can be in a playoff series. That being said, I think that the Celtics are poised to break the cycle in this series and finish the Hawks off in game 6 in Atlanta.
Posted by David Trageser | No comments yet
29 April 2008
Posted by David Trageser | No comments yet
23 April 2008
Continue reading "Rondo On a Roll, Plus Superstars Shining Bright"
Posted by David Trageser | No comments yet
16 April 2008
Posted by David Trageser | No comments yet
14 April 2008
Posted by David Trageser | No comments yet
9 April 2008
You can't spell "Los Andgeles" without a 'd.' Oh wait, yes you can! "Los Angeles," see? No 'd,' there you have it (Look what my college degree gets me!). Maybe that's why the Los Angeles Lakers (no "d" there either!) don't play it very well. I don't even need to back that statement up, either (but fear not, I'm going to!). The proof is in the pudding, and by pudding I mean last night's loss to the Trail Blazers in Portland.
Posted by David Trageser | No comments yet
8 April 2008
No NBA yesterday, instead I had to settle for March Madness, boo hoo. It was a great game, and despite the loss I still think that Derrick Rose is the best player in college right now and should be the no. 1 overall pick in the upcoming NBA draft. He's incredibly athletic, has a great sense of the game, a high basketball IQ and most importantly is, by all accounts, an excellent leader and teammate. Michael "Beastly" is incredible as well, I just think Rose's ability to make his teammates better and his upside are tremendous. Also, Chris Douglas Roberts and Mario Chalmers were amazing, to put it mildly.
Posted by David Trageser | No comments yet
4 April 2008
First and foremost, I'd rather see the Boston Celtics match up against Cleveland than the other likely alternative, the Orlando Magic. Orlando has already beaten the Celtics twice this season (by a combined 5 points), whereas the Celtics split their season series with Cleveland, 2-2. Orlando also presents some tough match-ups for the Celtics, with Dwight Howard in the middle and Rashard Lewis and Hedo Turkoglu on the perimeter. While none of the Orlando players present as difficult a cover as LeBron James (Howard is close, but his game is not as diverse as LeBron's, nor does he have the same combination of speed and strength that makes James almost impossible to contain), the Magic have three legitimate scoring options that are capable of sinking any opponent on any night.
Posted by David Trageser | No comments yet
3 April 2008
Posted by David Trageser | No comments yet
2 April 2008
The Celtics handled their business tonight. They beat the Indianna Pacers in convincing fashion tonight, becoming the first NBA team this season to reach the 60 win plateau. The Celtics played an excellent team game on both ends, stifling the Pacers, the NBA's 3rd highest scoring team, and holding them to a mere 77 points. Garnett led the way for the Celtics with 20 points and 11 rebounds and Leon Powe sparkled off of the bench, contributing 14 points and 9 rebounds on an energetic 5 of 8 shooting performance.
Posted by David Trageser | No comments yet
1 April 2008
Everybody knows Paul Pierce can score. His reputation in the NBA is that of a tenacious scorer, capable of tormenting defenders and taking over offensively for stretches, using his combination of size and grace to muscle or slash his way into the lane or to the rim or to create space for his silky smooth mid-range jumper. Unfortunately for Pierce, this is all he's been known as, and for several years he has been seen as only a ball-hogging chucker who couldn't defend anyone, more focused on padding his stats on an irrelevant team than winning games. While this characterization seems fitting enough given the performances of him and his team for the past few seasons, this season Pierce has shown to the world what dedicated Celtics fans have known for years, that Pierce is a well rounded and versatile player on both ends of the floor, both willing and able to do whatever it takes to get his team a win.
Posted by David Trageser | No comments yet
19 March 2008
How cool is this spring going to be? We have the 54-13 Boston Celtics. The best record in the NBA and maybe best team to match. And the 2007 Champion Red Sox, coming into the new season with just about all of the key cogs from last year, along with a couple of nice additions in Sean Casey and possibly Bartolo Colon. It's pretty cool knowing that 2 or 3 times a week through April, Boston fans will have great sports options.
Posted by michael moschella | No comments yet
21 February 2008
For only the second time all season the Celtics dropped two in a row after Baron Davis canned a last second fall away jumper. The Golden State Warriors defeated the men in Green, 119-117, in front of 20,711 people, the largest crowd in franchise history, and largest crowd to ever watch a basketball game in the state of California. That's great. We lost!
Posted by michael moschella | No comments yet

