Tag Archive: Boston Celtics


LAS VEGAS – LeBron James’ decision to sign with the Miami Heat made NBA commissioner David Stern go “Hmmm…”

James’ decision to turn his decision into a made-for-TV spectacle called the “Decision”?

That made Stern cringe.

Stern said Monday he has no problem with James leaving the Cleveland Cavaliers to join Dwyane Wade and Chris Bosh in Miami – and he has no reason to think the Heat engaged in tampering to get him. But he does wish James had chosen a better platform to announce his decision, particularly because he didn’t give the Cavaliers more notice he was leaving.

“Had he asked my advice in advance, I might have suggested that he advise Cleveland at an earlier time than apparently he did that he was leaving, even without announcing where he was going, so we could have eliminated that,” Stern after a meeting with the NBA’s board of governors. “I would have advised him not to embark on what has become known as ‘The Decision.’

“I think that the advice that he received on this was poor. His performance was fine. His honesty and his integrity shine through. But this decision was ill conceived, badly produced and poorly executed. Those who were interested in it were given our opinion prior to its airing.”

James’ decision prompted Cavaliers owner Dan Gilbert to send a scathing letter criticizing his former star to the team’s fans. In it, he called James “narcissistic” and said he displayed “cowardly behavior.” He also vowed that Cavaliers would win a championship before James did with the Heat.

Stern said he had fined Gilbert $100,000 for the comments.

One league source said the Cavaliers’ media relations staff begged Gilbert to not send the email, but he ignored the pleas and wanted it out immediately. Gilbert also told The Associated Press that he felt James quit on the Cavs during the playoffs the past two seasons.

“Remarks by Dan Gilbert, the owner of the Cavaliers, catalyzed as they may have been by hurt with respect to the manner and the fact for himself, his team, and particularly for the people of Cleveland, though understandable, were ill advised and imprudent,” Stern said.

The Rev. Jesse Jackson had previously criticized Gilbert’s comments, saying they”personify a slave master mentality” and sounded like they were directed at a “runaway slave.”

“Equally imprudent, I believe, are the remarks by my good friend Jesse Jackson, which purport to make this into a racial matter,” Stern said. “I find that to be, however well meaning Jesse may be in the premises on this one, he is, as he rarely is, mistaken. I would have told him so had he called me before he issued his statement this morning.

“But he is a good friend of the NBA and our players, and has worked arduously in many good causes, and we work together in many matters. I have a great deal of respect for him. We would just call this a disagreement amongst friends.”

Stern had no problems with James and Bosh joining Wade with the Heat to form a team that Las Vegas odds makers are already calling the favorites to win the 2011 championship. Stern compared the new Heat to the Boston Celtics and Los Angeles Lakers of the 1980s and the Chicago Bulls’ dynasty of the 1990s. Those teams, he said, “didn’t have three Hall of Famers, but sometimes had four and a half.”

When asked about his immediate response when he learned of James’ decision, Stern said: “I wasn’t like, ‘Whoa.’ You know, it was more like, ‘Hmm, that’s pretty good.’ ”

James left fans in Cleveland angry, crying and shocked after the decision. Some even burned his Cavaliers jerseys and T-shirts. His famous mammoth Nike billboard in downtown Cleveland was also brought down.

“We touch an emotional cord in our sport,” Stern said. “That’s what happens. Fans feel disappointment. You might feel jilted. We’ve seen that in other circles. Maybe not quite as dramatically.”

With a representative from every franchise on hand at the board of governor’s meeting, Stern also said no team expressed any desire to file tampering charges against the Heat for allegedly talking to James prior to the beginning of the free agency period on July 1. When asked if there were any exchanges between the Cavaliers and Heat ownership, Stern said it was “all very cordial.”

“There’s nothing here at this time that is causing us to launch an investigation,” Stern said.

Take a break for one moment from the endlessly swirling LeBron James rumor mill of devastation. This is still a period of free agency for the entire NBA, and various minor moves could make the difference in next year’s postseason. Unless the Heat manage to reanimate the corpse of Wilt Chamberlain.

Speaking of reanimating corpses, the Celtics have made a low-key, but quite valuable move. Boston needs help in the paint. Key sub Rasheed Wallace has retired, Kendrick Perkins is going to be out until at least December with his various knee injuries, and Luke Harangody can only replace Brian Scalabrine in so many ways.

Thankfully, help is on the way in the form of a one-time All-Star. Here’s Adrian Wojnarowski at Yahoo!:

Free-agent center Jermaine O’Neal has reached agreement to sign a two-year contract worth about $12 million with the Boston Celtics, league sources told Yahoo! Sports.
In recent seasons, O’Neal has become a source of comedy, particularly as the most high-profile member of Dwyane Wade’s poor supporting cast in Miami. But that was largely because he was overpaid. O’Neal’s value is pretty much set as a short-term big man at this point.

In that role, he can be quite successful. His offensive game isn’t there these days, but he can still succeed as a rebounder and defender. The Heat played a slow-it-down game this year built on defense, and O’Neal was a huge part of that.

He will have to start at the beginning of the season with Perk out, but it’s easy to imagine him in the playoffs as a very important backup to keep up the defensive pressure when Garnett and Perkins sit.

O’Neal is no longer the player he once was. But he is still a valuable pickup for a veteran contender like the Celtics.

O’Neal to sign with Celtics

Free-agent center Jermaine O’Neal has reached agreement to sign a two-year contract worth about $12 million with the Boston Celtics, league sources told Yahoo! Sports.

O’Neal had been deliberating between the Celtics and Denver Nuggets.

Boston needed a center to help fill in for Kendrick Perkins, who is expected to be out five to six months with a severe knee injury. Rasheed Wallace also has indicated he plans to retire.

After falling one game short of winning their second NBA championship in three years, the Celtics have been active in free agency to solidify their roster for another run.

The Celtics reached agreement on a two-year, $20 million contract with Ray Allen on Wednesday, five days after giving Paul Pierce a four-year, $61 million extension. Coach Doc Rivers also announced last week he would return for another season.

O’Neal, 31, averaged 13.6 points and 6.9 rebounds for the Heat last season.

BOSTON (AP)—The Boston Celtics’ new Big Three will stay together to try for a second NBA title.

Ray Allen confirmed to The Associated Press on Wednesday night that he has agreed to a two-year, $20 million contract to return to Boston. With Kevin Garnett under contract, Paul Pierce on the verge of a new four-year deal and coach Doc Rivers also agreeing to return, the Celtics can keep together the core of the 2008 NBA champions for at least two more years.

Allen’s agent, Lon Babby, told the AP that the second year is a player option. NBA teams are not allowed to sign free agents until Thursday.

The deal was first reported by ESPN.

Allen, who turns 35 this month, averaged 16.3 points last season as the Celtics reached the NBA finals for the second time in three years. After Boston lost to the Los Angeles Lakers in seven games, Allen said, “It’s obvious I don’t want to be anywhere else.”

Allen joined the Celtics in the summer of 2007, joining with Pierce to lure Garnett to Boston to form a new Big Three that won an NBA title in its first season together. The next year, with Garnett injured, the Celtics lost in the Eastern Conference semifinals.

With the team struggling at the All-Star break this year, general manager Danny Ainge considered trading Allen and trying to make the team younger by rebuilding around point guard Rajon Rondo. Instead, Ainge kept the core together and it rewarded him by returning to the finals.

Allen was inconsistent against the Lakers, hitting an NBA finals-record eight 3-pointers in Game 2, then going 0 for 16 from 3-point range over the next three games. But Rivers never wavered in his support, praising Allen’s defense and also the way he forces opponents to cover him wherever he is on the floor, opening up space for his teammates.

The Celtics said he was their top priority in the offseason.

But shortly after the finals ended, Pierce opted out of the final year of his contract, and Rivers discussed taking a sabbatical so he could spend more time with his family. When they both decided to return—Pierce agreed last week to a four-year deal worth a reported $61 million—all that was left was for Allen to re-sign.

In a 14-year career for Milwaukee, Seattle and Boston, Allen is second all-time in 3-pointers and fifth among active players with 20,965 points.

AP Sports Writer Howard Ulman contributed to this story.

Allen agrees to re-sign with Celtics

Ray Allen has reached agreement on a two-year, $20 million contract with the Boston Celtics, league sources told Yahoo! Sports.

Allen is scheduled to make $10 million in each season of the deal. The second year is at his option.

Allen’s agreement comes five days after the Celtics agreed to give Paul Pierce a four-year, $61 million extension.

“I’m excited to be returning as a Celtic,” Allen said. “There’s nowhere else I would rather be.”

DAVIE, Fla. (AP)—Dwyane Wade’s future was muddled and uncertain, until Chris Bosh told him where he wanted to spend the next few years.

“I’m feeling Miami,” Bosh said.

Those three words were all Wade needed to make his decision.

Will they be enough to sway LeBron James to Miami? Stay tuned.

Ending months of speculation, Wade and Bosh announced Wednesday that they’ll sign with Miami, two decisions that vault the Heat back into the NBA championship picture and put them two-thirds of the way to hitting one of the biggest trifectas in NBA history. Wade, Bosh and James all have talked about playing together. On Thursday night, James will say why that will or will not happen.

“It’s over,” Wade said in an interview with The Associated Press. “It’s not all over-over, but for me, it’s over.”

James can’t say that yet.

Wade told the Heat that for him to re-sign, the team had to add either James or Bosh. For good measure, they might get both.

“It had to be one or the other,” Wade said in the AP interview. “Of course, there’s a lot of talented players in this league. But you want to look at players that complement my game, and Chris and LeBron are two of those guys. I had a decision to make. Chris had a decision to make. It wasn’t a lock that he would come to Miami. So I had a lot to think about.”

James averaged 29.7 points for Cleveland last season, Wade averaged 26.6 points for Miami and Bosh averaged career-bests of 24.0 points and 10.8 rebounds for Toronto.

They were the three kingpins of this long-hyped free-agent market, a trio of All-Stars who came into the league together seven years ago and structured their last contracts just to hit the open market together this summer, the last under the current terms of the league’s collective bargaining agreement.

Now, the ball is in King James’ court.

“I expect us to compete for a championship,” Bosh told ESPN. “I think both Dwyane and I, we both wanted an opportunity where right away we would be competing. … We’re ready to sacrifice a lot of things in order to do that. It’s not about the money. It’s not about anything else except for winning. I’m a winner. Dwyane’s a winner. We’re going to bring winning to Miami.”

That was Heat president Pat Riley’s plan.

Around the NBA, the immediate reaction was that Miami is poised to be in the mix for the 2011 title.

“It just makes the East that much better,” Boston Celtics coach Doc Rivers said in Orlando, Fla., where he was watching summer league games.

Magic coach Stan Van Gundy was more succinct, lauding Bosh as “one of the best forwards in basketball.”

“I think they’re instant contenders,” Van Gundy said. “I don’t think there’s any doubt. They’re instant contenders to win an NBA championship.”

Wade’s summer of change is now almost complete. He settled four civil lawsuits stemming from failed business deals, finally completed a long-awaited divorce and was awarded temporary custody of his two sons. And the question he’d been hearing for years—staying or going?—has an answer.

It wasn’t easy.

For Wade, the decision came down to Miami vs. Chicago, adopted hometown vs. actual hometown.

The Bulls almost pulled it off, until Bosh said he was bullish on Miami.

“The good part of this was controlling your own destiny,” Wade told the AP. “It really meant a lot to me, and I’m sure if you ask Chris or ask LeBron, they’d say the same. You have a say-so. You can control the destiny of where and what’s best for you. And it’s not many times in your life or your career if you’re going to have that. This is it.”

Wade does not know what the terms of his contract will be (he could receive around $126 million for six years but told AP he would take less if necessary to make other deals work). Bosh doesn’t have terms of his deal done either. It’s all contingent on what James says Thursday night, and Wade insisted he knows nothing about what the two-time MVP will say or where he’ll be saying it from.

“I won’t speak to him again until he makes his decision,” Wade said in the AP interview. “And when it’s over, I will congratulate him.”

The Heat still have only four players in the picture for this coming season: Wade, Bosh, Michael Beasley and Mario Chalmers. Miami is in discussions with several free agents, including Brendan Haywood, Mike Miller, Raymond Felton and Udonis Haslem—whom Wade has played with in all seven of his previous seasons.

The salary cap released for the 2010-11 season on Thursday was just over $58 million, about $2 million more than teams expected, and that extra money could likely be yet another free-agency edge for the Heat.

“We’ll see what the best thing is for us to win,” Wade told the AP. “I’m going to make a lot of money, no matter what happens. I’ve been blessed. I’m not counting every dollar and every cent. Let’s sit down, let’s see what the best thing is for us, for the long haul.”

Miami came into free agency with what turned out to be roughly $46 million of cap space, not including $16.5 million or so earmarked for Wade, thanks to years of avoiding just about any deal where money would have been committed for the 2010-11 season.

It was high-stakes poker, and Riley went all-in that he could get something done to make Wade happy.

Citing league rules, the Heat couldn’t express their glee Wednesday, since the NBA’s signing moratorium was ongoing.

Wade’s oldest son, however, isn’t bound by any restrictions.

Zaire Wade, 8, got woken by his father Wednesday with the news: Daddy’s staying in Miami.

“For real? Cool,” Zaire replied.

Wade knew he made the right choice.

“I felt great this morning, waking up knowing I’ve got another chapter behind me,” Wade told the AP. “Coming into the summer, I knew that I had a court case here, court case there, custody, all these things. Just took one step at a time, and this is another step in the journey of where I wanted to go, forward, not backward.”

BOSTON (AP)—The Boston Celtics have signed top draft pick Avery Bradley.

Bradley was the No. 19 overall selection in last week’s NBA draft.

Bradley was a shooting guard in his only year at Texas. He will serve as Rajon Rondo’s understudy at point guard.

The 6-foot-3, 180-pound Bradley averaged 11.6 points last year. As a high school senior, ESPN chose him the national player of the year and the No. 1 prospect in the country.

Bradley is known as a strong defender and good outside shooter but a weak free throw shooter.

BOSTON (AP)—The Boston Celtics have agreed to terms with captain Paul Pierce on a deal that could keep the MVP of their 2008 title run with the team for another four seasons.

The contract was not announced, but it was confirmed to The Associated Press by a Celtics official familiar with the deal who spoke on the condition of anonymity because the free agent signing period does not begin until Thursday.

“Both sides made it clear that staying together was best for the team,” the official said.

Terms of the contract were not immediately available. The Boston Herald, which first reported on the deal, says Pierce would get $61 million over four years, with a mutual option for the fourth year.

 Celtics spokesman Jeff Twiss had no comment. Pierce’s agent, Jeff Schwartz, did not immediately respond to a call seeking comment.

Pierce has spent his entire 12-year career with the Celtics and is second only to Larry Bird among longtime Celtics in points per game. Pierce is also first in franchise history in 3-pointers, second in steals, third in total points, eighth in games played and ninth in rebounds.

Pierce opted out of the final year of a contract that was to pay him $21.51 million next season. By re-signing quickly for less, he creates cap room, gets long-term security for himself and gives the team a chance to keep together the core of the 2008 champions for another run in 2010-11.

Coach Doc Rivers, who had been considering taking a year off, said this week he would return. Ray Allen, who is a free agent, has said he wants to return to Boston.

With Kevin Garnett under contract for two more years, that would preserve the new Big Three that led the Celtics to an NBA-record 17th championship two years ago. Garnett missed the 2009 playoffs with a knee injury; the Celtics returned to the NBA finals this spring before losing to the Los Angeles Lakers in seven games.

Pierce, 32, was the 10th overall pick in the 1998 draft from Kansas. He is the last remnant of the ill-fated Rick Pitino era, and his tenure stretches through two trips through the NBA lottery as the once-dynastic franchise tried to restore its former glory.

In 2007, after going 24-58 to earn the fifth overall pick in the draft, the Celtics considered trading Pierce and trying to rebuild with youth. Instead, they acquired Garnett and Allen and won the NBA title in their first year.

For Pierce, it meant giving up his role as a go-to guy who had averaged as many as 26.8 points per game. His numbers dropped—he averaged 19.5 points over the past three years—but the Celtics reached the NBA finals twice in three years.

Pierce has 19,899 points in 884 games, all for the Celtics.

LAS VEGAS (AP)—Former NBA All-Star Antoine Walker pleaded not guilty Wednesday to criminal bad check charges alleging he failed to repay almost $1 million in gambling debts and penalties to three Las Vegas casinos.

A Clark County District Court hearing master, Melisa De La Garza, set trial for Nov. 22 in Las Vegas. Walker and his lawyer, Jonathan Powell, said nothing to reporters after the brief arraignment.

Powell has said he and the Clark County district attorney’s office were negotiating toward resolving the Nevada case without sending Walker to prison. Walker could face probation or up to 12 years behind bars if convicted.

Walker won a 2006 NBA championship with the Miami Heat, but hasn’t played in the NBA since 2008. He played briefly in Puerto Rico during the 2009-10 season.

Walker filed last month for Chapter 7 bankruptcy liquidation, scuttling a promise he made last November to a Las Vegas justice of the peace to pay restitution to Caesars Palace, Planet Hollywood and the Red Rock Resort, plus court fees and penalties to the district attorney’s office.

That judge bound the case over for trial in state court.

The charges stem from $1 million in casino markers, or gambling loans, that Walker racked up between July 2008 and January 2009. Nevada law treats unpaid markers as bad checks that can be turned over to the district attorney for prosecution.

Walker, a Chicago native, was a three-time league All-Star with the Boston Celtics before going to Miami.

His bankruptcy filing reported $12.7 million in liabilities and $4.3 million in assets, including his championship ring.

Rivers returning to coach Celtics

Doc Rivers will return to coach the Boston Celtics next season, a source close to him confirmed to Yahoo! Sports.

After deliberating between leaving the job and returning to spend more time with his family in Orlando, Rivers finally decided on Wednesday morning that he’ll honor the last year of his contract and return for the 2010-11 season.

The Celtics reworked the final year of Rivers’ contract with a raise from the $5.5 million he was owed, sources said, but Rivers wasn’t ready to commit to a contract extension.

The Boston Herald first reported Rivers’ decision to return to the Celtics.

Rivers will turn his attention to recruiting Celtics free agents Paul Pierce and Ray Allen, and league sources said he’s focused on hiring former New Jersey Nets coach Lawrence Frank to replace assistant Tom Thibodeau, who left to coach the Chicago Bulls.

“With the blessing of my family, I want to try one more time with this group,” Rivers told Y! Sports.

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