No one has ever been better at making grown men cry than Nike. You can be a cynic all you want and point out how this will ultimately be about selling more Kobe sneakers or you can just enjoy the 90 second tribute to a basketball player who inspired people in all walks of life to be better.
Happy birthday to Celtics legend Tommy Heinsohn! The hall of fame player and coach turns 86 today. In addition to all of his accomplishments on the court, generations of basketball fans know him primarily as the crazy uncle/grandfather who has been calling Celtics games with superb play-by-play man Mike Gorman since 1981.
Despite his status as one of the most beloved Boston athletes and sportscasters of all time, it might be easy to forget that T handled some play-by-play duties himself on the road in the ’90s. With today being his birthday, here’s my excuse to open up the YouTube vault and share some classic Tommy Heinsohn highlights from the UPN 38 days. Enjoy!
This is it. This is the greatest t-shirt we have ever designed at The 300s. This is a completely custom artwork that we designed to give the future 1st Team All-NBA forward his own shirt. Grab your shirt today for the deep playoff run or grab a hoodie, sticker, magnet, coasters, leggings, laptop sleeve, travel mug etc.
With everyone either remote or part-time, we know you’ve got some time on your hands so The 300s is looking for interns and part-timers to blog about Boston sports, national sports, golf, TV, movies, video games etc. We’ll give writers a platform, promotion on social media, and the opportunity to write about what you like.
If you’re interested send an email to Red@The300s.com and let us know what you want to write about and any samples you might have.
Well, ladies and gentlemen, today is the today The Process finally ends, and how sweet it is to be the team that does it. The Sixers were always going to have a hard time beating the Celtics once Simmons went down for the year, but there was a glimmer of hope after Game 1 when Hayward got hurt. However, whatever light was left on their season was thoroughly stamped out by the drubbing in Game 2 and the lackluster finish in Game 3.
Just in case you didn’t watch, the Sixers were actually up 94-92 with under two minutes to play. But then they blew it. Embiid forced a terrible pass that was stolen by Smart, then got stuffed by Tatum, who then went on to block Richardson the next time down the court. The C’s finished on a 10-0 run to win 102-94. And that, my friends, is the end of the Philadelphia 76ers as we know them.
Yesterday afternoon, news broke that the Sixers, down 0-3 in the series, actually CANCELLED PRACTICE the day before Game 4. If that’s not throwing in the towel, I don’t know what is.
“Get me TF outta here.” – Joel Embiid, probably.
As much as Embiid seems to fade in the fourth quarter, obviously you can’t blame this on him. As Scal said, Brett Brown should already have sold his house and started looking for a new job, but I don’t think it’s his fault either. The fault lies solely in the hands of Elton Brand.
Even in this picture Embiid looks tired from carrying these stiffs.
It doesn’t take a genius to know that Simmons and Embiid are a great core to build around. Beyond that, you need shooters. How easy is it for the Celtics to double team Embiid and just let mooks like Furkan Korkmaz and Alec Burks chuck bricks. You need real shooters around Embiid. Shake Milton and Josh Richardson are solid bench players, but that’s all they are. The real question is, why pay Tobias Harris more than any other Sixer ever with a $180 million max contract, and then pay Al Horford another $109 mil for 4 years on top of that? WHAT ARE YOU THINKING??
Nearly $300 million on Harris and Horford has resulted in a combined 19.6 PPG, 17.3 RPG (fine), 6.7 APG, 1 steal and 1.6 blocks per game. They have hit exactly 0 threes in 13 attempts and have shot 34.9% from the field and 71.4% from the line. To put those numbers in perspective, Joel Embiid is averaging 30 and 13. It’s absolutely mind boggling that Brand thought JJ Redick and Jimmy Butler could be replaced with this kind of production. Sixers fans are crying themselves to sleep thinking about how they drafted Markelle Fultz over Jayson Tatum.
76ers fan put on a blindfold while getting blown out by Celtics π€¦ββοΈ
What the Sixers need to do is start by firing Brand and Brett Brown. Some people think Embiid will be traded, or even demand a trade, but I think that would be a bad move. Those two aren’t the problem. They need to get rid of the garbage contracts and add wing players who can shoot and play defense. DeMar Derozan, Marcus Morris, Evan Fournier, Goran Dragic, and Jordan Clarkson would all be good fits, assuming they can afford any of them. But they probably won’t, so us Celtics fans will continue to laugh, flaunt Jayson Tatum and Jaylen Brown, and bury them once again.
News broke a couple hours ago that Gordon Hayward is, drum roll please…..injured again. Repots are that he’ll miss a minimum of 4 weeks, which means he’s out through at least a potential second round Raptors matchup. Celtics fans everywhere:
Again Gordon?!
Here’s how the 300’s reacted:
-Red: “That dude has Triscuits for bones and ligaments.” -Joe: “I just imagine Ainge saying we’re taking him out back and shooting him. Then Stevens grabbing the shotgun and saying, “no Danny, Gordon’s my dog.” -Me: “Can his wife time her baby’s birth accordingly so it happens while he’s out?”
“Why does my body suck?”
Seriously, how about this guy’s run in green? Dude’s only serious injury in 7 years in Utah was a broken finger, but he only missed a couple games. He was never an iron man, but this is getting ridiculous. In only 3 years, this is his list of injuries causing him to miss more than one game for the C’s:
-broken leg, right ankle sprain, concussion, broken left hand, and now grade 3 right ankle sprain. That’s not to mention the smattering of other bumps and bruises along the way.
In all seriousness, you have to feel for the guy. We all know how hard he’s worked to get back to this point, and he’s been an absolutely vital part of our success all year. He’s a genuinely good person, an unselfish teammate, a humble family man, and I really want to see him succeed. I truly believe he is the X factor in a Celtics championship run, but in order to do that he has to…fucking play. If he can’t…
Big gulps, huh?
Time to trade him. Our bench is pretty terrible, and unloading him and a couple draft picks for some much needed depth is better than a great player who can’t stay on the floor. A bench comprising the Turkish Shark, Semi, Double Williams and Brad Wanamaker is not one that strikes fear into opponents’ hearts. Kemba and the J’s may be able to will us through the first two rounds, but we’re going to need Gordon if we want to make it past the Bucks.
Just because.
Also worth mentioning, end the War on Theis. He deserves it. Go Green.
I won’t lie, living in semi-quarantine for the past 5-6 months has been a mixed bag of misery for all of us so night’s live this take on even more significance than ever before. Two playoff games in one night was alway a luxury, but when you have nothing to watch for months except Netflix and reruns of Bar Rescue then you really appreciate this kind of sports overload. So kudos to Adam Silver for leading the way with the idea of putting an entire league into a bubble.
Boston Bruins (-1.5) vs Carolina Hurricanes
Bruins Lead the Series 2-1 Puck Drop: 8 pm, NESN Breakdown: After Tuukka left the B’s in a precarious position by opting out of the season…the morning of a playoff game…Jaroslav Halak stepped in and played pretty damn well (minus the ugly goal he gave away trying to play the puck behind the net). So while it was en vogue to bash Tuukka for a number of reasons, many Bruins fans have ironically gotten exactly what they were hoping for: a new goalie. Halak was obviously never supposed to play in the playoffs because he’s the backup, but he’s not your typical backup. Since Tuukka never played well with a heavier workload, he and Halak have basically been splitting time evenly the past 2 seasons. Granted Tuukka was 2nd in the NHL this year in GAA, Halak wasn’t far behind at 7th in the league so we’re still in pretty good hands all things considered.
Boston Celtics (-5.5) vs Philadelphia 76ers Tip Off: 6:30 pm, ESPN
Breakdown:Β The Celtics have had a lot of success against the Sixers in recent years, winning the last four playoff series the two have played against one another. Not to mention the C’s have beaten the Sixers in 18 of the last 24 regular season matchups. Now the Sixers are without Ben Simmons who suffered a season ending knee injury. Philly was already a dysfunctional mess before that so while I am always fearful of what a motivated Joel Embiid can do on any given night, I think the C’s win the series in 6 games.
This was a frustrating game to watch. The Heat, without their best player in All-Star Jimmy Butler and on the second night of a back-to-back, were able to pull off an impressive win over C’s. The Celtics started slow and never found their groove and trailed the entire game. They hung around and made the game close at the end, but this was really a game I thought the Celtics should have won.
The Heat are a competitive team and a tough matchup for whoever they draw in the first round of the playoffs. The Celtics are the only Eastern Conference team with a record over .500 against themI if we someone get matched up against them, I’m still betting on green. That said, the Heat are a very deep team with tons of shooting. Their length and athleticism match up well with the Celtics, who have similar strengths. Duncan Robinson, Goran Dragic, and Jae Crowder are all great role players to have, as we saw last night.
Don’t say “we”. YOU got emotional. Don’t be a Kyrie, take responsibility for your own actions.
However, the reason the Celtics lost this game because they were lazy. They had a little spurt in the third where they closed the lead to one, then let off the gas pedal. They did a bad job of closing out on the perimeter, Tatum was constantly complaining to the refs, and ball movement was stagnant (Kemba led the with 4 of the team’s 15 assists).
Now, I don’t want to get too alarmist here or anything. The Celtics aren’t going to shoot 30% from beyond the arc, Marcus Smart is certainly not going to foul out in 16 minutes and Semi Ojeleye better not be taking 6 shots on a normal night. Bam Adebayo also shouldn’t be shooting 18 FT’s. But here’s a question:
Where is he?
Where’s Time Lord? Where is he? And why the hell is Grant Williams getting more minutes than him? I understand that Grant is a “high IQ individual” and all that jazz, but he’s also slow, undersized and brings nothing to the table offensively other than a propensity for turnovers and missed 3’s. Time Lord, on the other hand, is an athletic beast who, even if he fouls a lot, could have thrown his weight around with Adebayo. Instead, you have Smart and Tatum combining for 11 fouls while Theis chases around Canadian Big Foot. Then, with mere seconds to go, Time Lord finds the floor only to commit three fouls in his 0 minutes of action.
The rest of the schedule shouldn’t be much of a problem, with the only competitive game left coming up Saturday against Toronto. I really thought the Celtics should have gone 7-1 in the bubble, but if we play like we did last night we’re staring 5-3 in the face.
Okay, so maybe the C’s didn’t get the W we were all hoping for. To be honest, if you had to pick one game the Celtics were likely to lose out of the seeding games, this was clearly the one. Yes the Bucks were without Eric Bledsoe and Pat Connaughton, but it’s not all bad. As a matter of fact, I feel pretty good about the first game back. Here’s why:
The Bucks are a great team. There’s no denying that. On the surface they don’t appear to be much more than Giannis throwing down Stretch Armstrong dunks and Kris Middleton chucking 3’s, but they are. They have great depth, plenty of shooters, they protect the rim (how many times did Tatum get stuffed at the rim? 4? 5?), and they get out fast in transition. But, despite all of that, Kemba’s minute restriction and Jayson Tatum playing the worst game of his professional career, this game was tied with 90 seconds to go. And I’m good with that.
Bearing that in mind, here are my takeaways from the game. I’ll start with the things I liked:
-Mike Breen saying BANG! -Jaylen being aggressive. I always love to see JB attacking the paint. He didn’t shoot the ball well, but he got to the line 9 times, hitting 7. -Going off that, the whole team did a good job of getting to the Free Throw line, something Celtics teams of the past have struggled at. Smart shot 8 FT’s, and the team as a whole went 27-34. That may be an off night for James Harden, but it’s good for the green. -Marcus being Marcus. Whether he’s flopping, knocking down 3’s that make me say “don’t shoot!”, or turning defense into offense, I love it all. If I had to put money on one Celtics player not missing a beat, it would be Marcus Smart. The guy is an animal and I love it. -Gordon Hayward doing a bit of everything. Gordon got off to a slow start in the first half, but he finished with 17 points, 9 boards and 6 assists. The Celtics are at their best when he contributes in every facet of the game and quietly fills the stat sheet. He did that last night. -Kemba looked unimpeded in limited minutes. His burst was there, he hit three 3’s, got to the line, and made a few nice passes. Brad has indicated that he will increase his minutes tonight, so I look forward to that.
-Not a Celtic, but Sideshow Rob-in Lopez. Man, I wish this guy was a Celtic. His game is ugly, but he’s entertaining to watch. The way he moves makes me think of some weirdly athletic combination of Sideshow Bob and Jason Segel. He knocks down 3’s with his feet together, hits post moves with arms rotating like helicopter blades, and mean mugs the entire time heβs doing it. Hilarious.
There was a lot not to like as well, with these two plays being the most obvious. Now, I have to agree with the Bucks that the second play was a block. Smart was there before contact, but he was still moving out of the restricted section when Giannis rose into his shot. That’s why it was called a block.
In my opinion, that play never should have happened because he punched Theis in the kidney a minute earlier. Wanamaker had a foul for less contact on a screen earlier in the quarter and he got called, so itβs not hard to believe the refs simply didn’t want to foul out Giannis. A minute after the first no call the block happens, the Bucks go up 3 with 90 seconds left, and that’s the game.
Some other things I didn’t like:
-Mark Jackson. -Fouling jump shooters. I think this was a product of being rusty because both teams did this early and got better as the game progressed, but please stop. -Everything about Jayson Tatum’s game. Yikes. He SUCKED. The stat sheet says he went 2-18, but that’s generous considering the first basket should actually have been credited to the Bucks when two players failed to make a rebound and knocked it in themselves. That means Tatum actually shot 1-17 (a solid 5.8%), was a team worst -13 and made one of the dumbest defensive gambles in that unnecessary reach that led to the play above. DO NOT REACH ON GIANNIS WHEN HE’S 5 FEET BEHIND THE ARC!
To reiterate what I said at the start of this post, I’m fine with the way things went. Sometimes you get calls, sometimes you don’t. The Bucks are good and this wasn’t a playoff game, so I’m not worried about it. Tatum and the rest of the team have 7 more games to find their shots, hopefully starting with the Blazers tonight. Until then, go green!
The New York Knicks have made me smile a lot this week and that’s not something I’ve been able to say very often in three decades of cheering for the team. They deemed this week #LinsanityWeek on social media and have been playing two games every night on MSG Network back from those magical couple of weeks in February of 2012. If you’re not very familiar with the story of Jeremy Lin, the undrafted Harvard point guard who became the talk of the entire sports world, boy do I have a tale for you.
Now 50-plus days into the suspension of all the major sports leagues, it was nice to look back fondly on one of the most spontaneous and genuinely fun stretches I’ve had in being a sports fan. When I commiserate with fellow tortured Knicks fans, the refrain “the last time I had fun watching this team was Linsanity” is exchanged with alarming regularity for it being the year 2020. One can argue that a LARGE reason for that is the depressing fact that the Knicks have won a grand total of one playoff series since the start of the 2000-2001 season. But honestly, another reason was that ‘Linsanity’ was really fucking cool.
We love sports for a million reasons (and boy will I appreciate them all so much more when they finally resume!) and one of them is the classic story of the underdog athlete emerging and succeeding against all odds. In early February of 2012, it was enter, stage right for Jeremy Lin to become the next athlete to fit that classic mold. Lin was an undrafted point guard from Harvard who, in the midst of his second NBA season, had already been cut by the Warriors and Rockets before the Knicks signed him to be their fourth point guard and an insurance policy. Oh and I probably should mention Lin is the son of two Taiwanese parents and in 2010 became the first Asian-American to play in the modern NBA.
Now it’s time to set the stage. Like I mentioned, the Knicks had signed Lin to be nothing more than an injury insurance policy but on February 4, 2012, they found themselves 8-15 and in the midst of having lost 11 of their previous 13 games. Their biggest problem? Led by the corpses of veterans Baron Davis and Mike Bibby the Knicks had by far the worst production at the point guard position in the league. At their current rate of losing head coach Mike D’Antoni was not long for his job, that’s for sure. During a Saturday night home game against the Nets, the Knicks were once again trailing early and D’Antoni was ready to start throwing shit against the wall to try and spark the team and save his job. He brought in Lin off the bench. Now keep in mind, up until that point Lin had scored a total of 76 points in his entire NBA career. But on that night he’d go on to torch opposing point guard Deron Williams and the Nets to the tune of 25 points, 7 assists, 5 rebounds, and 2 steals in a much needed Knicks win.
Because his Knicks contract wasn’t guaranteed for the entire season, Lin had not even rented a place in Manhattan but instead was sleeping on his older brother’s couch on the Lower East Side. The night before his career game against the Nets he spent the night sleeping on his teammate Landry Field’s tiny love-seat of a couch because his brother was having a party that night. 24 hours later Jeremy Lin would have a sold out Madison Square Garden chanting his name in the fourth quarter. Sports, man.
Lin started at point guard for the first time in his NBA career the next game and he casually dropped 28 points and 7 assists on the Utah Jazz in another Knicks win. What made that performance even more significant was that forward Amare Stoudamire missed that game and the star of the team Carmelo Anthony injured himself in the first half and would go on to miss the next seven games. So now the Knicks were without their two best players (and perennial all stars) and it did not matter one bit.
Three wins in and Jeremy Lin had quickly become the talk of New York sports and owned the back-pages of all the newspapers on a daily basis. But the upcoming fourth game of this saga would come against the vaunted LA Lakers led by none other than Kobe Bryant, who at this point was still the biggest star the NBA had to offer. The game would be at home at the Garden and would be broadcast nationally so it would be the first time that the country got their chance to see what all the hype was about. Pundits around the league acknowledged that this was a neat story but that the big stage and bright lights of this match-up with Kobe was probably the night where the clock struck midnight. When asked pregame about Lin’s recent play and all the hype, Kobe scoffed at reporters explaining that he hadn’t been following “the kid” at all and didn’t know what they were all talking about. A career high 38 points later by Lin, resulting in a seven point loss to the Knicks (still without Carmelo and Amare), and Kobe would quickly very much learn about what those reporters were talking about.
I remember permanently having a huge smile on my face throughout that game because of how insanely fun this whole ride was and thinking of the absurdity of it all. One week prior the guy was crashing on his brother’s couch and fully expecting to be cut from his third team in six weeks and now he’s out-dueling one of the greatest players in NBA history. It was the definition of the cliched sports story script that Hollywood would throw out because it wasn’t the least bit realistic. But even better, it was actually happening and overnight Lin and the Knicks became the lead on SportsCenter every game.
The 89 points that he had totaled over his first three professional starts was an NBA record dating back to the ABA merger (’76-’77). After the 38 point explosion against the Lakers, Lin had grown to become a nationwide and even an international star. Fans in Taiwan were packing bars at 8:00 am local time to watch each and every Knicks game. Lin donned the cover of Sports Illustrated not once but TWO weeks in a row, a feat that had very rarely ever been done before in the magazine’s long history. He also quickly became a role-model and beacon of hope for young Asian-American fans across the country whose dreams of one day playing in the NBA just got a little more plausible.
On Valentine’s Day Lin hit a game winning three pointer to beat the Raptors in Toronto and hand the Knicks their sixth win in a row (remember when they had lost 11 out of 13 games before he entered the lineup?). After finally losing a game, the Knicks had another big test on national TV hosting the defending champion Dallas Mavericks on a Sunday afternoon. As we had already learned, Lin relished the bright lights during this run and he did not disappoint in this game either. He finished with 28 points, a season high 14 assists, and 5 steals in a 104-97 win.
Sadly the clock did eventually strike midnight on Jeremy Lin’s magical Cinderella story in 2012 when he tore his meniscus and missed the rest of the season. And looking back eight years later, the rest of Lin’s NBA career didn’t quite go to plan as he never fulfilled the promise and success of that ‘Linsanity’ stretch (although don’t cry too much for him as he earned nearly $66 million over the course of his nine season NBA career). But for a three week stretch in February of 2012, Jeremy Lin was the brightest star of them all and put together a run that will make Knicks fans smile for many many years to come. Man, I miss sports!