Marc Lanza graduated from Brown University in 2006 with a B.A. in History. During his tenure, he was a sports columnist for the campus newspaper, the Brown Daily Herald. He eats, sleeps, and breathes New England sports, but especially enjoys watching, and writing about professional basketball. Additionally, he mainintains a web site dedicated to Fantasy NBA, called Fantasy NBA Guy. The rebuilding phase, at long last, is over. The days of acquiring assets and praying for ping pong balls, finally, have come to an end. For the first time in over 15 years, the Boston Celtics are entering the NBA season with championship aspirations. Not simply playoff aspirations, mind you, but championship. It sounds odd, doesn't it? The lowly Celtics, inveterate losers and lottery mainstays...these guys are championship contenders now?
It was only five months ago that the organization's 15 remaining fans were rooting for intentional losses and chanting Sam Bowie's … excuse me … Greg Oden's name during every home game. Suddenly, the team's biggest concerns have become:
1. Chartering a bandwagon with enough seating capacity to accommodate the throngs of diehard fans that are sure to miraculously appear this year
2. Clearing a spot in the Garden's rafters to hang the 17th championship banner
Kevin Garnett and Ray Allen were brought to
Thus, the clock has begun ticking for
Throughout Ainge's tenure he has defended Doc as ardently and bewilderingly as Bush has defended the War in
With Rondo now slated to take over starting point guard duties for a playoff-bound team, River's coaching is even more critical. As the only true pass-first guard on the team, Rondo will be responsible for getting KG, the Truth, and Jesus the touches they need to be content and productive. For the C's to win 50-plus games and live up to those lofty expectations, Doc needs to let the kid play early and often, make a ton of mistakes, and allow Pierce and KG to bark at him until he's consistently making the right decisions with the unconsciousness of a Pavlovian dog. Rondo must be Doc's number one priority this season, as the second-year player has the talent and ability to advance considerably under the tutelage of the former all-star point guard. Rivers has recognized as much; while he had previously insisted that the Allens (Ray and Tony) were perfectly capable of handling quarterback duties, he recently backtracked, acknowledging that Rondo's development is essential, and hinting that he's ready to hand the reigns over to the dynamic, second-year player. This week in an interview with the Boston Globe, he gushed: "I really am proud and loved to watch what Rajon has done over the summer. His progression is obviously a key to our success, and I think he will be up for the task … I really think he's put in a lot of time and he'll be ready."
All expectations aside, Doc's job should be considerably easier this year. This season, he'll be able to focus on game strategy and defense instead of teaching fundamentals to a group of millionaires barely old enough to drink. As an added bonus, the unhealthily-competitive Garnett will effectively act as a player-coach on the floor at all times, lessening the burden on Doc to motivate, and Pierce to lead. While the pressure is greater with the Celts' new star power, Rivers claims he embraces it: "This type of pressure is great … there are a lot of great coaches in our league who have never had an opportunity to coach players like this."
To the delight of those 15 remaining fans, the Celtics Brass has finally put a moratorium on waiting for the stars of tomorrow to mature. For Danny Ainge and