Tuesday, April 26, 2011

The death of top draft pick Len Bias had an effect

Everybody says it’s KG’s team, but Perk was down there doing all of the dirty work, and you need a guy like that.” That’s as close to saying the unspoken, which we haven’t heard in Boston since the surprising trade Ray Ban Sunglassesc. The Celtics Sunday blew a 25-point lead but squeaked by Minnesota, and had lost six of their last 10 and hadn’t looked very good or interested. Coach Doc Rivers dismissed any injuries saying last week, “It’s all mental. Our attitude shocks me. Right now I think we’ve just become very, very selfish. Not just in trying to get our own, but everything is about how we’re playing individually. You can see it. A guy struggles, he mopes. Everything is me, me, me Burberry Sunglasses.”
Rivers’ sad players were, “Feeling sorry for themselves, instead of giving themselves to the team and playing. You can just see it manifest itself throughout the team.” Rajon Rondo, for one, Perkins’ closest friend, has been a basket case, shooting 33 percent the last 10 games and averaging only about seven assists. And they pad his stats in Boston. What it seems more like is the players either realize or believe management has sold them out. The Perkins trade for Jeff Green seems clearly for the future, and with some foresight Miu Miu Sunglasses. Especially for someone like GM Danny Ainge, who played for the Celtics when they began their slide in the late 1980s. The death of top draft pick Len Bias had an effect.

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