A few laurels to hand out on what was an otherwise ugly game:
- Shaquille O'Neal was all over the court, rebounding on both ends, blocking shots, and diving for loose balls. I'm not sure what motivates Shaq to play like this -- or, to phrase the issue a bit more pessimistically, what prevents him from playing this way all the time -- but it's good to see he has it in him. The Celtics should have gone to him more on the offensive end; nine shot attempts is not enough for man his size going up against the likes of Chris Wilcox and Greg Monroe. Boston has had no qualms about riding the hot hand of Paul Pierce, Ray Allen, and even Marquis Daniels in recent games. There's no reason why they should be shy about going to the big fella until the other team figures out how to stop it.
- Ray Allen's confidence -- and the confidence the team has in Ray Allen -- never ceases to amaze me. Despite the fact that the soon-to-be all-time leader in made three-pointers was cold all night (even missing a pair of free throws), the Celtics still went to him in crunch time, running him off a screen on the right wing with the score tied at 82 and maybe half a minute left. To the surprise of no one, Allen buried a jumper -- though he did have his foot on the three-point line, another sign he was just a bit out of calibration all evening.
- Glen Davis seems comfortable back in his bench role, and he's continuing to see minutes at the end of games, which I think we can expect all season. He's looking for that 18-foot jumper a lot less now, instead preferring to quickly reverse the ball and keep the offense moving. His biggest play Wednesday night came on what was effectively Detroit's last possession, going straight up to bother a Ben Gordon drive with the Celtics up two. Most guys would foul there, but Davis maintained his verticality and forced Gordon into a tough shot, which he missed. Gordon actually could have easily been whistled for an offensive foul himself for discarding Davis with his left arm while laying the ball up with his right.
No comments:
Post a Comment