Via TrueHoop, a report from Boston Globe sportswriter Greg Lee says point guard Sebastian Telfair is all but out in Beantown.
"I wanted to let you know that we have removed Sebastian’s nameplate from his locker in Waltham. The facts and circumstances of his case have not been determined but he does not have a Celtics locker and we do not anticipate that he will," [team managing partner Wyc] Grousbeck wrote in the e-mail.
The case Grousbeck refers to is Telfair's recent gun-related arrest.
The Celtics' problems go deeper than Telfair, so this doesn't really mean jack. Until Doc Rivers and Danny Ainge are both gone, Boston will be dealing with basketball mediocrity. There's still a glut of young players that are basically 2's and 3's on that team, and that 3 ought to belong to Paul Pierce until he says he's had enough. Hope of landing the #1 pick in the lottery and being chummy with Kevin Durant's family isn't going to help incompetent management, and Ainge has joined Kevin McHale of the Wolves, the Sixers' Billy King, and the Knicks' Isiah Thomas in the high class of NBA Front Office Fuck-Ups.
Telfair will likely find a team with a system that fits him. The League has too many teams for him not to fall in somewhere, but it's interesting to watch someone who was such a lauded prospect in high school (enough to warrant an ESPN movie). The only problem with watching Telfair's career arc is almost reality-show like: you have to fight the impulses to want to see him fail; it's a natural response to early overexposure.
Tuesday, April 24, 2007
Not Like Releasing Him Solves Anything.
Posted by Signal to Noise at 11:51 AM
Labels: Boston Celtics, front office, NBA, Sebastian Telfair
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3 comments:
The thing I thought was funny about this story was that all the headlines I read weren't "Celtics will release Telfair", they were all something like "Celtics sever ties with Telfair." Um, what makes this a severing of the ties as compared to a normal release??
Possibly just some editorial embellishment. "Release" implies regret of some sort; it's been rendered neutral by constant NFL use. "Severing ties" gets to the heart of the matter.
Thank yoou
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