Where the Celtics' season was lost

By mcsimmo / Roar Rookie

The Celtics started out strongly in the fourth season of the Garnett, Pierce and Allen era, as they battled for redemption after last season’s defeat to the Lakers in the NBA Finals.

A string of injuries and departures, however, derailed their season, leading to the Lebron-Wade-Bosh triumvirate taking their own revenge and knocking the Celtics out of the playoffs.

I look back over the season to find out where the Celtics season was lost.

It began with the departure of Tony Allen in the off-season, a move which went largely unnoticed but proved to be a significant loss as the season wore on. Whether the decision was to let him go or he left of his own accord, is a matter of conjecture.

Allen was never a model of consistency in his time off the bench for the Celtics, his errant jumpers and costly turnovers often offsetting his great defensive play. But after working his way into the starting lineup for the Grizzlies, things clicked for Allen, his offensive play improved and he made it into the Second All-NBA Defensive team.

The Celtics though thought they had a decent solution as a back-up perimeter player in Marquis Daniels. He settled into the rotation in his second season with the Celtics, providing solid perimeter defense and inside scoring. But when he went down for the season with a spinal chord injury however, the Celtics were back to square one.

Daniels’ injury played some part in the subsequent trade of Perkins for Green, as Green was seen as a solution to back-up Pierce. And while Green was solid in the Heat series as a back-up, his defense was patchy, and the cost of losing their starting center in Perkins was just too high.

Ah, yes the Perkins trade. A controversial move, from which the team would never quite recover. While Jermaine O’Neal came in and filled the Centre position in the playoffs admirably, it just wasn’t enough, and some will wonder whether Ainge blew it by trading away Perkins.

The Celtics had clearly traded away Perkins, expecting that they would have the 39-year-old Shaq ready for the playoffs. At the start of the season, Shaq’s size and skill around the basket, had opened things up for Rondo and given Celtics the inside scoring they needed.

When Shaq left the court only five minutes into his return game against the Pistons, I had that sickening feeling that the Celtics season, which had started so promisingly was now slipping away.

When Shaq played more than 21 minutes this season, the Celtics were 20-4. In the playoffs, Shaq hobbled his way to 11 minutes total.

And finally, when things were already gloomy, a takedown by Wade led to a nasty dislocated elbow for Rondo, and things became even gloomier. While Rondo valiantly battled on, the seriousness of the injury prevented him from being anywhere near his best.

Suddenly, the Celtics greatest weapon against the Heat, had been turned into a non-factor, if not a liability. In Games 4 and 5, Rondo averaged only 2rpg, 4apg, and 0.5spg, a massive drop-off from the 4.4rpg, 11.2apg and 2.3spg, he’d averaged during the regular season.

The Celtics missed his activity on the boards, his hustle steals and everything else that a healthy Rondo brings to the table.

On the upside, amazingly, the Celtics with a one-armed point guard, a hole in the Center, and a complete lack of a bench, came within a couple of shots of winning Games 4 and 5 against the Heat.

The positives for Celtics fans are that Allen, Pierce and Garnett stayed healthy and showed few signs of aging. All three are signed up for next year and Doc Rivers is expected back as well.

The big questions for next season are whether this team can address some of its holes with another (healthy) big man and a back-up wing defender.

They could do with some mercy from the injury Gods, too.

The Crowd Says:

2011-05-16T09:13:24+00:00

amazonfan

Roar Guru


They aren't playing as if they are too old. I think they can continue to play well next season, and should continue to challenge for the title (assuming there isn't a lockout.) Regarding the role players, true, however it's not unsolvable. Anyway I don't believe in ruling out any team's title hope just yet. Their title window hasn't closed until they can no longer compete, and with a few adjustments, I think they can challenge next season.

2011-05-16T07:56:59+00:00

ohtani's jacket

Guest


I don't think Rondo has shown any signs that you can build a team around him.

2011-05-16T01:46:14+00:00

Jason

Guest


Anyone think the C's should start rebuilding. Looking to build the team around Rondo now and see what they can get from trading away KG, Allen, Pierce, O'neals ?

2011-05-15T22:37:16+00:00

ohtani's jacket

Guest


They're too old and don't have the right role players.

2011-05-15T16:17:19+00:00

amazonfan

Roar Guru


If there is a lockout, then I agree it has closed. However, the big four are still at the top of their game, so I don't see why they can't win a title next season, should there be a next season.

AUTHOR

2011-05-15T02:24:42+00:00

mcsimmo

Roar Rookie


Pretty tough for anyone to overcome the loss of one of their main players but you're right they didn't have the depth they needed this season. Well the Big Three turned back the clock this year but whether can they do it again is a big question mark. Really hope there isn't a lockout, that would suck bigtime.

2011-05-14T19:54:17+00:00

ohtani's jacket

Guest


The big question for next season is whether there is a next season with a lockout looming. The Celtics' title window has closed. They had a chance to win a second title last year and came up short in the fourth quarter of Game 7. That's it for them.

2011-05-14T04:36:49+00:00

Swampy

Guest


I was astounded that Rondo was able to play at all after the elbow dislocation, let alone come back in the same game. However the fact that he had to play games 4 & 5 just says everything about what the celtics lacked. Depth. Sure Miami have no bench but they also have probably two of the top 4 players in the NBA playoffs who are also in their physical prime. Going forward the big three are only going to slow down. Even if the Celtics add a piece or two are they seriously going to compete with Miami or Chicago next season (if there even is one)? I'm pretty sure Miami will line up an acquisition or two. Just finished watching Memphis vs thunder - wow what a great series! -- Comment left via The Roar's iPhone app. Download The Roar's iPhone App in the App Store here.

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