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Re: Exclusive From Me: Stephen Smith Does Some Ripping On Ainge & Black Players



--- You wrote:
- Many black coaches don't have the financial oomph/power to command 
black players respect, so black players dog it, ala Glen Robinson
and the rest of his Philly teammates. They were in open revolt
against Ayers, with Robinson bumping him on purpose.
Smith says there are exceptions like Silas in Cleveland.
--- end of quote ---

Sure, it's all about the money these coaches are paid. If they were paid more
money, they'd be loved and respected by their players, and would make the Hall
of Fame as coaches. No doubt, the reason the team quit on Pitino was because he
didn't have enough power and wasn't paid enough. 
What a Marxist nitwit. 

--- You wrote:
Smith says Van Gundy, example of a coach with power, 
management has a large sum invested in him - can't ditch Van Gumby 
or Pokey, so Francis one to go in power struggle, since they can
get something in return for him.  Which brings up a thought:
Would you trade Pierce for Francis?
--- end of quote ---

No. Francis has no integrity. You can gamble on a talented headcase by trading
one of the greatest 51 players in Providence College history for him, but not a
guy like Pierce. 
This reminds me: how could P-May write an entire column (about Baker) without
mentioning EWill once?! We all know Baker would've been an All-Star for the
remainder of his contract, had EWill not been traded. 

--- You wrote:
- Paul Pierce "frustrated and had it" says Smith, who calls Pierce 
a good guy like Kevin Garnet and not a headcase, just overwhelmed 
by all of Ainge's maneuvers.
--- end of quote ---

That's about the only thing Smith may have gotten right so far. 

--- You wrote:
- Ricky Davis is however a "Headcase".
--- end of quote ---

Really??? Now

--- You wrote:
- Smith can't understand any of Ainge's trades. Davis and Mihm,
didn't make a lot of sense to Smith.
--- end of quote ---

There's lots of things Smith can't understand, judging by his comments on the
ESPN halftime show. I think the problem is definitely on the receiving end,
though. 

--- You wrote:
- Smith says Ainge's vision looks "ugly" to him and others:
"We think Ainge has a plan. We think it is terrible."
And Smith said he told Ainge this, but planned to be fair to him.

- Smith says I never believed Antoine Walker should be traded for Raef
LaFrentz.
You can't put a docile/passive personality like LaFrentz in the lockerroom with 
a similar personaility like Pierce, and have the two of them lead the team.

- Most of the people in the NBA community think Ainge's plan is terrible.

- O'Brien was well loved and a lot of coaches not anxious to walk into the
Celtics
situation.  Ainge too controlling with a vision not clear yet.

- A lot of coaches will be mentioned for the Celtics job, but few will
want to be under Ainge's  auspices.

- It's possible Ainge's plan is to hit the bottom, and it could 
happen with the team in disarray.

- City of Boston not tolerant of rebuilding and teams bottoming out. 

- "At the end of the day, what is Ainge doing?"

- Boston Celtics would have been one of the "top four teams in the EC."

 - Smith preceded the above remark by calling the Eastern Conference the "JV"
league compared to teh West.
--- end of quote ---

Oh, OK. So, the bottom line of this outpouring of fairness towards Ainge is
that the Celtics should've tried to stay one of the top 4 teams in the JV
league. I'm sure that would suit Stephen Smith just fine. No wonder Ainge's
plan is "terrible" (terrifying?) to him. QED.
Kestas