CBW review, Celtics vs. Pistons 1st quarter
Snoopy the Celtics Beagle
snoopy at celticsbeagle.net
Fri Nov 3 21:15:30 CST 2006
theCeltics Beagle hard at work on his next review
Game 02, Friday, Nov 01, 7:30pm: Celtics vs. Detroit Pistons
The Celtics came into this game after the supreme embarrassment of
being beaten in their home opener two days before, after a moving
tribute to the recently deceased Red Auerbach, to whom the Celtics
dedicated this season. After practice the next day, the Celtics were
all required to shoot 100 free throws in the gym, in hopes of
avoiding the misery at the line that contributed to the loss.
Detroit was also coming off an opening night loss, and was looking to
prove they really could win without Ben Wallace, their premiere
rebounder. So the question was, would the Celtics find their offense
first, or would Detroit find their defense first? The game would be
tough no matter what happened.
The Detroit starters were introduced: Chauncey Billups, Richard
Hamilton, Rasheed Wallace, Tayshaun Prince, and Nazr Mohammed, under
Coach Flip Saunders.
Then came the Celtics lineup, but first, they had to show off the new
jumbotron scoreboard. This was, unfortunately, followed by the
"Celtic Dance team" (whom I refer to as the "Moosiers" after the
"bovine hoofer" comment someone made), making their debut, fulfilling
my worst expectations about what they would be doing--making this
look like a college basketball game instead of an NBA game. After
they bounced their way across court in a manner that reflected no
kind of "dancing" I'd ever seen outside a few really bad movies, they
lined up to flash their wares as player introductions were made. The
Celtics starters, when they were finally introduced, were: Paul
Pierce, Sebastian Telfair, Wally Szczerbiak, Ryan Gomes, and Kendrick Perkins.
1st quarter:
The tipoff was won by the Celtics, who promptly dribbled the ball up
the court as the Detroit defense had all day to set up. The C's did
pass the ball better, but still weren't moving well without the
ball. Ryan Gomes did get a decent look at an 18-foot jump shot that
bounced out and into the hands of the Detroit defense. Hamilton
brought the ball up as the Celtics barely beat him dribbling the ball
up to their basket. It was obvious the C's had been instructed to
tighten their defense, as they blanketed the strong side of the
court, Billups took--and missed--a shot nearly identical to the one
Gomes had taken and missed at the other end, and the Celtics took the
ball up, showing patience as they worked the ball into Perkins, who
made sure the ball went in with a nice hook shot as the Detroit
defense totally failed to react to him under the basket. Mike
Gorman, a recent guest on CSL's webcast, pointed out that the Celtics
had gotten their first lead of the season one minute into the second game.
The Pistons were unable to convert at the other end, and Pierce took
down the rebound. Prince fouled him, and tested the ref's patience
in the new era of zero tolerance for the Stanislavsky method on the
court. So far, the C's defense was better, and the offense was--for
the moment--holding up. Now, the Good Guys would face their first
test at the free throw line as Paul Pierce walked to the line. The
first shot bounced off the rim, the backboard, and the rim again,
before finally dropping through the net. The second one looked more
like a proper free throw, whispering through the net as the relieved
Pierce ran back on defense with the rest of the team.
Prince was still complaining as the Pistons went up, and I was
surprised he wasn't hit with a "T", given the really short fuses the
refs had previously shown this week for such demonstrative
behavior. Rasheed was able to put it up over Gomes, despite good
defense by the young Forward, drawing the foul in the process, and
going to the line for two. Justice prevailed as he missed both free
throws. Wally went up pretty quickly from the corner on the ensuing
possession, and the shot just didn't look good to me. He was open,
but he just didn't extend well, I thought. Detroit couldn't
capitalize as Pierce took down another defensive rebound, immediately
getting the ball to Telfair, who got a good look that didn't go in
from beneath the free throw line. Hamilton blew an easy shot, but so
did Pierce, despite taking it right to the hoop, the ball bounced out
of the net. Wally got his offense in gear after yet another Piston
miss--and they had a wide open look, too as the C's defense broke
down completely on the play.
The Pistons finally got themselves on the scoreboard with 8:48 left
in the first quarter, off a Billups feed to Mohammed. Wally
responded at the other end with a baseline jumper. But Billups was
finding his teammates, and Mohammed scored again, from just under the
hoop. Pierce got in the paint, rebounding his shot after Mohammed
blocked it and went back up to put the ball back in for two
more. After Billups missed a jumper, Telfair went to the hoop
(missing a wide-open Gomes) to go for two more. Timeout was called
with 7:19 to go in the quarter and the Celtics leading it, 12-4.
During that timeout, there was a new promotion added for the Garden,
where you can get your group a chance to play for five minutes on the
Parquet floor, with PA introductions and a DVD of the game. Sounded
like a good deal to ME!
Following the timeout, the Celtics tightened their defense, as
Detroit was determined to make up for missing bunny shots
earlier. The C's offense looked a bit disjointed on the trip up,and
got nothing out of it. The Celtics defense was MUCH better than the
previous game, to my great relief. Mohammed provided two more at the
free throw line after drawing a foul. The Celtics next offensive
trip was a mess as the Pistons came away with the ball after a bad
pass by Perkins, who compounded the matter by managing to trip over a
Piston player, committing his second foul. Perk sat for Al
Jefferson, and the Pistons and Celtics traded baskets. It was nice
to see Pierce passing out of the triple team to an open Telfair, who
nailed the shot. The Celtics played tight defense, but the refs blew
it when the shot clock was wrongly restarted, and then a foul was
called on Prince's shot. I looked at the play again, and there's no
question the shot clock would have sounded before the Pistons got a
shot off originally. It was a dumb foul by Telfair, but the refs and
the timekeeper blew it first. Telfair sat in favor of Rajon Rondo as
the Pistons went 2-2 at the line, closing in on the Celtics lead.
Gomes was able to hit a shot clock jumper at the other end as the
Pistons defense got tighter, forcing the Celtics to move the ball
around the perimeter. After a couple of possessions, Delonte West
came in for Wally. I have little other than my observations to
support it, but I'd swear Wally's hurting when he tries to
shoot. What pleased me was that so far, the Celtics had consistently
looked inside before trying the outside jumpers. Both teams were
playing halfcourt ball, and at this juncture, the Pistons were
slightly more successful as they closed in on the Celtics. Billups
went back to the line for two more points. I still get annoyed when
I realize we traded him away ages ago. Al Jefferson was still
playing in close to the hoop and was rewarded with a trip of his own
to the line, where he sent both shots through the net.
Billups responded with a deep two, after which the Celtics continued
to try to work the ball inside to Jefferson--perhaps the Celtics were
reading some of the online comments following the last game.--but the
Pistons were beginning to defend Al seriously. Both teams had played
mostly halfcourt and I was surprised to see how effective the Celtics
offense was in that set, though I'd rather see a few more fast
breaks. timeout was called with 1:49 to go and the Celtics leading it, 21-18.
The timeout featured another appearance by the Moosiers, dashing my
hopes that someone had herded them on a plane to Los Angeles. and
barred the Garden doors behind them.
After the timeout, the Pistons, courtesy of Hamilton, added two more
points, once more closing in on the Celtics lead. Olowokandi had
come into the game, looking to cement the newfound reputation he'd
established in preseason. Rondo accepted the gift of the Pistons
playing off him with a 10 foot jumper. Pierce then sat for a rest as
Tony Allen entered the game. Delonte earned a trip to the line where
he continued the Celtics perfection at the line in the first
quarter. A bit of sloppy play in the final minute and a blown fast
break opportunity--one of the few--kept the Celtics from extending
the lead as the quarter ended with the Celtics ahead, 25-24.
Next...the second quarter!
Snoopy the Celtics Beagle
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