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Ken Berger

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Celtics, Allen on trade clock

Posted on: February 7, 2010 6:32 pm
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Few grand conclusions can be drawn from February NBA games. But in this case, the Celtics' latest disappointing loss only underscored what has been a poorly kept secret among NBA executives for weeks: Ray Allen's time in Boston is likely coming to an end.

Thanks to a non-competitive third quarter, the Celtics fell to Orlando 96-89 on Sunday, dropping them to third in the East behind the Cavs and Magic. The struggling Celtics still have three games against Cleveland to prove they haven't fallen from elite status. But after going 1-3 against Orlando and 0-4 against Atlanta, the Celtics have reached a crossroads in their bid to milk one more championship banner out of the Allen-Paul Pierce-Kevin Garnett era.

Don't bet on every member of the Big Three being around beyond the Feb. 18 trade deadline.

Though team president Danny Ainge has publicly ridiculed the Allen trade reports, several NBA executives told CBSSports.com that the Celtics have been actively trying to parlay Allen's $19.7 million expiring contract into an asset that could keep them in the mix during the upcoming playoffs and also help them for the next several seasons. The most recent inquiry, sources say, involved Sacramento sharpshooter Kevin Martin, who'd be a good fit with Boston's remaining core. Kings officials might be talked out of their reluctance to deal Martin if they could pry a prolific big man out of a third team brought into the discussions or in a separate transaction before the deadline.

The bottom line is that Ainge, who saved his job by pulling off the perfect storm of trades that yielded Allen and Garnett three years ago, has made it clear in private conversations that he's "not going back to the abyss," according to one person familiar with the discussions. 

"Danny has said, 'I can't go back to square one where we were prior to the Garnett deal,'" the person said. "At the All-Star break, they’re going to look in the mirror and say, 'Cleveland got better, we can't beat Orlando, and we can't even beat the Hawks. We’re not going to win it this year.'"

If the Celtics kept Allen and let his contract come off the books, they'd still be over the cap this summer with no avenues besides sign-and-trades to acquire a starting shooting guard. That's why Boston also has expressed interest in the Bulls' Kirk Hinrich, an excellent defender and ball-handler who would give the Celtics a starting two guard next season at $9 million and in 2011-12 at $8 million. The Bulls' motivation would be cap relief.

The Kings, who are not planning to be big free-agent shoppers this summer, aren't seeking to acquire cap space alone. They want assets -- and the Celtics don't have a young big man to offer. The Bulls, who almost certainly will move Tyrus Thomas, might need to be invited into that conversation to satisfy everyone's needs.

Whatever avenue they pursue, the Celtics don't want to go into this summer with no cap flexibility and no assets that could be used to keep them among the elite. Before Ainge struck the 2007 draft-related deal for Allen and then plucked Garnett from Minnesota with the help of former teammate Kevin McHale, the Celtics had just endured a 24-win season and hadn't been out of the first round since 2002-03. Ainge and Doc Rivers were on the brink of getting fired until the perfect remedy presented itself -- and the Celtics parlayed the Allen and Garnett deals into their 17th NBA title.

"Kevin McHale's out of the league," one rival executive said, only half-joking. "So they're not going to be able to recreate that deal again."

The period leading up to that was so grim that nobody in the organization wants to revisit it. The best way to avoid such a scenario would be to part ways with Allen. It wouldn't be starting over. Instead, it would be a bold attempt to have a chance against Cleveland, Orlando, and Atlanta in the playoffs and avoid going back to the depths of rebuilding.







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Comments Add a Comment
hoppervol33
Since: Jun 10, 2009
Posted on: February 8, 2010 2:08 am
 

Why??

I know he probably will be moved. But why? They have lost a few games here lately but why hit the panic button? KG isnt 100 percent yet! The playoffs are when it matters and the Celtics would certinaly make it there with homecourt advantage in the first round if they kept Ray. And honestly if all you can get back is Kevin Martin or Kirk Hinrich then WTF? You think those guys are gonna do anything more for you than Ray Allen? or than they already do for thier losing teams?? Either one of those guys ever hit a clutch playoff shot at the buzzer?? When they made the KG, Allen, Pierce deal they knew they had 3 or 4 years tops to get it done. Well this team already won it for them once and are certinaly not in a hole in the east. Let them Finish out the year, Pray to god The big ticket gets healthy, And try to make a run at another title. Then Rays Salary comes off your books and you can begin to rebuild or whatever floates your boat, Just don't be gay and listen to Berger.



Zooey
Since: Apr 16, 2009
Posted on: February 8, 2010 12:29 am
 

Celtics, Allen on trade clock

If the analysis here is true, then the Celtics are in trouble. If they don't unload Allen by the 18th, they are done this year and in an even worse position going into next season. And the only reason anyone would want to take Allen off the Celtics hands is cap relief.

That's not a good position for the Celtics.


stev008
Since: Feb 7, 2010
Posted on: February 7, 2010 10:59 pm
 

Celtics, Allen on trade clock

hinrich*


stev008
Since: Feb 7, 2010
Posted on: February 7, 2010 10:58 pm
 

Celtics, Allen on trade clock

I dont see how kinrich solves their problems. He is nowhere near as good a 3 point shooter as ray and im sure the celtics could get something much BETTER. Plus why pay for his salary when we already have an allstar point guard and when he would not bring us into championship contention. Kevin martin makes more sense but they could also try to get Andre Iguodala who would fit in great with the celtics. Its just ridiculous how we lose a couple after going through a tough stretch (like every team except cleveland has) and Everybody thinks we should trade ray who is clearly NOT the problem. Its team collapse and i think trading ray would greatly affect the team even more negatively (think of the chemistry). This team was a shot and point away from beating the lakers and im sure if that shot goes in nobody would be complaining right now. Please give our guys time to get on the same page. Were pretty complete health wise and i wouldnt want us to tank the season because were struggling in february. I would only want our team to trade ray if we get equal value in return (martin, iggy, etc. not hinrich, please a 19 mil. expiring contract is worth more than that).


About BergerSphere
Ken Berger has been the NBA Insider for CBSSports.com since 2008. Prior to that, he covered the NBA for Newsday. In 2011, he was named one of the top five sports columnists in America by the Associated Press Sports Editors and his work was noted in the "The Best American Sports Writing, 2010." He enjoys lockouts, long walks through hotel lobbies and will never stop asking the tough questions, such as, "How u?"
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