Rajon Rondo triples up again
In a season when Rajon Rondo [stats] has lit up the NBA assist chart like a pinball machine, here’s a fresh line to consider.
His 10-point, 20-assist, 10-rebound triple double in last night’s 88-86 overtime win over Atlanta is only the seventh in the NBA since 1986 with at least 10 points, 10 rebounds and 20 assists, according to CSNNE statistician and Bentley College sports information director Dick Lipe.
The last five of those belong to Rondo. Last night also marked his 19th straight game with a double-digit assist performance. John Stockton set the NBA record with 29 straight games in 1992.
This is rare ground for any point guard.
“Listen, I know he’s on a run,” said C’s coach Doc Rivers. “That’s phenomenal. I don’t even know what that means. I know he’s playing very well, but I don’t even need the numbers to tell me that. He’s been spectacular, not only in games but everywhere, and that’s why we’re winning.
“We need a locked in effort from him every night and he’s doing that. That was growth tonight because it was a fatigue game, and there’s games like that when Rondo comes in and struggles, and tonight he willed that game.”
Perhaps the most impressive part of Rondo’s performance, according to Rivers, was that the guard begged to stay in the game in the fourth quarter. He played 47 minutes, the most for any player last night, in the midst of the Celtics [team stats]’ most grueling stretch of the season.
“Just win,” Rondo said of his reason for staying on the floor. “I don’t want to be selfish, because if I’m out there tired then I’m not doing what’s good for the team. But I wanted to stay in.”
Said Rivers: “He didn’t beg long, but he stayed in. The fact he’s trying to score to me is the most impressive. Before he was just a facilitator, but the fact that he’s getting more assists is because he’s an aggressive scorer, and teams can no longer play off of him to pass.”
Bass knee scare
The Celtics, who have had enough health scares to last a decade, suffered another brief moment of doom when Brandon Bass went down in overtime and immediately grabbed his left knee. He got up, to an ovation, after approximately two minutes on the floor.
“I told him to get up,” Rondo said simply.
It was Rivers who spoke for everyone when he said, “I thought he was hurt. I’ve had that injury. You know the one I’m talking about. I don’t even like to say the word. It was where he was grabbing. I didn’t think it was going to be a good thing, so that was great.”
Bass finished the game, and had 21 points and 10 rebounds in 42 minutes.
Thoughts of family As he lay prone on the floor on March 23 in Philadelphia, Mickael Pietrus had one recurring thought, and it had nothing to do with basketball.
“To be honest, I was thinking about my kids and my life,” the returning Celtics [team stats] swingman, who has since been recovering from a concussion. “That could have been a different story for me. But today I’m young, I still have my smile, I enjoy life. But when I fell I was thinking more about my kids.
“I was a different person,” Pietrus said of the recovery, which included passing a test last week. “Concussions suck. I would rather get a sprained ankle. You can’t do anything. I was laying down for two weeks.
“I couldn’t do much. I had to rest my brain. I couldn’t watch TV, I couldn’t do anything. It’s not like if you hurt your knee or your ankle, or something like that. You have to get your brain right, because that’s your life. For some people it takes three weeks, for some people a month, and for some people three months.”
Worrying for Ray
Rivers admitted concern over the news that Ray Allen needed to miss more time last night due to his balky ankle. Rivers said he has not heard any discussion about Allen needing surgery, but the guard’s repeated swelling in the ankle has become more of a problem than anticipated.
“I don’t know what’s going on with it, but he’s not going to play tonight,” he said. “It just swells. I got a call a little while ago. I haven’t heard (surgery). I’m just more concerned it’s the second or third time it’s happened, so that’s a concern.”
Rivers is still expecting Allen to make the team’s upcoming trip through Toronto, New Jersey, Charlotte and New York, with the first three games to be played on successive nights.
http://www.bostonherald.com/sports/b...lt#articleFull
In a season when Rajon Rondo [stats] has lit up the NBA assist chart like a pinball machine, here’s a fresh line to consider.
His 10-point, 20-assist, 10-rebound triple double in last night’s 88-86 overtime win over Atlanta is only the seventh in the NBA since 1986 with at least 10 points, 10 rebounds and 20 assists, according to CSNNE statistician and Bentley College sports information director Dick Lipe.
The last five of those belong to Rondo. Last night also marked his 19th straight game with a double-digit assist performance. John Stockton set the NBA record with 29 straight games in 1992.
This is rare ground for any point guard.
“Listen, I know he’s on a run,” said C’s coach Doc Rivers. “That’s phenomenal. I don’t even know what that means. I know he’s playing very well, but I don’t even need the numbers to tell me that. He’s been spectacular, not only in games but everywhere, and that’s why we’re winning.
“We need a locked in effort from him every night and he’s doing that. That was growth tonight because it was a fatigue game, and there’s games like that when Rondo comes in and struggles, and tonight he willed that game.”
Perhaps the most impressive part of Rondo’s performance, according to Rivers, was that the guard begged to stay in the game in the fourth quarter. He played 47 minutes, the most for any player last night, in the midst of the Celtics [team stats]’ most grueling stretch of the season.
“Just win,” Rondo said of his reason for staying on the floor. “I don’t want to be selfish, because if I’m out there tired then I’m not doing what’s good for the team. But I wanted to stay in.”
Said Rivers: “He didn’t beg long, but he stayed in. The fact he’s trying to score to me is the most impressive. Before he was just a facilitator, but the fact that he’s getting more assists is because he’s an aggressive scorer, and teams can no longer play off of him to pass.”
Bass knee scare
The Celtics, who have had enough health scares to last a decade, suffered another brief moment of doom when Brandon Bass went down in overtime and immediately grabbed his left knee. He got up, to an ovation, after approximately two minutes on the floor.
“I told him to get up,” Rondo said simply.
It was Rivers who spoke for everyone when he said, “I thought he was hurt. I’ve had that injury. You know the one I’m talking about. I don’t even like to say the word. It was where he was grabbing. I didn’t think it was going to be a good thing, so that was great.”
Bass finished the game, and had 21 points and 10 rebounds in 42 minutes.
Thoughts of family As he lay prone on the floor on March 23 in Philadelphia, Mickael Pietrus had one recurring thought, and it had nothing to do with basketball.
“To be honest, I was thinking about my kids and my life,” the returning Celtics [team stats] swingman, who has since been recovering from a concussion. “That could have been a different story for me. But today I’m young, I still have my smile, I enjoy life. But when I fell I was thinking more about my kids.
“I was a different person,” Pietrus said of the recovery, which included passing a test last week. “Concussions suck. I would rather get a sprained ankle. You can’t do anything. I was laying down for two weeks.
“I couldn’t do much. I had to rest my brain. I couldn’t watch TV, I couldn’t do anything. It’s not like if you hurt your knee or your ankle, or something like that. You have to get your brain right, because that’s your life. For some people it takes three weeks, for some people a month, and for some people three months.”
Worrying for Ray
Rivers admitted concern over the news that Ray Allen needed to miss more time last night due to his balky ankle. Rivers said he has not heard any discussion about Allen needing surgery, but the guard’s repeated swelling in the ankle has become more of a problem than anticipated.
“I don’t know what’s going on with it, but he’s not going to play tonight,” he said. “It just swells. I got a call a little while ago. I haven’t heard (surgery). I’m just more concerned it’s the second or third time it’s happened, so that’s a concern.”
Rivers is still expecting Allen to make the team’s upcoming trip through Toronto, New Jersey, Charlotte and New York, with the first three games to be played on successive nights.
http://www.bostonherald.com/sports/b...lt#articleFull
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