The Knicks Ain't the Only One to Make a Move
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by user Romiezzo
New York got Zach Randolph? Woohoo. But that's Boston Celtics' Paul Pierce said last week that if the Celtics don't make any moves, he'd want out of the team. He sure is happy now, as the Celtics made a desperate move and traded the #5 overall pick, Jeff Green, for seven time all-star (now former) Seattle Supersonic Shooting Guard, Ray Allen.
Danny Ainge pulled off another major deal that he thought was unlikely just an hour before Thursday night's NBA draft began. He obtained Allen and the 35th pick from Seattle for guards Delonte West and Wally Szczerbiak and forward Jeff Green of Georgetown, whom the Celtics drafted with the fifth pick.
Boston was 24-58 last season and has won just three playoff series during Pierce's nine years with the team.
The trade for Allen should quiet Pierce's comments, voiced several times, about being dissatisfied with the youth movement that could keep Boston from contending during his career.
Pierce, 29, led the Celtics in scoring but played only 47 games because of injury last season. They won their 16th - and most recent - championship back in 1986.
"I would think there'd be a sense of urgency at this point," Pierce said after the season. "I mean, two consecutive years of not making the playoffs. This is a town eager for the Celtics to be in the playoffs, eager for the Celtics to be one of the best teams in the NBA. I just can't see us sit here again next season not talking about the playoffs."
Let the talk begin.
"We wouldn't do the trade for it not" to make the Celtics a playoff team, coach Doc Rivers said.
Allen had surgery on both ankles April 7, but Ainge said he expects him to be ready before training camp starts Oct. 1.
West's departure leaves the Celtics thin at point guard, but Sebastian Telfair could stick with the team.
On April 4, team owner Wyc Grousbeck said the Celtics were severing ties with Telfair after he was arrested in the New York area and charged with carrying a loaded gun in his car.
"Sebastian and I talked," Grousbeck said Thursday. "It's a long time to November. We'll see what happens."
Allen gives the Celtics a talented veteran on a team that ended the season with just five players older than 25.
"I'm not sure any of the players in the draft are going to be as good as Ray Allen in the next few years," Ainge said.
Allen, who turns 32 next month, averaged a career-high 26.4 points last season, his 11th, but underwent surgery to remove bone spurs on both ankles that required him to wear protective boots.
We'll eventually see if these two trades eventually pay off by the end of next season.
