Boston Celtics vs. Sacramento Kings: 12/12/07 - Open Game Thread
So Perkins is definitely out. And that's tough. But it's not like he hasn't been in foul trouble and played limited minutes before. On the bright side Brad Miller is not the type of center that is going to be physical with KG. And Big Baby gets the first start of his career. Let's see what he can do.
Oh yeah Scot Pollard is hurt too.
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Jim I have a moral dilemma
On a side note I expect Boston to blow this team out if they can ride their starters to a reasonable level tonight. Sacramento can play at a high level for a short time but not for a sustained period of time.
Jim it's 23-16 right now, and from my limited watching of this game, I've notice both teams are coasting. The c's are still up 8. That's why they're 17-2 if nothing else. I wonder if this team is coasting knowing the playoffs is what matters. I wonder if the can flip the switch if that's the case.
(P.S. Sorry about the crappy rant.)
As a side note
One question also
Thanks for stopping by
For a tommy point that was a weak charge
KG did have 3 fouls at the end of the half. The Kings have stopped working the ball side to side A and B the C's just have exploited Sac's lack of cohesion. You see why they're 17-2 right now Jim. You really do. I wonder, as I said earlier, if that playing at a certain below caliber level will lead them to playing with callous indifference until it's too late to be rescued. For KG's sake alone I hope not.
I do like Tommy
It's just so amusing to listen to
On the other hand he loves the Celtics. Which in past years I'm sure many around the GB needed.
Big Baby
About his nickname:
He earned his nickname because he was a big kid with a sensitive side. When Davis played Pop Warner football and everyone else on the team was older, he pouted because he was the baby. When he played high school basketball and his team lost, he cried. And when Hurricane Katrina struck in late summer and he held IV's for the victims who found refuge on his home court, he cried again.But the reason his nickname stuck, and the reason it fits so snug, is that Davis never cries for long. He is too busy spreading laughter. He has dressed up as James Brown, as a ballet dancer and in drag. After one victory this season, he kissed his coach on the cheek. After one poor shot, he asked his coach to criticize him in front of the team. After one collision with a referee, he told reporters: "I was just praying to God I didn't paralyze anybody."
On his family:
Even the parents who sometimes failed him as a child could not resist his magnetic pull. Davis met his father, Donald Robertson, in his sophomore year of high school. His mother, Toyna Davis, went to games and bellowed in her deepest baritone: "My big baby!" Now, Davis visits his father regularly. He winks at his mother in the stands. His capacity for forgiveness is as large as his appetite.
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