As the Celtics’
22-point lead whittled away Tuesday night in Cleveland, you were probably
wondering two things. One, when did Sideshow
Bob become Moses Malone? And two, when’s
the last time the Celtics lost a lead like that.
Let’s start with
Anderson Varejao, who had one of the best individual games against Boston in
the last decade. Approaching that lethal moment on the career curve when youth
and athleticism crosses with experience, Varejao is having the best year of his
career. And the league’s leader in
offensive rebounding had an ideal matchup on Tuesday.
The result, Varejao posted just
the 2nd 20/20 game against the New Big Three Celtics. (Dwight Howard had the other in March of 2009
in a game notable in that it turned out to be Kevin Garnett’s final appearance of the title defense season.)
CELTICS
OPPONENT REBOUNDS – NEW BIG 3 ERA
24 –
LOVE VS. MINNESOTA – JANUARY 3, 2011
21 –
HOWARD @ ORLANDO –MARCH 25, 2009**
20 –
HOWARD @ ORLANDO – DECEMBER 25, 2009
20 – VAREJAO @ CLEVELAND – JANUARY 31,
2012**
19 –
NOWITZKI @ DALLAS – MARCH 20, 2008
19 –
JEFFERSON @ UTAH – FEBRUARY 28, 2011
**
20/20 Game
20 REBOUND GAMES VS. BOSTON – SINCE 2001
28 –
WALLACE @ DETROIT – MARCH 24, 2002
24 –
LOVE VS. MINNESOTA – JANUARY 3, 2011
23 –
NOWITZKI @ DALLAS – FEBRUARY 21, 2002
21 –
CAMBY @ NEW YORK – DECEMBER 11, 2001
21 –
WALLACE @ DETROIT – MARCH 15, 2003
21 –
HOWARD @ ORLANDO –MARCH 25, 2009
20 –
OLOWOKANDI @ L.A. CLIPPERS – DECEMBER 29, 2001
20 -
O’NEAL @ LA LAKERS – MARCH 21, 2003
20 –
Ke THOMAS VS. PHILADELPHIA – APRIL 10, 2003
20 –
MARION @ PHOENIX – FEBRUARY 27, 2005
20 –
HOWARD @ ORLANDO – DECEMBER 25, 2009
20 – VAREJAO @ CLEVELAND – JANUARY 31,
2012
But lest you
think the Celtics can’t make rebounding history. They may, tonight. Kevin Garnett is nine defensive rebounds shy
of 10,000 for his career. He’ll become
just the third man in league history to reach that milestone. Karl Malone, Robert Parish, Kevin
Garnett. That’s it.
MOST
DEFENSIVE REBOUNDS – NBA HISTORY
1.
|
KARL MALONE
|
11406
|
2.
|
ROBERT PARISH
|
10117
|
3.
|
9991
|
|
4.
|
HAKEEM OLAJUWON
|
9714
|
And because it’s
2:15am, and you’ve read this far, you could call these “nuggets” or “bullet”
points, but they don’t pertain to either of those franchises.
* The Celtics have now won 121 straight games when leading by 19+. If Tuesday night’s scare seemed oddly familiar, it’s because the last time it happened, it was in the same building. On November 11, 2006, the Lebron James’ 25 second-half points led Cavs back from 25 down to beat the Celtics 94-93. The Celtics leading scorer that night? Kendrick Perkins. Or, after Monday night, the artist now known around the NBA as “Kia Optima.”
* The Celtics have now won 121 straight games when leading by 19+. If Tuesday night’s scare seemed oddly familiar, it’s because the last time it happened, it was in the same building. On November 11, 2006, the Lebron James’ 25 second-half points led Cavs back from 25 down to beat the Celtics 94-93. The Celtics leading scorer that night? Kendrick Perkins. Or, after Monday night, the artist now known around the NBA as “Kia Optima.”
· * The
Celtics have now won nine straight when scoring at least 89 points. In fact, the Celtics are 9-0 when scoring
between 89-100 points. The two times
they’ve broken 100? Both losses, at New York and Miami to open the season.
· * How
bizarre was the historic 27-point comeback in Orlando last week? In the other
nine wins, the Celtics largest comeback?
Five points.
· * Ramon
Sessions had the first double-digit assist game against the Celtics this year. And the first since Chris Paul had 15 last
March 19th in New Orleans. It ended a 33-game regular season streak
of no one getting 10 assists against the Celtics, and oddly enough, he ended that
streak off the bench.
And I leave you
with the strangest statistical note of the day….The Celtics and the Cavaliers
were the last two teams in the NBA this year without a win against a .500
team. The Celtics got three last week,
home and home with Orlando anad against the Pacers. So the Cavs entered the night as the only
team without one. But by losing…wait for
it…they got it. The loss pushed the
Celtics up to .500 at 10-10, meaning Sunday win for the Cavs in Boston, is now
considered a win against a .500 team.
Deriving joy from
bizarre statistical paradoxes like that is likely why I get so little sleep,
and almost definitely why I’m no longer
married.
Like the Patriots hadn't beaten a winning team all year until Denver won their first playoff game (and then the Pats win over Denver became one). But then it went away when then beat Denver a second time. Also you said "330 game streak" when you meant "330 day." Great stuff though! I love the statistical oddities as well! http://lucidsportsfan.blogspot.com/2011_06_01_archive.html#2049941527228952857
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