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Saturday, June 7, 2008

Celtics’ Pierce says he’ll play Sunday

Boston star's right knee still 'tender,' but has no structural damage

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— Paul Pierce heard a pop and had a thought.

His NBA Finals, in a wisp and a crash, were over. An arena and this city collectively leaned in the same direction.

Despite Los Angeles Lakers coach Phil Jackson hinting otherwise, Pierce says he was aching, not faking, when he went down in the third quarter of the NBA Finals Game 1 against the Lakers because of a sprained right knee.

Enough so that if there had been a game Friday, Pierce said he would have been on the sidelines watching. Instead he, along with the rest of the Boston Celtics, took the day off to watch video, soaking up their victory and looking to heal fast.

"I think there's a great chance I'll play on Sunday, just knowing myself, knowing my threshold for pain," Pierce said of his odds in playing in Game 2 of the Finals.

Pierce scored 15 of his 22 points in the third quarter, the points flanked by the injury. He bumped into teammate Kendrick Perkins at the 6:49 point, was carried off the court and returned less than two minutes later.

"It was crazy to me because I've never been carried off the court, and it was like, man, I said, 'I have to be close to death or blood everywhere for me to get carried off,'" Pierce said, adding that he took four Advils.

"It was sort of embarrassing, truthfully. I should have just laid there for five more minutes and then got up. Hopefully it won't happen again. If I get carried off the next time, there's no way I'm going to come back."

Celtics coach Doc Rivers said there was no structural damage in Pierce's knee.

"He didn't have to tell me a lot," Rivers said Friday. "I talked to him, though, and just watching him walk, you can see he's : It's tender, it's still, it's swollen a little bit."

Pierce will receive two or three treatments on the knee a day leading up to Sunday.

He acknowledged that the injury "could be bad," but that he will wait until the series ends to have an MRI performed on it.

"I mean, what is it really going to tell us?" he said. "The extent of the injury, but at this point with two weeks left, six games to go, we can figure this out after the season."

Perkins, the Celtics starting center who is more a space eater than scorer, was also among the Celtics attending to his ailments Friday.

He rolled his ankle in the third quarter and told Rivers he was about 60 percent at the time. How he exactly reached that percentage, Rivers isn't sure.

All the same, it hadn't improved much over an evening, but Perkins still expects to play in Game 2.

"You know, there's going to be pain," he said. "It's the Finals, so you've got to suck it up."

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Comments

jross1972 (Joe Ross) says...

If Paul Pierce and the Celtics win the NBA Championship, all he'd need do is utter the word "Jayhawks" and that would play in the minds of potential recruits, especially on the heels of an NCAA Championship.

June 7, 2008 at 11:45 a.m. ( | suggest removal )

jaybate (anonymous) says...

VERY foolish, Paul. We educated you better than this, even if you did not get a degree.Your body is your living.You have at least 8-10 years left; that's probably $100M in the balance.Even if you don't care about your living, think of all the retired professional athletes from all sports walking around on canes and in wheel chairs because of this kind of mentality.nothing is more important that your health.Get it scanned NOW!Play through a broken bone, if you must; they heal no matter what (though watch out for stress fractures because they may indicate bone pathology).Play through a chipped tooth.Play through a broken toe.But never risk your joints or organs for anyone or anything.Danny Ainge never played with a blown knee, or torn ligaments in his ankle.Call Jo Jo White. Ask him. He's as tough as they come, but nobody's fool.

June 7, 2008 at 4:22 p.m. ( | suggest removal )

jaybate (anonymous) says...

I haven't yet noticed an announcement that Coach Self's contract has been formalized and signed. Again, this must be one seriously complicated contract.hence, i am announcing a contest to pick the date when coach self's contract will at last be finalized and signed by coach self and ku.My prediction is that it will be signed the day after the investigation into Darrell Arthur's grades has concluded and KU has not been implicated in any improper conduct.Another possible prediction I considered, based on Bill Mayer's claim that nothing would happen in the Arthur case regardless of findings, is that some other infractions are being investigated that have not yet been made public. But I am too loyal to KU to make a prediction based on that utterly unfounded basis, and besides I do not agree with Mayer for a second on this issue. If Arthur's grades were changed, there will be ramifications and a cascade that could reach Mt. Oread, maybe even the rafters of AFH. Boy do I hope those grades were not changed and that KU recruiters acted within the rules!Rock Chalk!

June 7, 2008 at 5:27 p.m. ( | suggest removal )

trich424 (anonymous) says...

Maybe, and this is a wild guess, they are still working out the detailed contract. He wants improvements to a lot of things, that isn't a contract that is written in the morning, signed in the afternoon, and announced by dinner. And let Paul Pierce judge his knee himself, I'm sure if something major was wrong he would know, you have no idea what is knee is feeling like.

June 7, 2008 at 7:01 p.m. ( | suggest removal )

jaybate (anonymous) says...

trich424,Does this mean you're not entering the contest? :-)Seriously, how many documentaries about crippled, retired athletes have to be made before the world of sports is going to give up this silly notion that you ought to risk your body and livelihood for a championship?Sports has a history of endorsing injurious behaviors as tests of toughness and committment that over time fall away and are viewed in hindsight to have been just plain stupid.Among my favorite examples is withholding water from players in August two-a-days in football back as late as the late 60s football. The logic was that you weeded out the pussies by finding the ones that could go without water. So you lost a few to death; it built toughness and character an esprit d'corps. Football coaches would probably still be withholding water, if Ray Graves at University of Florida had not figured out how to make a killing pedalling overpriced water infused with too much sugar and salt, er, Gatorade.Hey, Coach Graves, no need to give them Gatorade. You could just give them more frequent water breaks; then they wouldn't need to be used to prime a business that allegedly made a drink that metabolized faster.Frankly, trich424, Paul should listen to his own body...and then he should go get an MRI, so maybe 20 years from now we don't have to watch him in a documentary gimping around and say, "I want to help the kids avoid what happened to me."

June 7, 2008 at 11:07 p.m. ( | suggest removal )

rockchalk_dpu (anonymous) says...

JayBate,While I completely agree that Pierce should at least get his knee checked out and MRI'ed, I can understand where he is coming from. How would you feel if you were on the cusp of something you had worked your whole career for, through crappy coaches and horrible records, only to see that possibly taken away from you. Given the shelf-life of players and teams in the NBA, it could be the only chance that Pierce and the "Big 3" have at a titleBeing a former athlete myself, there is no way I could come to grips with not giving it my all in trying to win a title.I hope that Boston stretches it out to game 6 so that the city can see a title in person and the team can finish their dream season.Rock Chalk

June 8, 2008 at 5:15 p.m. ( | suggest removal )

jaybate (anonymous) says...

You make the case for scanning more eloquently than I do.I played a little once. I know the temptation to play hurt. I totally appreciate your and Pierce's desire to play in this situation.But I really do think that it is not wise for athletes to give into this temptation.My reason, again, is that there are just too many disabled, retired professional athletes and Paul shouldn't risk his future prosperity on trying to win a ring. Professional athletes jump from college to the pros for the money. They want to be professionals and make money playing the game. There is a line in an old John Wayne movie called El Dorado that is fitting here. Wayne is a hired gun and one of the fastest. He decides not to work for a man. The man tries to tempt him; then the man tries to question his manhood. Wayne tosses the money paid him so far less his travel expenses and says, "I decide where I risk my neck, and for who."Wayne does later decide to work injured (with a bullet lodged in his spine no less). I think Paul ought to resist temptation and be a professional.But you are right that even a professional must have to consider performing for something more than just the money.You think this is one of those times.I think its not.More persons probably agree with you.I'll keep thinking on it.

June 9, 2008 at 12:09 a.m. ( | suggest removal )