powered by Google  
CBSSports.com Big Three? 1986 Celtics' Big Six trump '08 champs - NBA Sports News   Track your favorite teams and players.
Free membership, Register Now
Already a member, Log In
 


Community
Newsletters | Help
  Home   Fantasy     NFL  |  MLB  |  NBA  |  NHL  |  College FB  |  College BK  |  Golf  |  More CBS College | High School | Mobile | Shop  
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 Horses Home
 Live Racing
 Youbet Update
 Carryovers
 Free Selections
 Contests
 U. of BET
 Message Board
 
 
 
 
 Cycling Home
 Results
 Standings
 Stages
 Teams
 Riders
 Message Board
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 Arena Football
 Auto Racing
 Boxing
 CBS College Sports
 CBS Sports TV
 College Baseball
 College Hockey
 Collegiate Nationals
 Contests
 Fantasy FB Today
 Fantasy News
 Horse Racing
 Message Board
 MMA
 Olympics
 Poker
 Soccer
 SPiN
 Tennis
 Tour de France
 Video
 WNBA
 Women's Coll BK
 World Sports
 
 Site Index
 
 
 CBS College Sports
 Coll Sports Tonight
 Get CBS Coll Sports
 XXL - Watch Now
 Talent Bios
 Schedules
 School Sites
 
 
 Find your School
 Football Scoreboard
 Football Rankings
 Football Passing Leaders
Football Rushing Leaders
Football Highlights
Volleyball Rankings
MaxPreps High School Sports
MaxPreps TV Schedule
 
 
 Featured Application
 Mobile Web
 Alerts
 Applications
 Video
 
 
 Home
 NFL
 NCAA
 MLB
 NBA
 NHL
 Fantasy
 
NBA Home | Scoreboard | Standings | Schedules | Stats | Teams | Players | Transactions | Injuries | Video | Fantasy News
 

Big Three? 1986 Celtics' Big Six trump '08 champs

 

Freeman: Give me Big Three 2.0

BOSTON -- My first thought was the usual one: Freeman's wrong. Whatever his side is, I'll take the other one. In this case, he thinks the 2008 Celtics would hammer the 1986 Celtics because Boston's current Big Three is better than its best three from 1986.

My question: Which three from 1986?

Larry Bird's Celtics had to go through some fairly decent competition to succeed in the '80s. (Getty Images)  
Larry Bird's Celtics had to go through some fairly decent competition to succeed in the '80s. (Getty Images)  
The 1986 Celtics had a lot more than three big weapons. Larry Bird, Kevin McHale, Robert Parish. Dennis Johnson and Danny Ainge. An aging but wily Bill Walton. Those Celtics had more superstars than these Celtics. They had more basketball brawn. They had bigger basketball brains.

And it bears repeating that they had Larry Bird.

On second thought, my first thought was incorrect. Freeman isn't incorrect.

He's insane.

But I know where he made his mistake. He made it in the same place lots of people would make it. He recently watched the 1986 Celtics on television, saw the speed of the game back then, and reached his fatal conclusion: These Celtics are too fast, too athletic, for those Celtics.

Fine. But if that were the criteria, then the 2008 Denver Nuggets -- with uber-athletes like Allen Iverson and Carmelo Anthony and J.R. Smith and Nene -- would have clocked those 1986 Celtics, too. And nobody's saying that, right?

It's so easy to dismiss the past as too old, too slow, irrelevant. The 1986 Celtics were a 45-rpm record compared to today's, well, I was going to say today's Celtics are a 78-rpm record, but nobody in today's NBA knows what a vinyl record is. Or a tape cassette. Pretty soon the CD will be replaced by music downloaded straight into our medulla oblongata, and when that day comes will we write off the compact disc as an overrated dinosaur? I don't think so. The CD dominated pop culture. I saw it with my own eyes.

The 1986 Celtics did the same to the NBA. I saw that, too.

If Freeman or anyone else is going to play the "today's athletes are superior" card, I'll end this nonsense right now by bringing out my trump: Yesterday's athletes, the best of the best in their era, would have been the best of the best of any era. Had Bird, McHale and Parish (or Johnson ... or Ainge ...) been born in the 1980s instead of the '50s and '60s, had they spent their summers gorging on today's AAU ball instead of fishing or playing baseball or whatever the best teen basketball players did back then, they'd have emerged as dominant now as they were then. It's evolution. It's competition. It's common sense.

And those 1986 Celtics weren't just champions. They were the best of the best. In the past 25 or 30 years, those Celtics were rivaled by just one outfit, the Los Angeles Lakers -- and not the bastardized, one-dimensional version of the Lakers that the current Celtics had the good fortune of facing in the 2008 NBA Finals. The only team(s) that could compare with the Celtics from the 1980s were the Lakers of the same decade, which remains the greatest decade in league history. More teams had more stars than ever. Big Three? Hell, in those days entire starting fives were awesome. So were some sixth men. McHale and Michael Cooper and Vinnie Johnson and Bobby Jones came off the bench in the 1980s.

CONTINUED: 1 · 2 · Next »
 
 
 
 
 
Related Links
 
Gregg Doyel
Recent Columns
 
Headlines