wbur.org
support wbur today!
Listen to this story
Celtics, Lakers, and NBA History
photo

NBA finals, Game One tonight, and it’s a storied match-up. Boston Celtics. Los Angeles Lakers. Between them they’ve won almost half the championships in NBA history.

For professional basketball, the classic tip-off can’t come soon enough. The Celtics-Lakers era of Larry Bird and Magic Johnson made the NBA a sports powerhouse. Michael Jordan and the Chicago Bulls kept it soaring.

But it’s been tough going many years since then.

This hour, On Point: We talk with Danny Ainge and top sportswriters – on Celtics, Lakers and the future of the NBA.

-Tom Ashbrook

Danny Ainge on the Celtics and Lakers, then and now:

Use the audio links below to listen to Danny Ainge’s interview with Tom Ashbrook, and hear him respond to questions from our guests Jack McCallum of Sports Illustrated and David Steele of The Baltimore Sun.

Comparing the Celtics and Lakers of the 80s to today’s teams, McCallum asked Ainge (in good humor), “Will you explain to people that you guys weren’t really that damn good defensively? [that the current team], they’re not as good a team, but they’re better defensively than teams were in the 80s, in general?” You can hear Ainge’s reply:

DANNY AINGE: I would agree with that…. I think that the Lakers and Celtics of the 80s were very good defensive teams in the last 5 minutes of games…. But our team now plays defense for 48 minutes better than our teams in the 80s did. At the same time, the offense is not as good. And the offense is not as good because the offensive players are not as good…. I don’t think either one of these teams [now] have the same kind of [offensive] firepower, but they do have better athletes and better defensive energy than I think either one of those teams [in the 80s] had.

» Listen (mp3 format) »Listen (real audio format) » Listen (windows media format)

Guests:

Danny Ainge, general manager and executive director of basketball operations for The Boston Celtics, and a former Celtics guard with the legendary 1980s team.

Jack McCallum, senior writer for Sports Illustrated and author of this week’s cover story on the Celtics and Lakers, “The Rivalry.”

David Steele, sports columnist for The Baltimore Sun.

Jack Beatty, On Point news analyst and senior editor at The Atlantic Monthly.

 

Tags: , , ,

 
 

Comments are closed.

Recent Shows
Poker: America’s Game
Thursday, November 19, 2009 image

Poker and American history. How the game of presidents, cowboys, gangsters, and online gamblers helped shape America.

Comments [10]
 
Google vs. Murdoch
Thursday, November 19, 2009 image

Rupert Murdoch wants to block the search giant from scooping free content from his newspapers. We’ll look at the staredown.

Comments [137]
On Point Blog
Michael Wolff and Jeff Jarvis on Murdoch v. Google

We had a rousing discussion about Google vs. Murdoch, and what it says about the whole future of news, with Michael Wolff, Jeff Jarvis, and Steven Brill. Here’s what Wolff and Jarvis had to say about the delusions of both Murdoch and Google.

More » | Comments [20]
 
Video: Google CEO Eric Schmidt

Last week, host Tom Ashbrook was on stage with Google CEO Eric Schmidt, asking him about some of the biggest technology and business issues of our time.
It was part of an MIT event held on Thursday, Nov. 5, to commemorate computer science professor Michael Hammer, who died last year. Here’s video of the full interview, courtesy of WBUR.org:

Among other things, Schmidt said the possibilities [...]

More » | Comments [4]
 
California, here we come! And we need your questions!

On Point is headed west!
No, no. Not for good. Only for one show. But it’s a very special show!  The NPR station in Thousand Oaks, California – KCLU – is celebrating their 15th anniversary. We’re lucky to have been on their airwaves for nearly seven years, and they invited us out west to host a live [...]

More » | Comments [10]