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Celtics Beat Knicks Without Garnett

NBA: Boston 88, Detroit 76

Allen, Celtics hold off Rockets

Celtics Open With Win

Recap: New York vs. Boston

Rondo is happy with this exercise

Champion Celtics are coming to town

Celts think Newport is good place to bond

Celtics Players To Visit Portland Wednesday

Celtics returning to radio in Northwest Vt.

2008 Boston Celtics World Champions- New England State Trophy Tour

Off The Court With...Jeremiah Rivers

Celtics sign Miles

Kobe Tops List of Most Popular Jerseys in China

American Mardy Fish moves into second round of ATP

Remembering Reggie

Timberwolves add depth at point guard, agreeing to deal with

Why Boston NEEDS to keep James Posey

Rose primed to play in summer league

Sparks Storm past Seattle

NBA Finals notes

Celtics win NBA title after dominant Game 6 victory

NBA Finals notes

Pierce, Bryant stick it out and make the Finals

Eastern Conference finals back East in Boston

Expanding their audiences

No Place Like Home In NBA Playoffs

Cavs-Celtics matchups

GAME 5: HAWKS AT CELTICS: Through the looking glass

NBA | Kevin Garnett named league's top defender

Celts defense set to strike a Pose

Boston's backups hold on

Allen nets 22 in Celtics win over Bulls

Defense played at this stop

Celtics add experience - and winners - with new players

Post Ups Notebook

Cavaliers-Celtics Preview

KG 50-50

Celtics, Pacers Put Winning Streaks On The Line

Celtics Stay Perfect Against West, Edge Mavs

Celtics' Garnett misses 2nd game with strained abdominal; Ray Allen out with flu

NBA Barometer: Damon Stoudamire to Celtics?

NBA Game Summary - Boston At New Jersey

Cause for concern

Garnett helps Celtics to seventh straight win

NBA: Celtics, Celtics who is going to stop the Celtics?

Celtics Waive Brandon Wallace

Slam-dunk Santas

Celtics hold off Bulls for 17th victory of season

Progress seen in big project

LeBron Impressive But Still Needs A Consistent Second Act

Up Close with Glen "Big Baby" Davis

CELTICS NOTEBOOK - Rookie Davis looks like vet

Team welcomes Posey - a day late

Inside the Celtics: Depth could hold keep to deep playoff run

Nets 82, Celtics 71

Bryant Rumors Heat Up

Allen offers glimpse at how scary Celts can be

Cheeks impressed with rookie Smith's first game

Growing pains for this 'Baby'

This wild ride is just beginning

Ainge still looking to fill big shoes

NBA All Star Game News and Updates

Boston Celtics vs Los Angeles Lakers

Boston's Moment: 17 or Bust for the Celtics

Beckett Bowl includes A-list invites

Former LSU player hosts golf tournament

Davis to sponsor AAU gear for local teams

Celtics sign second-round pick Davis

Pruitt agrees to deal

Herbie gives LSU plenty of love, Early gets his props, more #2 votes for Tigers

Courtside View: Big Baby on board

Johnson shapes up for big season

Ray Allen Takes Good With Bad

Maui Invitational bracket set

The Celtics Are Moving Forward

YEAR IN REVIEW: 10 Games to Forget

Celtics get Garnett in 7-for-1 trade

Ray gets a raise in Italy

Why the Celtics Will Make the Playoffs, and Why Celtics Nation Shouldn’t be Celebrating

First-rounders in a rush to succeed

Brady impressed by LSU's versatility

Davis taking baby steps to become NBA big man

Celtics give ex-LSU star mixed reviews

Younger Hornets looking to shine

Not playing nice: Powe, Davis enjoying a battle of the bigs

Winners Of Draft Day Trades

'Big Baby' meets Boston

Fazekas, Davis, Byars Among Second-Round Steals In 2007 NBA Draft

Rosetta: Davis feeds off support from friends

Pruitt, Davis second choices

Davis to learn NBA fate today

Big Baby seeking Net gain

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Smaller 'Big Baby' says he's NBA ready

Theus, Shaw will talk again with Kings

Draft Prospects: Golden State Warriors

Davis starts workout tour

College Hoop Blog: Good 'N Plenty

Rarely is the truth sexier than rumors

LSU's Big Baby Glen Davis Loses 45 Pounds, Down to 280

Magnum Rolle leaves LSU

Big Baby' driven by doubters

LSU forward Glen Davis

LSU tour continues; Monroe is next

Turnipseed receives another postseason honor

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Top 20 boasts what will be 16 players already in NBA by June's draft

Football Potential Is Seen in a Basketball Big Man

SEC's top award doesn't translate in NBA

Dancing with a 6-foot-9 star

Tigers get papers from Spencer

Should I stay or should I go: The professional dilemma

Training Day

Colaianni: Wright made right decision

KC's Thornton commits to LSU

Big Baby Steps

FEINSWOG: How much is on Brady?

The Fantastic Final Four

Georgetown's comeback ensures the Final Four won't be a fabulous freshman fest. Except for Greg Oden.

NCAA Basketball: UCLA and Ohio State reach Final Four

Porter ties regional mark with eight 3s in Ducks' Sweet 16 win

Ohio State 85, Tennessee 84

NCAA Men's Tournament: The best are still around in West

Sweet (16) Emotion!

Byars, Commodores upset No. 3 seed Washington State in 2OTs

Tigers reach second round with win over North Texas

$25,00 Grand Prize Offered in March Madness Contest

SIX TEAMS HEAD TO THE NCAA

Season comes to shocking end for Huskies

Cal Bears Earn Slot in Pac-10 Eight

The Trojans face a tough matchup in Stanford while having uncertainty over their status in the NCAA.

2007 Pac-10 Tournament Preview

Huskies head to Pac-10 tourney with confidence, despite challenge

Davis, Mitchell make NABC all-district team

LSU's Davis to miss Kentucky game

Heart-wrenching loss for LSU

Lofton scores eight points in return to UT lineup; Vols get past LSU, 70-67

LSU, Alabama focus on survival

LSU falls to Vanderbilt and former player, 64-53

'Big Baby' Featured in Latest ESPN the Magazine

Big Baby Has Rough Day

LSU Forward Glen Davis in Car Wreck

Glen Davis' nickname no longer good fit

LSU's Glen Davis finds trouble in the paint vs. UCLA

 
 
 
 
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Remembering Reggie

 

He was the quiet Celtic with a smile that was infectious. He was reserved and somewhat shy but his actions, both on and off the basketball court, spoke much louder than any words could ever do. He was the captain of the Boston Celtics and their leading scorer. He was a devoted husband, father and a friend to all who knew him well. He was the hope of a new Celtics generation. Reggie Lewis was only 27 years old when he died of a heart attack on Tuesday, July 27, 1993. We still fondly remember him today, 15 years later.

Reggie Lewis was born in 1965. He was raised in a modest urban home in Baltimore, Maryland and lived with his mother, Peggy, and brothers, Irvin and Jon. At an early age, Reggie already loved basketball and was often found on a basketball court. Hist footprints appear in the cement outside of the court that he played on as a child.

Lewis enjoyed success and early fame as a key member of a 50-0 Dunbar High School basketball team that also featured future NBA players Reggie Williams, David Wingate and Tyrone "Mugsy" Bogues. His talent led him to Northeastern University, where he exceeded everyone's expectations as a starter for the Huskies. In his freshman year he averaged 17.8 points per game and by his senior year he was averaging 23.3 points per game. Lewis lead his team to 4 National Atlantic Conference Titles and ultimately NCAA Tournaments. The Huskies captain graduated as the team's all-time leading scorer, ninth-best in NCAA history, and in ceremonies on January 21, 1989 had his familiar number 35 retired to the Matthews Arena rafters.

Reggie was drafted by the Celtics with the next to the last pick in the first round of the 1987 draft. Like most rookies in Celtics history, his first year was a learning one and Reggie mostly watched and learned. He observed and learned and pushed himself in year two and appeared in 81 of the 82 regular season games and finished his sophomore season averaging 18.5 points per game. More importantly, he stepped in and comforted Celtics fans' fears and worries, after Larry Bird missed almost the entire season due to surgery.

Celtics fans witnessed true flashes of brilliance in Reggie's game during 1991-92, as he averaged a career-best 20.8 points per game (he averaged the same figure the following season) while playing in all 82 games. He posted a spectacular career-high 28.0 points per game in the 1992 playoffs and was the lone Celtic to be named the NBA Eastern Conference All-Star Team. Reggie was named the team's captain after Bird's retirement in 1992.

On April 29, 1993, the Celtics began a first-round playoff series with the Charlotte Hornets. The setting was the old Boston Garden. The Boston Garden at the time was the only arena in professional sports that did not have air conditioning. Opposing teams would profess that the Celtics intentionally turned up the temperature as a way to create an edge over the unsuspecting and unconditioned. Several opponents throughout the years had fallen victim to dehydration and related nausea. The Garden created perhaps the greatest home edge in all of sports. This night, the Garden was hot and humid as usual. The Celtics were on their way to a blowout victory and it was still early in the first quarter. Their captain, Reggie Lewis, could not miss a shot and had already scored ten points within the first three minutes.

After going to the basket and grabbing a rebound through several defenders, Lewis began to head back down the court. Suddenly, his body slumped forward towards the court. Although the fall was sudden, it did not initially appear to be concerning because Lewis returned to his feet within a few seconds and checked himself out of the game. Complaining of dizziness and a black out, Lewis sat out the remainder of the first half while team doctor Dr. Arnold Scheller attempted to diagnose the cause of the black out. At halftime, Lewis mentioned that he had some grapefruit juice just before the game that tasted too bitter. With the high degree of humidity in the Garden coupled with the possibility of bad juice, Scheller, an orthopedic specialist, recommended that Lewis be allowed to continue to play in the second half. In that half, teammates noticed that Lewis' legs were very wobbly and he came back out of the game almost immediately.

After the game, Lewis was sent to New England Baptist hospital where he underwent a battery of tests that were supervised by a "dream team" team of 12 of the most respected cardiologists in the Boston area. After thorough testing, the team of doctors diagnosed Lewis to be suffering from ventricular tachycardia, the most dangerous form of arrhythmia. They concluded that Lewis was lucky that his first symptom was not sudden cardiac death and merely a fainting episode.

Reggie was frustrated because the diagnosis meant an end to his basketball career, but he became angry with the doctors because they kept pursuing whether cocaine could have been an explanation. Lewis checked himself out of the care at New England Baptist Hospital in the middle of the night and sought out Brigham & Women's Hospital chief of cardiology, Dr. Gilbert Mudge.

Dr. Gilbert Mudge had been following the story and even prior to Reggie's contacting him, Dr Mudge claimed to have been suspicious of the Dream Team diagnosis due to what he believed to be inconsistencies and discrepancies in Lewis' test results. After performing his own battery of tests, Mudge called a press conference in early May of 1993 and stated that Lewis was not suffering from cardiomyopathy but merely from a curable neurocardiogenic fainting disorder. Mudge prescribed beta blockers as treatment and pronounced Reggie physically fit to return to playing professional basketball the following fall.

On July 27, 1993, Lewis entered the Brandeis arena with a friend to prepare for a fullcourt pickup game that night. After about an hour on the court without even working up a sweat, Lewis crumpled near the 3-point line. Nearly two hours after he collapsed at 5:07 p.m. on July 27, 1993, the hospital announced that Reggie Lewis was dead at 27. In the wake of his death, the heart wrenching news came out that earlier in the day, Reggie's wife Donna had just found out that she was pregnant with their second child. She never got to give Reggie the news.

Then, over subsequent months and years, it became very ugly. There were unconfirmed reports that cocaine had been at least partly responsible for the tragedy, and a debate arose among doctors whether the death could have been prevented. "The real tragedy is that right now we should be saying, 'Reggie has a pacemaker and can't play basketball anymore,' " Kevin McHale said after Lewis' death. "Instead we have to mourn him."

After his death, still reeling from the personal loss of their captain as well as the loss the previous year of Len Bias, the Celtics tried to pick up the pieces and go on. They petitioned the league for relief from his salary but were denied. It seemed the franchise was given one blow after another and it took 22 years for the franchise to recover from the devastating series of events starting with the death of Len Bias and continuing with the death of their very talented captain, Reggie Lewis. The Celtics retired #35 in Reggie's honor on March 22, 1995.

Reggie's accomplishments on the court are well documented. He is only player in the history of the Celtics to have registered 100 rebounds, 100 assists, 100 steals and 100 blocked shots in a single season which he did in the 1991/92 season with 394 rebounds, 185 assists, 125 steals and 105 blocks. Reggie once blocked four shots from Michael Jordan in one game.

Reggie Lewis left fans around the nation with memories of his basketball accomplishments. But also memorable was what he did off the court. His contributions to the community were just as consistent as his jumpshots. Reggie began an annual giveaway where he purchased hundreds of turkeys and gave them to underprivileged families in the area, without any media or fanfare surrounding it. He was always seen with a smile and was a genuine caring person. Reggie's widow, Donna Harris-Lewis, has continued her husbands legacy of kindness through the Reggie Lewis Foundation, which still annually sponsors the turkey giveaway that Reggie began.

After his death, The Reggie Lewis Track and Field Center, was opened in Roxbury, Massachusetts. The center was funded partially by Lewis and routinely hosts major track and field competitions as well as home basketball games for Roxbury Community College. Reggie's greatest influence on people.

Publish Postff of the basketball court. Reggie had strong morals, humility and compassion. Today, 15 years after his death, we remember Reggie and can only think of what might have been. There will never be a clear method of telling just how good Reggie Lewis would have been. We caught a brief moment. We have many memories. Rest in peace, Reggie. We love you and miss you.


 

Read more at http://celticsgreen.blogspot.com

 

 
 
 
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