The Boston Celtics opened the 2024-25 season by winning 19 of their first 23 games, putting the team on a 68-win pace as of early December. Many scoffed at the notion of a championship hangover. But some tiny cracks quickly spread.
Jimmy Butler and the Miami Heat are in the middle of an ugly divorce, one which could very well end with a trade in the coming weeks. Boston Celtics legend Paul
Tyler Herro says the Boston Celtics guaranteed they would draft him, but the Miami Heat swooped in and took him instead 👀 As Herro mentioned, the Celtics had the 14th overall pick in the 2019 ...
One of those is the defending champion Boston Celtics, who — at full health — dropped a disappointing game Wednesday night against a Toronto Raptors team that entered the night with only nine victories. Boston still has elite talent, but it has one glaring issue it seemingly can’t shed.
The latest development is that, according to NBA insider Chris Haynes, the Heat failed to pay Butler for a period during the summer.
The defending NBA Champions are back in action on Friday, Jan. 17 when the Boston Celtics host the Orlando Magic at TD Garden in Boston.
A decorated Miami Heat star almost played for Boston. 2022 Sixth Man of the Year ... on their podcast "The OGs Show," that the Celtics had made a promise to select him with the No. 14 pick in ...
The Eastern Conference Rival swooped in to land the Boston Celtics primary draft target in 2019, leading the Celtics to select Romeo Langford.
Sources close to Butler insist that one of his biggest issues with the Heat has become his role in the offense this season. Butler vocalized that frustration after the last game he played before the Heat suspended him on Jan. 3 for seven games “for multiple instances of conduct detrimental to the team over the course of the season.”
Miami Heat shooting guard Tyler Herro was led to believe that he would be drafted 14th overall by the Boston Celtics in 2019.
The Celtics play at the TD Garden in Boston, which they share with the NHL's Boston Bruins. It's located in the heart of Boston, directly above the MBTA's North Station. Construction on TD Garden started in 1993. The arena opened its doors in 1995. It cost $160 million to build.