I think you and the writer of the article are reading way too much into Ray's words and body language, body language that you didn't even see but are taking for granted what happened on the words of a writer that already had a slanted view because of the article he was writing.
I'm not going to pretend to have been there. I wasn't. But I do believe there is a heck of a lot of reading between the lines going on here that might be dead wrong.
The Celtics offense went where it has always gone in the fourth. Do you expect it to be so different after 100 games of working so well?
How am I reading anything into anything? I posted a link and asked a question. No value judgment there at all.
Any insight on why our best player last night only got three shots in the fourth? By your comments in another thread, you pointed out that Doc was calling plays for KG down the stretch, despite him having a terrible night shooting. Might it have made sense to call some plays for Ray?
Also, over those 100 games where our fourth quarter offense "work[ed] so well", our team was the sixth worst team in the entire NBA in scoring in "clutch" situations (less than five minutes left, lead for either team of 5 points or less). Our fourth quarter offense has struggled all year long when the game has been tight.
http://82games.com/CTSORT11.HTM
No value judgement?


?
You are saying he was frustrated and instantly jumping to a conclusion that it is with his coach and what the coach asked his team to do late in the game.
That assumption sure sounds like a value judgement to me.
You don't think that maybe, just maybe, Ray could have been frustrated with the fact that the Celtics losss. Or the fact that he finally had a stellar game only to have it at the same time when so many others were bad?
Why does Ray's frustration have to be with Doc and his not getting his # called?
Should Doc have called more plays for Ray, absolutely, I was screaming for him to. But possibly going inside to KG was the right move, trying to be aggressive going in, so that if we missed a shot we might have a shot at going to the line. Calling Ray's plays there are a tough call because most of his plays revolve around the 3 pt line and if he misses you are looking at long rebounds, possible fast breaks and no possibilty of FTs. All rather disasterous things in a close game.
As for the bad clutch #s I imagine the sample size on that has to be tremendously small considering that the Celtics average score had a point differential of 10 point something points per game. That means there weren't a heck of a lot of times where with less than five minutes left, lead for either team of 5 points or less in the fourth quarter the Celtics needed to be clutch.
That does make sense right.