What happened to the days when chemistry, heart and loyalty were the cornerstone of the Celtics franchise? What happened to the days when a team built with the right pieces was more important than a bunch of superstars? Do you remember when we made fun of the Heat and the Knicks for collecting stars with no thought to the team as a whole? Having 4 all-star reserves is not enough? We need 2 all-star starters in addition to the Big 3? What would that be called, the Big 3 and the Bigger 2? What about being 12 deep and having a balanced bench? now just a bunch of rookies and vet mins with 5 stars are what the Celtics are all about? The moment we become one of "those teams" is the moment I stop being a Celtic fan. I'd rather watch Rondo and the right pieces play Celtics basketball than watch Chris Paul, Dwight Howard and Josh Smith play an all-star game.
We became one of those teams in the summer of 2007. Perhaps you missed the ESPN commercials of The Big Three, all those wins and the parade in Boston during June of 2008?
The average age of Lebron, Wade, Bosh, Stoudemire, and Anthony is a little over 27. The average age of the Big 3 in 2008 is a little less than 32. Ray, Paul and KG were well past their primes. How can you compare a 33 year old Ray Allen coming off knee surgery to a Wade? Or a 32 year old KG three four years past his career year to a Stoudemire or Bosh in their prime? Their longevity is merely a testament to their hard work and professionalism. While I'll take Pierce over Melo or Lebron because of his heart and clutch-ness, he can't really be compared talent-wise to a younger James or Melo. Oh yeah, we also complemented our big 3 with a play making point guard and a true center. Also a coach that demanded the respect of these players and was able to put them to ideal use. Comparing the Miami big 3 to Boston big 3 is like comparing a restored classic car to a souped up Ferrari.
An NBA players prime is considered, by a very large contingent of GMs, owners, pundits, fans, and players as being between the ages of 28 years of age to 31 or 32. So yes the Boston Big Three were still in their prime. It could be argued that the reason the Miami big three didn't win the championship is because they hadn't hit their prime yet.
Don't believe me? Take a look at where the best of the best had their best years, their MVP years and won their most championships. It was later in their careers, when they were older than 28 years old. That is a players prime because they have learned the game, learned their limitations, learned how best to play with others and learned best how to win.
Regarding the play making PG and defensive center, that's Monday morning argumentation. At the time Rondo was a second year player that few beyond Danny Ainge thought could do the job and Perk was a major project with major limitations and serious doubts about his ability to not foul out after 5 minutes of play. They were ENORMOUS question marks.
By the way, that coach that demanded respect, lost 18 straight games the year before, was almost fired, and was wildly called for being fired from everyone from the press and players on the team to people all over this blog that was calling for his head all the way into Game 4 of the 4th quarter and then suddenly those calls disappeared thereafter.
I love Rondo and Doc and believe me, many can attest to the fact that there were no bigger supporters of those guys before the championship went down. But they were both wildly considered major setbacks to a championship for that year during that year and not major assets.
So, no, Miami isn't a Ferrari and the Celtics weren't a classic car.
Next year Miami might be the Ferrari and the Celtics a classic car but the 2007-08 Celtics with the Big Three were three players that were a miraculously well oiled machine for their first together that got lucky with some young players and vets coming through and no major injuries. Miami was a machine that needed more oil and time to reach its potential and didn't have the luck of no injuries, young players coming through and every vet signing being a good one.
Boston in 2007-08 was a collection of stars where all the stars aligned and they melded into a juggernaut in one year. That is the exception to the rule not the rule itself. Miami in 2010-11, is a collection of stars which is more the rule than the exception. It will take more time and then they will reach their potential and win. You'll see.