I don't see anything here that is unreasonable. Other than some Boston fans, that is 
We've been pretty much an "if all goes right" team for the past 3-4 years.
It's not unreasonable, but it's reasonable that Boston can beat the Heat. There's no fact in Kurt's argument. Read between the lines, friend.
Read between the lines? You mean, imagine stuff? Nah, I'm not much into looking for stuff that isn't there.
Not sure what "fact" you're referring to (that's an opinion article). And he's not saying Boston can't beat the Heat. Unlike some local fans who seem to assume it's pretty much a lock, and anyone who dares to say there are some preconditions to such victory is an idiot -- even more so if it's a national writer.
Boston is for me — improved but not good enough to beat a healthy Heat team straight up (they couldn’t beat a banged up Heat team last year).
Who else on Miami was bangned up besides Bosh? So the Celtics didn't lose players to season ending injuries? The Miami Heat was relatively healthy compared to Boston. I didn't know Bosh was on the same level as James, Wade, Garnett or Pierce.
Miami Heat Injuries:
Bosh
Boston Celtics Injuries:
Bradley
Wilcox
Green
O'Neal
Pierce(MCL Sprained)
Allen (Bone Spurs)
It's curious that you duly acknowledge every single injury on the Celtics, even for guys that actually suited up, but neglect to do so on the Heat -- Wade, for example, was playing hurt for most of the playoffs.
Also, Bosh is a more important player than any of the four guys that didn't play for us. We lucked into grabbing a couple of games while he was out, but after that it was pretty much a no-contest affair. Neither of the Bradley/Wilcox/Green/O'Neal bunch would have had such an impact on our side.
James, Wade, and Bosh are still in their prime though they're pushing late 20's to early 30's, so of course they're going to better than Celtics team with aging superstars pushing mid 30's. The fact is as u get older u lose your athleticism.
The Heat had a 2-0 lead heading to games 3 and 4. Bosh returned and the still Heat lost game 5. The Celtics had a 3-2 lead without Bradley, Green, Wilcox or JO. So my argument is sports writers, Celtics fans and Heat fans need to stop making excuses as to why the 2012 ECF was competitive.
It's a pretty easy answer: the ECF was competitive because (and while) Bosh was out. Here's to hoping we have sufficient depth in the front court to make sure Garnett doesn't run out of gas this season.