This is all pretty much what I assumed happened, and it makes sense from all sides.
And I think Ray is absolutely right. When a team tries to trade you, and you know they are on the verge of a transition, why would you go back there, if you value the comfort of knowing where you are going to be for the next few years?
I never blamed him. He did was he felt was best. Good for him.
It's a pity reporters have no balls to ask him whether he was really offered a no-trade, and if he were, how it figured into his trade worries. Or perhaps whether he thought this team would have been too good to dismantle the team in case he stayed. You know, curious little stuff like that.
Thanks for 2008, and good riddance. Please stop talking.
I think it's kinda irrelevant, really.
By then, it was made painfully obvious to Ray that Danny Ainge could go in a million different directions in a matter of a week.
The damage had already been done, regardless of whether Ainge offered Ray a "no-trade clause" or free nachos for life at the Fours restaurant.
It was clear to Ray that it was time to move on.
Let's not forget KG also had a no-trade clause but he more or less got that Brooklyn deal forced on him as well so who's to say the same thing couldn't have happened to Ray
Also, furthermore IIRC, the Celts had decided to sign Jason Terry BEFORE Ray signed with Miami.
By then, Ray literally had NO reason to stay in Boston