Inside the 2008 Celtics’ group-text thread that is still active today

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When Kendrick Perkins emerged as a key member of the Boston Celtics team that won the 2008 NBA championship, he credited his growth to Doc Rivers, the coach he called his “father figure.”

That is, until his “father” shipped him to Oklahoma City in 2011.

“Yeah, I didn’t like that,” Perkins told ESPN this week, chuckling at the memory. “I never wanted to leave those guys. Me and Doc didn’t talk for a while after that.”

Real families tend to stick together through thick and thin, illness and injury, triumphs and disappointments. NBA “families” generally don’t exhibit that same resiliency; once the foundation starts to crack, everyone starts to go their own separate ways.

Yet, a small, tight-knit group from that 2008 Celtics team has kept the title connection alive. Twelve years after Boston captured banner No. 17, there remains a regular group-text chain of basketball banter (and other choice topics) between Kevin Garnett, Paul Pierce, Rajon Rondo, Tony Allen, Doc Rivers, and yes, Kendrick Perkins.

(For those feeling nostalgic, ESPN will re-air two games from the Celtics’ triumphant championship run Wednesday, with Game 4 of the 2008 Finals at 7 p.m. and the deciding Game 6 at 9:30 p.m.).

The text chain has survived trades, free-agent signings, reunions gone sour and reunions that never materialized. Consider that at the start of the 2014-15 season, the participants on the chain represented six NBA clubs: Washington (Pierce), Brooklyn (Garnett), Memphis (Allen), Boston (Rondo), Oklahoma City (Perkins) and the Los Angeles Clippers (Rivers). Through the years, the chain has endured hurt feelings and periods of silence between individuals who had beef with one another. But, as Pierce said recently, “There hasn’t been a grudge between any of us worth holding onto.”

“The guys won’t allow it,” Perkins added.

“It’s the closest group I’ve ever been around,” Rivers declared. “It’s amazing how often we all still reach out when something great happens or even when things don’t go very well.

“There was a real family element to that group that I’ll always cherish. It was very special, how protective they were of each other. It’s what every coach would want to have for their team.”

The text chain can be as simple as checking in about family members and milestones for each other’s kids, or as detailed as potential business opportunities to be considered. The most active texters are the retired players — Garnett, Pierce, Perkins and Allen — who regularly trade insults, and often get together in person in Los Angeles, where each of them has a home except Perkins, though he is regularly in town for his television duties. Garnett talks the most trash; when Perkins retired, he teased his friend on the chain, “What you doing now? Cooking at home wearing an apron?”

Rondo, now of the Los Angeles Lakers, is a spotty participant, but finds time to weigh in once a month, often with a simple query: “Everyone OK?” Rivers admittedly is “in and out” during the season as he tries to lead the Clippers to a championship, but he delights in reading the comments of his former players before bed.

Naturally, there have been some bumps in the road. When Boston dealt Perkins and Nate Robinson to the Oklahoma City Thunder for Jeff Green, Nenad Krstic and a future first-round pick in February 2011, Perkins and his teammates were shocked and disappointed. That transaction ultimately led to the origin of the chain.

Ten months after the deal, on Christmas Day, Rivers sent out the first text with a simple message: “Merry Christmas.” He and Perkins hadn’t talked much, but by then, Perkins had received a new deal from the Thunder and was enjoying his new home. Rivers’ text ignited a flurry of well-wishes and conversation topics among the players, who, with the exception of Perkins, were still wearing Celtics green.

“It was nice to hear from Doc,” Perkins said. “And by reaching out like that, it just got everybody talking all sorts of noise. As usual, KG was the loudest. He said to me on that first text chain, ‘Don’t you start getting too comfortable in Oklahoma, Perk. You know where your real family is.”’

It was Rivers, according to Perkins, who “basically raised me.” Rivers urged his center to find a way to stand out in his role as a complementary player. He also didn’t hesitate to confront a young Perkins when he let his nightlife interfere with his basketball responsibilities. “He’d come up to me and say, ‘Perk, you need to get your rest,”’ Perkins recalled. “He said, ‘I know where you were last night. You were out partying, and you were sluggish in practice today. Do you want a long career or a short career? Because if you keep doing what you did last night, it’s going to be really short.”’

Perkins was the first to depart Boston, but not the last. Allen left the Celtics as a free agent in the summer of 2010 after Boston made its defensive stalwart an underwhelming offer. He inked a three-year, $9.45 million contract with the Memphis Grizzlies and became the centerpiece of their defense. Boston felt his absence, because, as Pierce explained, “When he left, the heart of our defense went with him.”

Allen’s impact on that 2008 championship team, both personally and professionally, became much clearer in hindsight.

“His love for the guys, his affection for them, and his loyalty really stand out,” Rivers said. “He was really hurt over the offer we made to him in free agency. I don’t think he wanted to ever leave.

“But, one by one, we all did.”

In the summer of 2013, president of basketball operations Danny Ainge, determined not to hold onto his aging stars the way the legendary Red Auerbach had with Larry Bird, Kevin McHale and Robert Parish, agreed to deal Pierce and Garnett as the centerpieces of a blockbuster trade with Brooklyn that netted the Celtics a treasure trove of first-round picks. That same offseason, Rivers signed a three-year deal to become coach of the Clippers.



Source : ESPN