Cavaliers-Celtics Odds Paint Grim Picture for Cleveland in NBA playoffs

Cavaliers-Celtics Odds Paint Grim Picture for Cleveland in NBA playoffs

If the Cleveland Cavaliers were looking for bulletin board material heading into their Eastern Conference semifinal series against the Celtics, all they’d have to do is look at the odds. 

Recent NBA betting scandals notwithstanding, it's clear oddsmakers don't think the Cavs stand any chance against Boston. In fact, sportsbooks are giving the Cavs a better chance of getting swept than upsetting the top-ranked Celtics, and it’s really not even close. 

The Celtics are -3000 to win the series at FanDuel Sportsbook and -1200 to win at DraftKings. That means those sportsbooks are giving the Celtics an implied probability to win the series of 96.8% and 92.3% respectively. 

Even more telling, the Celtics are +140 at FanDuel and +170 at DraftKings to win the series 4-0. Those are the shortest odds of any correct series score. The Celtics winning 4-1 has the second shortest odds at +170 and +190, respectively. 

For context, even after winning Game 1, the Knicks are only -440 at FanDuel to win their Eastern Conference semifinal series. 

This is not exactly surprising.

The Celtics have been the betting favorites to win the NBA championship most of the season and remain so today. They are +100 to win the title at FanDuel and +115 at DraftKings. 

The Cavs are +10000 and +8000 at those books, respectively, the longest odds of any playoff team.

All of this paints a grim picture for the Cavs, even more so when you consider the Celtics are expected to be without their third-leading scorer from the regular season, Kristaps Porzingis, who is dealing with a calf injury and is not expected to play the entirety of the series. 

The Cavs are at full strength but struggled to beat a young Orlando Magic team in the first round of the playoffs. The series went seven games and the Magic had the Cavs on the ropes in the first half of Game 7 before Donovan Mitchell took over and willed Cleveland into the second round. 

Led by Jayson Tatum and Jaylen Brown, the Celtics easily dispatched the Miami Heat in five games in the first round, though the Heat were without Jimmy Butler.

It’s clear oddsmakers believe in the duo of Tatum and Brown, not only against the Cavs, but against anyone in the league. The Cavs could look at that as an insult and use it as motivation. It won’t matter to oddsmakers though. It seems their belief is near certainty, at least in this round.

Game odds refresh periodically and are subject to change.

If you or someone you know has a gambling problem and wants help, call 1-800-GAMBLER.

NBA Playoff Schedule: Full Rundown for Conference Semifinals

NBA Playoff Schedule: Full Rundown for Conference Semifinals

The first round of the 2024 NBA postseason had some great matchups, and things will only get better from here on out. Saturday marked the start of the second round of the playoffs, when true contenders battle against one another in an effort to reach the final four of their conference. Iron sharpens iron, after all, and this year's slate of Round 2 contests look pretty great across the board.

Fewer games means fewer overlapping broadcast times, too. After two weeks with up to three NBA games on every night, we're more or less back to the standard of an Eastern Conference tip-off around 7 p.m. ET and a Western Conference tip-off around 10 p.m. ET.

For your viewing habit purposes, here is the full schedule for the second round of the 2024 NBA playoffs, organized by series.

NBA Playoff Schedule for Second Round

Eastern Conference

(1) Boston Celtics v. (4) Cleveland Cavaliers

• Game 1: Cavaliers vs. Celtics, Tuesday, May 7 (7 p.m. ET, TNT)
• Game 2: Cavaliers vs. Celtics, Thursday, May 9 (7 p.m. ET, ESPN)
• Game 3: Celtics vs. Cavaliers, Saturday, May 11 (8:30 p.m. ET, ABC)
• Game 4: Celtics vs. Cavaliers, Monday, May 13 (7 p.m. ET, TNT)
• Game 5 (if necessary): Cavaliers vs. Celtics, Wednesday, May 15 (TBD)
• Game 6 (if necessary): Celtics vs. Cavaliers, Friday, May 17 (TBD)
• Game 7 (if necessary): Cavaliers vs. Celtics, Sunday, May 19 (TBD)

(2) New York Knicks v. (3) Indiana Pacers

• Game 1: Pacers vs. Knicks, Monday, May 6 (7:30 p.m. ET, TNT)
• Game 2: Pacers vs. Knicks, Wednesday, May 8 (8 p.m. ET, TNT)
• Game 3: Knicks vs. Pacers, Friday, May 10 (7 p.m. ET, ESPN)
• Game 4: Knicks vs. Pacers, Sunday, May 12 (3:30 p.m. ET, ABC)
• Game 5 (if necessary): Pacers vs. Knicks, Tuesday, May 14 (TBD)
• Game 6 (if necessary): Knicks vs. Pacers, Friday, May 17 (TBD)
• Game 7 (if necessary): Pacers vs. Knicks, Sunday, May 19 (TBD)

Western Conference

(1) Oklahoma City Thunder v. (5) Dallas Mavericks

• Game 1: Mavericks vs. Thunder, Tuesday, May 7 (9:30 p.m. ET, TNT)
• Game 2: Mavericks vs. Thunder, Thursday, May 9 (9:30 p.m. ET, ESPN)
• Game 3: Thunder vs. Mavericks, Saturday, May 11 (3:30 p.m. ET, ABC)
• Game 4: Thunder vs. Mavericks, Monday, May 13 (9:30 p.m. ET, TNT)
• Game 5 (if necessary): Mavericks vs. Thunder, Wednesday, May 15 (TBD)
• Game 6 (if necessary): Thunder vs. Mavericks, Saturday, May 18 (8:30 p.m. ET)
• Game 7 (if necessary): Mavericks vs. Thunder, Monday, May 20 (8:30 p.m. ET)

(2) Denver Nuggets v. (3) Minnesota Timberwolves

• Game 2: Timberwolves vs. Nuggets, Monday, May 6 (10 p.m. ET, TNT)
• Game 3: Nuggets vs. Timberwolves, Friday, May 10 (9:30 p.m. ET, ESPN)
• Game 4: Nuggets vs. Timberwolves, Sunday, May 12 (8 p.m. ET, TNT)
• Game 5 (if necessary): Timberwolves vs. Nuggets, Tuesday, May 14 (TBD)
• Game 6 (if necessary): Nuggets vs. Timberwolves, Thursday, May 16 (8:30 p.m. ET)
• Game 7 (if necessary): Timberwolves vs. Nuggets, Sunday, May 19 (TBD)

Key Dates for the 2024 NBA Playoffs

Aside from the all the above, the NBA postseason generally has a few key dates.

The first have already passed in the form of the play-in tournament, as well as the start of the first round. The Nuggets and Timberwolves kicked off the second round on Saturday, May 4. Below are several other key dates to look forward to.

• Conference Finals start dates: May 19-22, depending on the length of the second-round series.
NBA Finals start date: Thursday, June 6 will be Game 1 of the 2024 NBA Finals. Sunday, June 9 will be Game 2. Game 3 will take place on Wednesday, June 12. Friday, June 14 will be Game 4.

First Round Results

Below are the full results for the first round of this year's postseason.

Eastern Conference

(1) Boston Celtics def. (8) Miami Heat in 5 games

(2) New York Knicks def. (7) Philadelphia 76ers in 6 games

(4) Cleveland Cavaliers def. (5) Orlando Magic in 7 games

(6) Indiana Pacers def. (3) Milwaukee Bucks in 6 games

Western Conference

(1) Oklahoma City Thunder def. (8) New Orleans Pelicans in 4 games

(2) Denver Nuggets def. (7) Los Angeles Lakers in 5 games

(3) Minnesota Timberwolves def. (6) Phoenix Suns in 4 games

(5) Dallas Mavericks def. (4) Los Angeles Clippers in 6 games

And that's everything you need to know about the second round of the 2024 NBA playoffs. Enjoy watching!

Little-Used Celtics Player Reacts to Cavaliers Fans Chanting 'We Want Boston'

Little-Used Celtics Player Reacts to Cavaliers Fans Chanting ‘We Want Boston’

The Cleveland Cavaliers overcame a 10-point halftime deficit to blow the doors off the Orlando Magic on Sunday in Game 7 of their first round NBA playoffs series, which will earn them a date with the top-seeded Boston Celtics in round two. Jubiliant fans at Rocket Mortgage Fieldhouse spent the final minutes chanting "we want Boston" because that's just what fans do and they are entirely right to prefer the season keep going rather than end. Heck, it's not even that interesting of an event, even though the Celtics are heavy favorites to advance to the Eastern Conference Finals.

But Boston reserve forward Oshae Brisset found the development intriguing enough to post about, saying "hear the chants" with one of those eye-covering emojis available on X, formerly Twitter. Then he deleted it, which doesn't do much good after enough people see it.

Brisset played six minutes in the Celtics' opening round victory over the Miami Heat. He's not expected to be a major factor in the battle against Cleveland either. Or perhaps that's changed after a routine chant awakened a sleeping giant.

There are no real rules for this but it does seem like most people are already operating on the sensible plane when it comes to in-arena proclamations about wanting to play whatever team is next on the schedule. Which is that it's entirely fine. There's nothing wrong with it at all and no one is going to be the first person to, in that moment, start a "we're probably going to lose chant" because they might need a ride home from their buddy after the final buzzer. Pretty much every human who made it public that they "wanted Bama" lived to regret it. It's just something you say.

Jimmy Butler Utters Confident Statement About Heat's Playoff Fate

Jimmy Butler Utters Confident Statement About Heat’s Playoff Fate

The Miami Heat were bounced from the NBA playoffs in five games by the Boston Celtics, but star Jimmy Butler believes things would have been different if he was healthy.

Butler suffered a sprained MCL during the play-in tournament against the Philadelphia 76ers. He missed all five games against the Celtics.

"If I was playing, Boston would be at home," Butler recently said in an interview with Rock the Bells. "New York would d--- sure be f--king at home."

The Celtics cruised to the Eastern Conference's best record (64–18) this season, but Butler's confidence likely is coming from the rivals' recent playoff history. The Heat got the better of Boston in both the 2020 and '23 conference finals.

Butler was named the 2023 Eastern Conference finals MVP after tallying 24.2 points, 7.7 rebounds and 6.2 assists per game against the Celtics.

Butler ended his quick interview with Rock the Bells by addressing New York Knicks coach Tom Thibodeau, who he played for with the Chicago Bulls from 2011 to '15 and again with the Minnesota Timberwolves from 2017 to '19.

Thibodeau and the Knicks are set to face the Indiana Pacers in the Eastern Conference semifinals after defeating the Philadelphia 76ers in six games.

"I love Thibs, but I don't want him to win," Butler said. "Thibs, I love you baby, but I want to beat you to a pulp. It's like a one-sided relationship. You're in love with me. I love you, but I'm not in love with you."

Butler, 34, will be paid over $48 million by the Heat next season. He has a $52.4 million player option on his contract for the 2025-26 campaign.

Celtics' Payton Pritchard Reveals Why He Wears Sabrina Ionescu's Signature Shoes

Celtics’ Payton Pritchard Reveals Why He Wears Sabrina Ionescu’s Signature Shoes

Payton Pritchard and the Boston Celtics are currently awaiting the end of the Orlando Magic - Cleveland Cavaliers series to learn their opponent for the upcoming Eastern Conference semifinal series.

While everyone waits for the unofficial NBA TV series to wrap up on national television sometime this weekend, the local press gets to ask whatever questions they don't have time for when there are actual games to talk about, which is probably why someone finally asked Pritchard about his sneakers.

Prtichard wears Sabrina Ionescu's signature Nike shoes. Pritchard and Ionescu both went to Oregon as freshmen in 2016 and played all four years in Eugene before turning pro.

Ionescu was selected with the first pick of the 2020 WNBA draft, while Pritchard was taken 26th by the Celtics. While Pritchard doesn't have his own signature shoe, at least he found a comfortable one with his friend's name on it.

Pritchard is not the only NBA player rocking the Sabrina's. During All-Star Weekend, Dallas Mavericks center Dereck Lively II revealed that he had an exciting exchange with Ionescu about her shoes. She thanked him for wearing them while he thanked her for making them so comfortable.

That's some solid word-of-mouth. Not only does Ionescu have the skill and profile to be featured during NBA All-Star Saturday, but she also has got the footwear to back it up.

And if she has it her way, more WNBA players will get signature shoes. If they're half as comfortable as hers apparently are, that's a good thing for all basketball players.

Jayson Tatum Had Deep Message About Toughness After Celtics Eliminated Heat

Jayson Tatum Had Deep Message About Toughness After Celtics Eliminated Heat

After ending the Miami Heat's season with a 118-84 victory in Game 5 at TD Garden on Wednesday night, the Boston Celtics are on to the second round where they'll face the winner of the first round series between the Cleveland Cavaliers and Orlando Magic.

The ultimate outcome of Boston moving on to the second round past the shorthanded Heat was expected, but after the Celtics lost Game 2 of the series in stunning fashion, critics bashed the toughness of this Celtics' core, led by stars Jayson Tatum and Jaylen Brown.

Why did the Celtics lose to the Golden State Warriors in the 2022 NBA Finals? Fans and media critics pointed to Boston's lack of toughness.

Why did the Celtics lose to the Miami Heat in seven games in the 2023 Eastern Conference Finals? Fans and media critics once again pointed to Boston's lack of toughness.

So with fans and media questioning Boston's toughness earlier in the series, did it get to Tatum at all? Don't count on it.

"No, I think [in] the world we live in, it's gotta be something wrong with every team," Tatum told the media Wednesday night. "That's what they like to say. You can see how talented we are. I think it's lazy, or easy, to say that teams can out-tough us, right? I never understood that. What's the definition of tough? Having louder guys on your team? That s--- don't make you tough. Everybody has their own definition of what toughness is. It's playing the right way, showing up every day to do your job without complaining. I think that's being tough."

Whether Tatum likes it or not, the Celtics have had their fair share of head-scratching losses with their young superstar core over the past few postseasons, and in many cases, those losses have kept Boston from reaching its ultimate goal of winning an NBA championship.

The Celtics are hoping to break that trend with a title later this summer.

Celtics Broadcaster Mike Gorman Signs Off: ‘One Thing I Remember ... the Fans’

Celtics Broadcaster Mike Gorman Signs Off: ‘One Thing I Remember … the Fans’

Mike Gorman’s career nearly ended in a parking lot. It was in the mid-1970s and Gorman, fresh off a five-year stint in the U.S. Navy, was still trying to figure out a post-military future. He loved sports and had an itch for broadcasting, so one day he decided to take a chance and pop into the offices of WBZ, a Boston-area radio affiliate, and try to speak to Gil Santos, then a legendary local play-by-play man. If Santos wouldn’t meet with him, his next stop was Weymouth (Mass.) High School, where a friend said he could get him a part-time gig as a substitute teacher. 

When Gorman arrived, he was stopped at the security gate. He was asked by the guard if he had an appointment. He didn’t. He was asked if he had a résumé or a tape to leave for Santos. He didn’t. Puzzled, the guard suggested Gorman get some experience and come back. 

When the guard opened the gate for Gorman to turn his car around, he noticed a hat in the backseat. Stitched onto the front was VP-44, the naval squadron Gorman flew with. The guard, it turned out, used to fly with VP-8. After a few minutes chatting about planes, the guard called Santos. After hearing Gorman’s story, Santos agreed to meet with him. The two talked for 90 minutes. When they were finished, Santos called a small regional radio station and set Gorman up with a job as a public affairs director. 

“That was it,” says Gorman. “That’s how it all started.” 

Nearly 50 years later, including the last 43 as the indelible voice of the Boston Celtics, Gorman is at the end. He will be on the mic Wednesday, calling Game 5 between the Celtics and Miami Heat. If Boston wins, it will be his last game (local networks lose broadcasting rights after the first round of the playoffs). Recently, Gorman sat down with Sports Illustrated to discuss his signature style, how he knew it was time to quit and some of the highlights of a celebrated career. 

SI: Forty-three years. How did you know it was time?

Mike Gorman: “It’s just that I felt like I was losing touch with the game. Not just the Celtics, but the entire game. And I had spent close to 40-odd years now, having my life dictated by in July when the Celtics schedule would come out. And then the college schedule and the Big East schedule in those days when I was doing about six or seven games a week, it seemed. It just struck me one day when I was scraping the snow off my car. It’s about 3:30 in the morning, we’re in Hanscom Air Force Base. It’s snowing like a bandit. And I’m getting in the car. I’m saying to myself, ‘Michael, you’re 70 years old. What are you doing here? What are you doing?’

“And that was probably the moment that hit me more than anything else. I would continue on tomorrow if they were telling me I could just do the home games forever. That’s not a problem. That’s fun actually. Walk up, show, do the game, game’s over, you leave. That’s the ideal. But that package wasn’t quite available. I understand why it shouldn’t be. And I have other things I want to do. I’ve spent my whole life doing basketball. It’s going to be nice to, after the Final Four goes by and the NBA playoffs are done, to know that that’s done, too. That now when I wake up in the morning, I’ll go do what I want to do, not what the day tells me I should do or I have to do.”

SI: Did just doing home games extend your career? 

MG: “No question it did. And it would be nice if these guys [go on] to win a championship now in my last year and give that to me, going out. I’m sure it’s high on their priority list (laughs). But yeah, it kind of all came together in that parking lot. I swear, I’m not kidding. It’s just that I’m saying myself, ‘Why am I doing this? Why am I putting myself through this?’ It was one of those nights I remember specifically where it’s snowing like a bandit. We played in Detroit or someplace like that. We’re flying home so we could play some other team that wasn’t very good. And I’m saying to myself, ‘Come on, Mike. You love to do the Celts against the Knicks, Celts against the Lakers, Celts against anybody. You’re not really wanting to do the Celts against the Pistons anymore.’ ”

SI: It’s been four years since your longtime broadcast partner, Tommy Heinsohn passed away. How did that affect you?

MG: “There’s no lie, every day I think of him at least once about either what he would do in a certain situation. What would Tommy do? I should have a button like that that says that.

“It did change my style because a good part of my time that I spent with him, Tommy was a bit of an unguided missile on the air, so I had to keep it straight. So I would try to bring him back to reality. I know every time that he would make some really particularly outrageous or perhaps even offensive statement to somebody, I would count to 10 in my head without saying a word, because I was going to make it hard for them to match my quote with anything I might say up against what Tommy just said. And he would look at me like, ‘Well, aren’t you going to back me up on that one?’ I’d be like, ‘No, that’s, no, I’m not.’ But that was OK with him. He didn’t mind. It didn’t affect our friendship. Didn’t affect our relationship. 

“And Scal [Brian Scalabrine] has been great. He wants the job. He’s got a great enthusiasm for the job. Sometimes he gets a little lost in the trees. I got to feel like I got to pull him out when he starts talking the lingo of the assistant coaches that most of us, even me, don’t understand. But Scal’s going to be just fine. He’s funny. He’s a nice guy. As I said, he wants the job and unlike a lot of people I have worked with, he will accept criticism for what it is, and he will try to improve if he believes that’s an area of weakness. And not that many guys do that, especially guys who are ex-athletes, they don’t want to be told anything.”

SI: If you were going to write a book … 

MG: “I am writing one.”

SI: OK, so what will be the best story?

MG: “Well I want to write a fiction book. Or a screenplay. I think then I can really say what I want to say about a lot of people, but not put their real names down there. I have certainly had my run-ins with my share of characters in 40-odd years. So I just know about changing the name or change the vowel or two here. I can make them what I want them to be or expose them for what they were. And if they can find out who they are by guessing in the book, fine. But that’s my goal is to write a nonfiction novel or write a screenplay, one of the two.”

SI: Let me rephrase, then: What would your favorite broadcasting memory be? 

MG: “It’s just in a court sense, when Isiah [Thomas] threw the ball away and [Larry] Bird had the deflection to DJ and the layup and that had taken The Garden from dead silence right before that moment to blowing the roof off. And we had those games. That was before the NBA sold its soul to ESPN and all the other television networks out there and left us, as the locals, out of the picture as soon as the first round of the playoffs were done. And I’ve never really gotten over that, and I’ll never forgive the NBA for that. And I understand owners won’t need the money, I guess, but to do 82 games and then maybe do three or four in that first round and then see you later. 

“Let the network pick up the game, that’s fine. But I think the local broadcasters should at least be allowed to work. It’s a very sophisticated world we live in and they could provide a feed of me and Tommy, for instance, that just went out there. If you didn’t like it, you could take Mike Breen and whoever else he’s working with that particular week. But yeah, I just felt so when people say, ‘What’s your favorite game? What’s the biggest moment?’ In the first round, I guess, there are no big moments in the first round. You just got to survive to move on. So that hurts most of all.”

SI: I completely agree. 

MG: “I’ll remember all the people I worked with. I’ll remember all the guys around The Garden. I’ll remember Jack, I’ll remember Jimmy, I’ll remember all those guys. And I will, it’ll be those people who stick out in my mind, not necessarily the players. Paul Pierce will live forever in my head because I just love Paul. He’s such a good guy. I saw [Rajon] Rondo in the stands [recently], that started all sorts of rumors flying around. But yeah, again, if you ask me one thing I remember, it may not be the answer that you’re looking for, but it’s just the fans, it’s the people that I’ll think of most. And I’ll miss that most. It’s fun to walk through The Garden, hear people call your name. And they’re not looking for anything, they just come on, a wave and say hi and say thanks.

“If I could do one thing over, I probably would’ve waited until maybe the first of the year to announce I wasn’t going to come back because what it’s done, it’s afforded everyone a task to come say goodbye, which is nice. But I feel like I’m at my own wake. I just sit there and people come by, they tap you [on] the shoulder. Don’t care if I’m on the air or anything else, they just, ‘Just came by to say hi, Mike. Thank you very much. Yeah, thank you.’ So yeah, those are the folks I remember.”

SI: You are a phenomenal play-by-play man. But I’ve always thought one of your strengths is knowing when to let the moment breathe a little. Is that intentional? 

MG: “Without question. I try to tell anybody I work with, and Tommy was a firm believer in this, too, is pretend there’s a third person in the box with you, whether there is or not, and you have to leave him time to talk. And if you do that, then you’ll get a nice blend of what the play-by-play guy has to say, what the analyst has to say and what the fans are saying, what the crowd noise is like. I mean, at big moments, I hear guys all the time trying to impose their voice over big moments in the game and let the big moment in the game happen.

“You can do that later, when you’re reviewing it. But let the game breathe. Let people hear what it’s like to be in that seat at The Garden when that layup is hit at the buzzer. Don’t be so worried about what your call is and does your call make ESPN SportsCenter that night. I would say, it’s less is better. I’ll take that as a compliment, not as a knock.”

SI: It absolutely is. 

MG: “So many people come to The Garden and that’s no easy night. If you have two kids, you go to The Garden and you get all the paraphernalia, they get in the seats and everything else, you’re down a nickel before they throw the ball up. So that’s tough. So at least I try to give them a chance if they’re at home and not in The Garden, to get the feeling for what it’s like to be in the crowd and not to have Mike Gorman’s voice running all over the thing.”

SI: Was broadcasting always an ambition?

MG: “In the Navy, everybody has a collateral job when you’re in the squadron. And mine was the public affairs announcer. And we used to have this AOM, which is an All Officers Meeting, which in the case of a squadron up in Maine as we were, about 50 or 60 guys. And so we used to have these AOMs and I was in charge of all the AOMs. So I used to stand up in front of 60 guys with a microphone and tell them what was going on. And I found that I felt very comfortable doing that. I had seen guys who weren’t comfortable doing it. It was hard to watch them. They’d read it. They couldn’t handle being in front of a crowd. I started interjecting jokes in it and started doing a little bit of standup before the thing began, which is always my dream that I wanted to do standup.

“There’s not a lot of big demand out there right now for 77-year-old guys who do standup. So I’ll get that in the next lifetime, I guess. But yeah, so I felt comfortable with a microphone, and there was a kid who was one in the squadron and he had worked at a radio station before he came into the military. And he kept telling me, he said, ‘You’re pretty much a natural at doing this. You should take advantage of this when we get out. If you’re going to stay in, doesn’t matter, but if you’re going to get out, this is probably the best skill I seen you have.’ So that was my impetus to try to look for jobs in radio. But then I realized once I get out, you don’t just walk into WBZ in Boston unless you get lucky. I mean if that baseball cap is not sitting in the backseat, I tell you, I’m probably the basketball coach at Dorchester High School.”

SI: You mentioned your affection for Paul Pierce. Why him?

MG: “It was the timing more than anything else. And I feel like, with him, I watched him grow. And I have a little bit of that watching Jayson Tatum now and watching Jaylen Brown now. But with Paul, Paul had many more hardships off the court that he had to deal with. And how he dealt with them and how he came back from them, I just admired. And we had a little thing. People used to say, ‘Boy, it’s great the relationship you have with Paul Pierce,’ because every time, second time through the layup line, Paul would come and give me a hug no matter where I was. People said that’s great. Well, what was happening was Paul would give me the hug and say, ‘Who we got tonight [officiating the game]?’ And I’d say, ‘It’s Chris, Danny’s the Black guy, and Joe is the white guy. He’s kind of bald.’ And then Paul would go through around the layup line, I’d see him go, ‘Hey, Danny, how are you tonight, Paul? What’s happening over there?’ And I swear it used to buy him one or two whistles every game at least.”

SI: So a lot more time with family now, right? You’re a grandfather now. 

MG: “Without question. Again, how many holidays did I have to work? You always seem to be working and traveling on Christmas day. But to be out there on Christmas day and to be traveling on Easter to be traveling during stretches like that, you miss a lot. And once you miss it, it’s gone. You can’t say, ‘OK, now I’ll have that second year of life back.’ I want to watch that happen. So to live all this through my granddaughter all over again and to be Pap Pap, that’s cool. I like that.” 

Celtics' Kristaps Porzingis Expected to Miss Several Games With Soleus Injury

Celtics’ Kristaps Porzingis Expected to Miss Several Games With Soleus Injury

Boston Celtics star Kristaps Porzingis exited Monday's Game 4 against the Miami Heat before halftime after sustaining a non-contact calf injury. It could be a little while before he's back in action for the Celtics.

According to ESPN's Adrian Wojnarowski, Porzingis is expected to miss several games with a right soleus strain. The team announced Tuesday that the 28-year-old would miss Game 5 against the Heat, and it seems that he'll be unavailable to start the second round, should Boston advance.

A win in Game 5 on Wednesday would secure the Celtics a spot in the Eastern Conference semifinals, where a matchup against the Orlando Magic or Cleveland Cavaliers would await. It's not clear if Porzingis would be able to return in time for that series.

Porzingis's injury is a similar one to the ailment which has kept Milwaukee Bucks star Giannis Antetokounmpo out of commission thus far into the playoffs. Antetokounmpo has not played since April 9, when he sustained the injury in a regular-season game against Boston.

Porzingis played 14 minutes on Monday before exiting with the calf injury. He logged seven points and three rebounds before departing. He's averaging 12.3 points, 5.0 rebounds and 1.5 blocks per game in the first round against Miami, including his numbers from Game 4.