| What Carlos Arroyo brings to the Celtics | 03.08.11 at 4:10 pm ET |
WALTHAM — Before their open practice on Tuesday, Celtics coach Doc Rivers introduced their newest player, Carlos Arroyo, to his teammates. His new team proceeded to pummel him like baseball players do at home plate after someone hits a game-winning home run. With that bit of bonding out of the way, Arroyo began his crash-course in running the Celtics’ offense.
“He’s a point guard,” Rivers said emphasizing the last two words. “He’s been a point guard all of his life. Some of the stuff he’ll pick up pretty quickly.”
The Celtics have essentially played without a true backup point guard since Rajon Rondo took over the starter’s job in 2007. Eddie House and Nate Robinson — two shoot-first small guards — mainly filled that role, while the Celtics also tried Sam Cassell and Stephon Marbury as late-season experiments, with decidedly mixed results.
“It’s nice,” Rivers said of having a true backup point. “It’s just going to take him some time, but he knows how to run a team. That’s going to be great for us.”
Delonte West is supposed to be that player, but he has been unable to stay on the court; missing time with a broken wrist and a sprained ankle. Rivers said that West was definitely out Wednesday against the Clippers and called him “doubtful” for Friday’s Sixers game. The new hope is Sunday against the Bucks.
Rivers has been concerned about playing Rondo too many minutes. He has posted the following totals in his last six games: 43, 34, 42, 39, 42, 38. That 34 came in a relatively comfortable win over the Clippers. Rondo had to take himself out for a quick rest in the fourth quarter of their game against Golden State and looked a step slow on Sunday against the Bucks. While rookie Avery Bradley has stepped in admirably, the Celtics desperately needed a veteran hand at the position.
Into that spot steps Arroyo, who started 42 games for the Heat this season before being waived to make room for Mike Bibby. The 31-year-old Arroyo is the definition of a veteran journeyman, having played for six teams (the Celtics are his seventh) in his nine-year career.
His best season came back in 2003-04 when he started 71 games for the Jazz and averaged 12.6 points and five assists per game. Since then he’s bounced around between Orlando and Miami where he saw duty as a spot starter and backup. He was making 44 percent of his 3-pointers with the Heat, but he is a 34 percent shooter for his career.
“At this point in my career, everybody knows what I’m capable of,” Arroyo said. “Hopefully I can do a little bit more here and help the team. That’s what I came here for.”
Asked about what happened in Miami, Arroyo took the high road.
“I went from starting to not playing and I’ve got to respect that,” he said. “That’s coach [Erik Spoelstra's] decision. My job is to stay ready. I’m a true professional when it comes to that and I understand how the NBA works. I was just waiting for my time and hopefully my time is now.”
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March 9th, 2011 at 4:44 pm
I believe this is another good move for the Celtics, and one that should help them during the remainder of the regular season, and especially during the playoffs! I have always liked Carlos Arroyo, who sort of reminds me of what Jerry Sloan was like as an NBA player back in the 60s and 70s with the Bulls long before anyone knew who Michael Jordan was. Arroyo is one of those rare NBA players who looks to pass first before looking for his shot, which makes him an asset to a team full of scorers. This will also help Coach Doc Rivers rest Rajon Rondo–who has been playing lots of minutes this year–more and also run some different plays. Arroyo is fundamentally sound, tough, in shape, a team player, a fairly accurate 3-point shooter, and a veteran who has been in the NBA a long time. He’s not big or that quick, so he can be an individual defensive liability at times depending on the opponent, but that shortcoming won’t be as evident with the Celtics who play strong team defense. Arroyo is one of those savvy veterans who understands his role and all he cares about at this stage of his career is helping the Celtics win another NBA championship. Personally, I like the move! Welcome to Boston Carlos!
March 18th, 2011 at 2:37 am
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