US – Saturday, November 7
Jeff Howe's Celtics blog
Jeff Howe is an award-winning sportswriter who is in his second season as the lead writer on the Celtics beat for the Boston Metro.  
 
One for the thumb
Derek Jeter has been out of place since his last World Series title. The captain’s been on Jessica Biel’s arm, starred in countless Gillette commercials and had a front-row seat to Alex Rodriguez’s PED news conference.
 
Fans prepped for Yankees’ Canyon parade
Like many New Yorkers, Nancy Zupo, 45, of Astoria, wouldn’t miss Friday’s ticker tape parade for anything.  She’s taking her boys out of school. Her college-age nephews are coming in from out-of-town to celebrate.
 
Fans hit stores after Series win
Yankees fans made their way into Modell’s in Astoria on Thursday to purchase merchandise in celebration of the Bronx Bombers’ championship.  The doors opened at 5 a.m. By 9:30 things were going full throttle, with Yankees caps sold out and store personnel, including the manager, ringing at all registers.
 
Series title was easy, now comes the hard part
The smile plastered on Alex Rodriguez’s face may stay permanent until next April, but for some aging Yankees, it’s time to turn their game faces back on.
 
Failure to communicate
The Giants haven’t been on the same page defensively for three weeks. That goes for on and off the field.
 
Four downs with the Jets
The dirt on Sanchez
T
Stay grounded
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Getting defensive
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Average at best
 
Published 22:38, May the 4th, 2008
 

KG gets it done

NBA. Kevin Garnett has always been an easy target.

He’s a surefire Hall of Famer and has the league’s highest salary, commercial appeal and a number of nicknames. But as the best player on an endless amount of bad teams, it took him nine years to advance past the first round of the playoffs, and this will be just his second career trip to a conference semifinal.

Garnett was a postseason choke artist, his critics exclaimed, and those echoes were faintly heard through the Garden hallways over the last week. Even though he had averaged 21.5 points, 8.5 rebounds and 4.0 assists through the series’ first six games, the Celtics were losing, and some of the blame was put on Garnett’s shoulders.

Sure, he wasn’t always aggressive, had been unselfish to a fault and failed to take over at times when the Celtics were struggling at Atlanta’s Philips Arena despite averaging 24.7 points in three road losses.

But in the series’ decisive game yesterday, Garnett was unconscious, attacking the rim and scoring 18 points on 9-of-13 shooting while grabbing 11 rebounds, including four on the offensive end, in 27 minutes of work.

This wasn’t KG 2.0. Rather, it was simply a stronger performance from a man who wouldn’t be heading home after the first round for a seventh time.

“Through adversity, you have to continue to keep your head up, stay positive and lead by example,” Garnett said.

“That’s big when you’re trying to accomplish what we’re trying to do this year.”
   

 
 
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