Boston Celtics legend Paul Pierce believes Kevin Durant should leave the Phoenix Suns before the trade deadline and join a more dominant team in the Western Conference of the NBA. Kevin Durant, who will soon complete two years with the Suns,
Michael Jordan and LeBron James didn't make the cut for Kevin Durant's list of all-time best NBA 'pure hoopers.'
The defending NBA champions return home after four against on the road against Western Conference opponents for a matchup on Monday, Jan. 27 that sees the Houston Rockets going against the Boston Celtics at TD Garden.
Massachusetts native AJ Dybantsa revealed the advice he received from Boston Celtics stars Jaylen Brown and Jayson Tatum
Four-time NBA champion Stephen Curry knows all about the hardships of trying to repeat. The 10-time All-Star has appeared in six NBA Finals, including five cons
With the Phoenix Suns' focus remaining solely on trading for the Miami Heat's six-time All-Star Jimmy Butler, Hall-of-Fame forward and former Boston Celtics NBA Finals MVP Paul Pierce offered a differing opinion on who the franchise should target prior to the Feb. 6 trade deadline.
The Celtics defeated Dallas 122-107 on Saturday at the American Airlines Center. The win — which came against a Mavs team that was missing injured superstar Luka Doncic — capped a 3-1 Western Conference road trip for Boston and eased the sting of Thursday’s season-worst 21-point loss to the Los Angeles Lakers.
LeBron James blamed Stephen Curry, Draymond Green, and Kevin Durant during their Golden State Warriors dynasty for preventing him from having six championships.
There is still time before the NBA trade deadline for the Rockets to go all in on a move that could deliver them a title.
James Harden (24), Norman Powell (23) and Ivica Zubac (25) all scored 20+ points in the loss, snapping LA’s two-game win streak. Kawhi Leonard played a season-high 28 minutes and finished with 17 points, 5 rebounds, 2 assists, 2 steals and a block.
If a team is somewhere in the middle, it better have a clear direction because floundering around play-in territory is the NBA’s version of purgatory.