Blog Home » Yes, I’m rooting for the Celtics. Blame Nia Long


Yes, I’m rooting for the Celtics. Blame Nia Long

By DERON SNYDER (as published by theGrio)

Some lines you never expect to cross. Some scenarios are too unlikely to imagine.

Yet, here I am, pulling for the Celtics.

Native New Yorkers with no ties to New England don’t root for Boston. That’s worse than rooting for Philadelphia. We don’t care nothing about those I-95 outposts, also-rans not nice enough to be named twice or have two football and two baseball teams. However, it’d be way easier to pull for Philly, like supporting your little play-cousin.

Boston? That’s like rooting for the racist uncle who married into the family.

Hating on Beantown is a given for most self-respecting Black folks. It’s the default setting for consciousness, unless you were born in that region and can’t activate the manual override. The mistreatment of Black athletes there is legendary, a flea market of racism. Even those who play for the home team are excused when they confuse Boston with Birmingham. Where else have we seen a flag used like a spear?

But for the first time and probably the last time, I’m rooting for a Boston team.

Several factors have aligned and the ancestors have consented. This is a one-off exemption, a free pass allowing us to stay Black yet go hard for the Celtics against Golden State in the NBA Finals. Old heads Steph Curry, Klay Thompson, and Draymond Green would be the easy pick any other season, but they can take a seat and four L’s this year.

What’s changed? What’s the most significant factor?

Nia Long.

I mean Ime Udoka.

He’s the Celtics’ first-year coach, a former player and longtime assistant who endured several interviews and heartbreaking rejections elsewhere before landing this coveted gig. His fascinating journey started in Portland, where he was born to a Nigerian husband and American wife, and includes founding an AAU team, loading FedEx Trucks, playing in 316 NBA games, and winning a chip in San Antonio as an assistant under Gregg Popovich.

All of that is great. But his boo makes him special.

We’ve been crushing on Long since she played Brandi in “Boyz in the Hood.” Her short hairdo as Lisa on “The Fresh Prince of Bel-Air” took our affection to another level. By the time she showed up as Jordan in “The Best Man,” we were beyond gone. Then we discovered Long is Udoka’s fiancé and baby’s mama, giving him instant credibility on these streets and in the Celtics’ locker room.

She’s also his personal cheerleader.

Long definitely put Udoka over the top, giving us permission to support the Celtics. We never got behind the previous Black coaches and we never gave the franchise credit in that regard. Putting a Black man in charge never erased Boston’s stained  image. As far as we’re concerned, previous Celtics coaches were like Samuel L. Jackson in “Django.”

Still, it’s a fact that several NBA teams have never employed a Black coach, while no team has hired more than Boston (6). Bill Russell became the league’s first Black coach in 1966, while still playing, and won two titles in that role. K.C. Jones won a pair of championships and Doc Rivers captured another. Tom Sanders and M.L. Carr will remain outliers if Udoka prevails against Golden State’s Steve Kerr.

But our reversal isn’t solely about the coach. These Celtics are much more likeable than previous versions. We’ve watched Jayson Tatum, Jalen Brown and Marcus Smart grow into a formidable trio over several years, and Al Horford has been a good dude for 15 seasons. Role players Reggie Williams, Grant Williams, and Derrick White are terrific glue guys. Payton Pritchard is Boston’s obligatory white boy who can ball.

Udoka and the Celtics overcame a rough start to fashion the greatest in-season turnaround in NBA history. It’s a heartwarming story, sufficient to break through the cold shoulders we historically reserve for Boston. Golden State has reached six finals and won three over the last eight season. Enough.

Hard to believe, but, yes, I’m rooting for Boston. It goes against every fiber in my body, opposes every instinct I’ve followed as a Black man and a sports fan since birth. Nothing about this feels natural, but it just feels right.

I blame Nia Long.

I mean Ime Udoka.

Join Our Mailing List
signup button
Contact Us
info@blackdoorventures.com

Follow US
twitter icon facebook icon youtube icon rss icon