No more holiday for C’s

The Big Story – Sayonara, Celtics Dynasty: It took several years to become an annual championship-contending team and only two days to dismantle it. It happened when Brad Stevens traded Jrue Holiday to Portland for a better scorer who is weaker in every other way except being 10 years younger. Followed up a day later by incredibly only getting back bull-in-a-china shop clunker George Niang for Kristaps Porzingis in a deal between the C’s, Nets and Hawks. Just George Niang for KP? ARE YOU KIDDING ME?!

Sports 101: Name the only pitcher to win 200 games, an MVP, a Cy Young and 3 World Series titles.

News Item – Red Sox Update: (1) The hitting went south in a six-game losing streak since the Raffy Devers trade. (2) They ended that streak by scoring one less run in a 15-1 win over Toronto than they scored during the entire losing streak. (3) Roman Anthony had his first big game then when he was 3-6 with two doubles and two runs scored. (4) At 41-44 the guessing game has begun as to whether they’ll be sellers or buyers at the trade deadline. (5)And the rumors say Jarren Duran is the most likely to go first.

News Item – NBA Year Begins: (1) The biggest trades to kick it off were Kevin Durant to upstart Houston, and the aforementioned Celtic moves. (2) No surprise to start the draft, as the pride of Newport, Maine, Cooper Flagg went first overall to Dallas. (3) Rumors have Lob it to Rob Williams headed to L.A. to fix their hole at center and be the perfect lob threat for Luka Doncic. (4) The genius move to fire their coach by the Knicks drones on with them being down to their ninth or 10th choice.

News Item – Shake Up in ESPN Booth: After its “if it ain’t broke don’t fix it” move of firing Mark Jackson and Jeff Van Gundy two years ago, rumor is a change is coming to its NBA booth again. It has Mike Breen again being the only survivor.

The Numbers:

2.5 –millions spent to buy a signed 1986-87 Michael Jordan “rookie” card in California.

101.7 – miles per hour hit on the radar by Shohei Ohtani in his third start after missing last year entirely due to arm surgery.

Of the Week Awards

Thumbs Down – Dave Parker: Hearing that 1970s/80s Pirates star Dave Parker had passed at 74 was sad enough. But after waiting years he was less than a month from being enshrined into Cooperstown later this month to make it worse. RIP big fella.

Stat of the Week – 11 Walks: The hard to believe free passes the Red Sox issued in a nine-inning 9-5 loss to the Angels when Walker Buehler gave up five runs on just three hits and Garrett Whitlock four more on just two hits because they walked seven and three guys respectively.

Media Fools of the Week – Kendrick Perkins and Steven A. Blowhard: It was pretty rich to hear a five-point-a-game scorer, who could barely make a lay-up and got outplayed by Andrew Bynum in the 2010 Finals, say that a guy who’d already won three playoff games and sent another into OT buzzer-beating shots like Tyrese Haliburton had this spring alone was playing “scared to death.” Ditto for the Division II back-up from Queens turned bloviator, who had 15 measly points on 5 of 23 shooting in his college career at Winston-Salem (according to enemy/provocateur Jason Whitlock), saying “he was glad TH was injured because it at least gave an explanation for his poor performance” as he struggled to play with a bad calf that got worse because he played.

Clueless big-mouths who prove the way to get ahead on ESPN is to say it loudly regardless of whether it makes sense or not.

Random Thoughts:

ESPN’s Jay Bilas loves college basketball and good for him, but his work on their draft show making everyone out to be the next Michael Jordan is a journalistic embarrassment and insulting to those who know that no more than five in a regular year and 10 in a great year will ever leave their mark on the NBA.

Sports 101 Answer: The ’70s and ’80s A’s/Giants lefty Vida Blue is the only one to check 200 wins, MVP & Cy and three World Series won boxes.

Final Thought – Now What, Brad? While the Niang return for KP is insulting to Celtic Nation, Stevens did it for greater flexibility in building his roster, something severely restricted by being above the luxury tax line from a basic agreement that’s anti-dynasty in the name of league-wide parity.However, I am interested in seeing how Stevens goes about reshaping a team to still be an annual contender going forward without Jayson Tatum next year and having the pile of first-round picks Oak City has stockpiled. A tall task.

Email Dave Long at dlong@hippopress.com.

News & Notes 25/07/03

$14 more

In an email from June 20, Eversource announced that it filed adjustments to the Default Service supply rate and Regulatory Reconciliation Adjustment, “which are under review with the New Hampshire Public Utilities Commission (PUC) and will take effect Aug. 1.” If the adjustments are approved, “a typical residential customer on Default Service using 600kWh per month will have a total bill increase of approximately $14, or 10 percent,” the email said. Compare residential suppliers at energy.nh.gov.

Gee-milks

A dozen libraries in the GMILCS — Greater Manchester Integrated Library Cooperative System — are participating in this summer’s GMILCS Library Hop, which runs through Aug. 31, according to an explanation on the Bedford Public Library’s website. There are 14 libraries in the system; the participating libraries are Amherst Town Library, Bedford Public Library, Derry Public Library, Goffstown Public Library, Hooksett Public Library, Kelley Library in Salem, Leach Library in Londonderry, Manchester City Library, Merrimack Public Library, Nesmith Library in Windham, Rodgers Memorial Library in Hudson and Wadleigh Memorial Library in Milford, the website said. Visit each library, complete a specific challenge and earn prizes, the website said. Pick up a game board at one of the participating libraries; complete all the challenges to be entered into a raffle for a Bookery Manchester gift card, the website said. Looking for an idea for books to check out at those libraries? See our June 26 cover story, “Summer Reads,” for book recommendations from libraries and other local book experts. Find the issue in our digital library at hippopress.com; the story starts on page 10.

Hurricane season

With the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration predicting above-normal activity for the 2025 Atlantic hurricane season (which runs through Nov. 30), Eversource is urging customers to plan for severe weather, according to a press release. Sign up for text and email alerts regarding outages at eversource.com and download Eversource’s app, which allows for account access and features an outage map. The release also cited ready.gov/kit as a resource for building a disaster kit.

Signings

Gov. Kelly Ayotte announced the signing of the state’s two-year budget as well as several other bills last week, according to press releases from her office. The state budget-related bills included provisions that would eliminate mandatory vehicle inspections, according to NHPR, NH Journal and other media reports. According to WMUR, inspections will end as of Jan.31, 2026. Find a rundown of all bills Ayotte signed at the end of June at governor.nh.gov. Find the text of all the final bills at gc.nh.gov.

The New Hampshire Boat Museum’s Back Bay Skippers Model Yacht Club will host an open house at Bridges Falls Path in Wolfeboro on Saturday, July 5, from 11 a.m. to 2 p.m. Learn about model yachts and how to sail them, according to a press release. See nhbm.org.

The Tabitha Lemon Memorial Golf Tournament will take place Monday, Aug. 25, 7 a.m. registration at Pembroke Pines Country Club, according to an email about the event. Registration costs $150 for a single golfer, $600 for a four-golfer team at birdease.com/TabithaLemonGolf. The event raises money for Camp Spinnaker, a Zebra Crossing asthma family camp, the email said.

The Palace Theatre will hold its 2025 Garden Tour on Saturday, July 12, 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. at public and private gardens throughout Manchester. Tickets to this self-guided tour cost $25 in advance, $30 on the day with registration starting at 9:30 a.m. at Demers Garden Center in Manchester. See palacetheatre.org.

The Manchester Museums — Currier Museum of Art, SEE Science Center, The Millyard Museum and the Aviation Museum of New Hampshire — will offer half-price admission throughout the summer to visitors who have a membership at one of those museums. For example, present your membership card for the Currier and receive half-off admission to the Aviation Museum. See manchestermuseums.nh.org.

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