Dan Shaugnessey on Larry Bird's Celtics

veteran Boston-based sports journalist writes of the glory days of the Celtics.
Dubbed “Scoop” for his abilities to dig out stories no one else got, Shaughnessy, an associate editor at the Boston Globe, takes his title from an exhortation by Hall of Fame player Bill Walton. Said Walton of the Celtics in the 1980s, “You cannot overemphasize in your book how much fun this was….It was what you dream about and I wish it lasted forever.” Long since retired, Larry Bird would agree. He had a hardscrabble youth in a small town in southern Indiana, quit college and a sports scholarship, and clawed his way back into play by finding the right NCAA team and the right coach, all of which brought him to the Celtics. The team had long since served as a model for other NBA teams for its low-ego play and ethnic inclusiveness, and it took seriously an ethos about which Shaughnessy writes, simply, “Basketball is the game for everyman.” 
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