cisco wrote:Wow. Why would anyone want to watch a terrible basketball player play basketball?

Overstate much? If you or anyone else can't understand what Scalabrine brings to the floor, that is your loss. He brings a diverse toolkit to the roster and he has a role.
Which other player can play all three frontcourt positions and hold his own defensively in each? The answer is no one, really. "Fans" only see the missed shots and I find that unfortunate.
Not to you personally but the Das Celticsbloggen-level of "analysis" regarding Scalabrine and other players, of late, is freaking ridiculous. RealGM was the "crossroads of business and sports." There is nothing remotely 'GM' about this site anymore. Most threads degrade into ****, it seems, and from where I am sitting it's usually a regular poster from Das Bloggen spewing the vitriol when they disagree.
In my opinion, RealGM should be for posters who are able to watch a complete game without once looking at the ball-handler. The ball is easy to follow peripherally because it moves. A whole lot happens in the game that most posters seem to miss. Sad.
Like all the posts in the Miami game, sans KG and Ray Ray, about Powe beasting and why play Scalabrine when we have Davis (despite Davis playing 6+ minutes more.) Scalabrine's defense in that game was absolutely fantastic.
In that game in particular, Scalabrine attacked with tenacity, defensively, on the baseline. He was only credited, personally, with two steals but was responsible for at least 10 stops in ~17 mins. Another play stood out to me, on his defense of the pick and roll. The defender went under the pick. Scalabrine chipped the picker, thus preventing him from rolling, and in the same movement challenged the shot and forcing a miss on what turned into a pick and pop. It was a fantastic defensive play, imo.
Or how about the Cleveland game (when we lost on 5 Feb)? In the 1st QTR, Scalabrine challenge a Gooden miss, forced Gooden into a travel, challenged a Newble miss (not his man), challenged a Newble miss (not his man), flashed LeBron (not his man, forced to pick up ball), blocked Gooden and picked up Hughes on a switch. All in a 9:25 stint to open the game. Yet, all I read on the board was how he silly he looked on a shot, that he only had 1 rebound or that he got his shot blocked twice.
To the article (for those who cared to even read it), it just goes to show how much of a professional Scalabrine is. He continues to work hard, regardless of role, and he just wants to win. He is a very good defender who is currently in a slump shooting the ball. I am proud to have him on this team.