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The Celtics know what the Heat did this summer is why this game was scheduled to open the NBA season. Commissioner David Stern won't be there; he'll be in Los Angeles handing the Lakers their championship rings three hours later.
Odds are, Stern will be watching. Like just about everyone else in the NBA world.
"All eyes will be on the game in Boston, but I think all eyes will really be on Miami," Rivers said. "We're the other team that's playing and we're just going to show up. But I'm sure everybody is there to see Miami."
Boston was a couple of plays away from winning their second championship in three years last June, ultimately losing Game 7 to the Lakers 83-79 -- blowing a 13-point third-quarter lead in the process, and losing the seventh game of a finals for the first time in franchise history.
That title-winning window for Garnett, Pierce and Allen won't be open forever. That being said, they're still the East kings.
"There's never been an opening game that has been more heavily anticipated," Allen said. "I do believe that people are definitely excited to see them more than they're excited about seeing us. Truly they know, as a team, what we represented. The two teams are Eastern Conference powerhouses. It's going to be a game."
Neither team will be playoff-sharp, more than likely. James and Pierce both pointed out on Monday that it's the first game of a new season -- and in Miami's case, a new era. That being said, Pierce pointed out that he's at least curious to see what Wade, James and Bosh will all look like in Heat colors together.
"Nobody has seen that type of talent on one team," Pierce said.
And there might a little bit of a "Hey, what about us?" factor going on Boston, after the Celtics won the 2008 title and nearly got another one four months ago.
"As far as the East, we're the champs," point guard Rajon Rondo said. "But that's in the past. New season. We're not going to go down without a fight."
Tuesday is just Round 1, but it has the ingredients to be a tantalizing open stanza.
"I think it'll be a very hostile environment," James said. "And us being the most hated team in the world right now, I think it'll be even more hostile."
[Associated Press;
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