Ben Affleck showed off his spot-on Bill Walton impression, perfectly honoring his Boston roots

Ben Affleck NAILED this Bill Walton impression.

Actor Ben Affleck got a chance to share his stellar Bill Walton impression on the latter’s alternative NBA broadcast.

While appearing as a guest on Throw It Down with Bill Walton during Monday night’s Boston Celtics/Cleveland Cavaliers game, Affleck talked about growing up and watching Walton play his final years with the Celtics.

That stretch included the 1986 Boston title season.

With a young Affleck taking in Walton in his twilight years in the league, he developed a pretty on-point impression of Walton that he shared with the NBA legend.

Affleck didn’t seem to think it was all that good, but close your eyes and imagine Walton talking as the Oscar winner does his mimicry. It’s uncanny.

Like, that’s why Affleck makes the big bucks in Hollywood.

His well-established Boston roots likely helped him forge this impression, and he’ll have to toast himself with a fresh cup of joe from Dunkin’ for nailing Walton’s deep voice. The former Celtic seemed to get a kick out of it.

NBC Sports Boston re-releases documentary on Celtics icon Bill Russell’s statue

The network recently re-released the documentary ahead of the release of his Netflix documentary due out on Feb. 8.

When the City of Boston honored Hall of Fame Boston Celtics big man Bill Russell with a bronze statue, NBC Boston Sports made a documentary about it. The statute was created to commemorate Russell’s legendary career as a player and historic role as a humanitarian and activist fighting for civil rights in the 1960s until his passing in July of last year.

The network recently re-released its documentary ahead of the release of the  Netflix documentary on him that is due out on Feb. 8.

The NBC Boston documentary traces his journey to joining the team, his relationship with its legendary coach and manager Red Auerbach and the extraordinary work he did off the court as an activist.

To see the short film for yourself, narrated by teammate Tom Sanders and featuring Russell, Auerbach, Bob Cousy, Tommy Heinsohn, John Havlicek, Larry Bird, Sam Jones, Doc Rivers, Frank Ramsey, Wyc Grousbeck, Mike Gorman, Bob Ryan, David Stern and Jim Brown among others, check out the clip embedded below.

Listen to the “Celtics Lab” podcast on:

Apple Podcasts: https://apple.co/3zBKQY6

Spotify: https://spoti.fi/3GfUPFi

YouTube: https://bit.ly/3F9DvjQ

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Celtics to hold meetings about landing 2026 All-Star Game

Boston’s City Council has now called for a meeting about how to go about preparing the city to improve the bid to host the 2026 NBA All-Star Game.

The season has been very successful for the Boston Celtics, but, as all good organizations do, they are looking toward the future. That future involves bringing the All-Star Game back to the city according to new reporting from the Boston Herald’s Sean Phillip Cotter.

City Councilor Brian Worrell has called for a meeting about how to go about preparing the city to improve its bid to host the 2026 NBA All-Star Game.

“This is championship city,” said Worrell. “It’s definitely past due.”

The push to get an All-Star game to Boston comes after the major success Cleveland enjoyed as a result of its hosting the league’s annual exhibition tilt.

Per Worrell, the event generated $141.4 million in direct spending in Cleveland and generated $248.9 million in overall economic impact, making the attraction to Boston evident.

More important is the legacy of the city itself. Winning is a part of Boston’s DNA, and it would be hard to find a more passionate and intense fan base than Boston’s.

This is crucial for so many people and no one deserves it quite as much as the Boston fan base who have been without an all-star game weekend in any sport since 1999. With the support of Governor Maura Healey, the city should be able to field a very competitive bid.

Listen to the “Celtics Lab” podcast on:

Apple Podcasts: https://apple.co/3zBKQY6

Spotify: https://spoti.fi/3GfUPFi

YouTube: https://bit.ly/3F9DvjQ

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Jaylen Brown bemoans Boston traffic in hilarious tweet

Boston has some of the world’s worst traffic. It just claimed Jaylen Brown as its latest victim.

Boston is known for many things, but an easy commute isn’t one of them. In fact, according to a recent report, the Hub has the fourth worst traffic in the entire world, behind only London, Paris and Chicago.

Bostonians may have come to expect traffic delays after years of enduring the Big Dig, combustible public transit and incomprehensible road patterns. But that doesn’t mean the city’s messy traffic patterns are particularly welcome. Boston Celtics star Jaylen Brown found himself caught in Boston’s notorious traffic ahead of Thursday’s game against the visiting Golden State Warriors, taking to Twitter to claim he was commuting for almost two hours to get to the game.

Members of the Warriors, including Golden State head coach Steve Kerr, were also delayed because of the city’s traffic.

 

Listen to the “Celtics Lab” podcast on:

Apple Podcasts: https://apple.co/3zBKQY6

Spotify: https://spoti.fi/3GfUPFi

YouTube: https://bit.ly/3F9DvjQ

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Notre Dame coach Mike Brey previews season at ACC media day

Excited about the Irish’s chances this year?

If you had written off Notre Dame before ACC play began last year, no one would have blamed you. After all, the program hadn’t been that good in a while, and the Irish didn’t exactly impress in their nonconference slate other than a win over ranked Kentucky. Then, longtime coach [autotag]Mike Brey[/autotag] proved he had a little magic left in him and guided the Irish to their first NCAA Tournament in five years. They even won a couple of games in the tournament and nearly made it out of the first weekend.

Now, Brey is focused on how to make the 2022-23 Irish even better. Here’s what he said at Wednesday’s ACC media day in Charlotte, North Carolina:

Cameron Smith, Joaquin Niemann, Harold Varner III lead latest group of PGA Tour players to jump to LIV Golf

LIV Golf will feature some new players at its next event near Boston.

The PGA Tour made some changes and picked up some momentum in its battle with LIV Golf, but the new series will feature some new players at its next event.

On Tuesday, the upstart circuit led by Greg Norman and backed by the Public Investment Fund of Saudi Arabia announced six golfers would be taking their talents to the new series: Cameron Smith, Joaquin Niemann, Marc Leishman, Harold Varner III, Cameron Tringale and Anirban Lahiri.

The new additions mean LIV Golf now has six of the top 30 players on the Official World Golf Ranking (as of Aug. 21) as it prepares to host its fourth event at the International, Sept. 2-4, near Boston.

When asked about his reported interest in LIV Golf after his Open Championship victory, Cameron Smith said, “I don’t know, mate. My team around me worries about all that stuff. I’m here to win golf tournaments.”

Reports then broke the week of the FedEx St. Jude Championship at TPC Southwind that he was taking his talents to LIV Golf, but Smith didn’t confirm or deny the news.

“I’m a man of my word and whenever you guys need to know anything, it’ll be said by me,” he said at the time, while also noting he planned to play the Presidents Cup, Sept. 20-25. Smith was referring to fellow Aussie pro, Cameron Percy, who said, “Unfortunately, yeah, they’re gone,” in regard to Smith and Leishman being bound for LIV Golf.

Niemann told Golf.com at the U.S. Open that he wanted to play against the best players in the world.

“They’re still here and as long as they’re here, I’m not going anywhere. No chance,” he said in June. “If I was 40? Maybe it would be different.”

When Varner won the PIF Saudi International on the Asian Tour earlier this year, rumors began to swirl that he may leave the PGA Tour. He sat down with commissioner Jay Monahan in March and went on to say, “I’ve always supported the PGA Tour when they needed me, and I want to be there.”

Since turning professional in 2009, Tringale has made $17,426,908 in 338 starts and holds the dubious distinction as the man to win the most money without ever winning a PGA Tour event. Lahiri has also never won on Tour, but won twice on the European Tour in a matter of three weeks in February 2015 at the Maybank Malaysian Open and Hero Indian Open.

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Can local Boston fan favorite Keegan Bradley make good at 2022 U.S. Open?

Eleven years after Bradley won his lone major title in his major debut, can he win in his home state?

At the end of a memorable third round of the 122nd U.S. Open, Keegan Bradley marched toward the horseshoe of seats towering around the 18th green at The Country Club in Brookline, Massachusetts, where the fans rose and showered him with cheers. It’s a moment the born and bred Bay Stater will never forget.

“It was one of the most amazing moments of my entire life,” Bradley said. “I got to feel what it feels like to play in Fenway, to play in the Garden, to play in Gillette Stadium. I felt like a Boston player there.”

Bradley, 36, shot 1-under 69 to improve his 54-hole aggregate score to 2-under 208 and a share of fourth place, just two strokes behind co-leaders Will Zalatoris and Matt Fitzpatrick.

Eleven years after Bradley won his lone major title in his major debut, can he go from throwing out the first pitch at Fenway Park on Tuesday night to U.S. Open champion? Stranger things have happened at TCC. It’s where Francis Ouimet, a 20-year-old amateur who grew up across the street from the course, won the 1913 U.S. Open in arguably the most famous moment in championship history. Bradley didn’t grow up that close to the famed course, but the graduate of Hopkinton High School, was on site the last time a significant golf event was held at TCC, the 1999 Ryder Cup, which the U.S. won in miraculous fashion.

“Everyone ran out on to the green, and I asked my dad if I could run out,” recalled Bradley, who watched much of it from atop his father’s shoulders. “I was a little kid. There’s a crooked tree out here (on 18). My dad said, all right, I’m going to stand right next to this crooked tree, and you go out and come right back. We didn’t have cell phones. You can still see it. It leans a little bit. That’s a fond memory too.”

Bradley, who became one of six golfers to win in his major debut at the 2011 PGA Championship, is competing in his 36th major championship. He’s only finished in the top 10 twice – none since the 2014 U.S. Open. But here he is with a legitimate chance to write his name into Boston sports folklore.

“Out here today felt like I was in a home game, which is something that as a kid, it’s a dream,” Bradley said.

“I haven’t seen Keegan Bradley smiling this much on a golf course in a long time,” noted Paul McGinley on Golf Channel’s Live From the U.S. Open.

Having made three bogeys in his first six holes on Saturday, Bradley turned his fortunes around with a pivotal birdie at the ninth.

“I made the putt, and they went wild. It really gave me a jolt of energy,” he said. “It put me on a path to, all right, we no longer are trying to save this round. Let’s try to get ourselves into contention here, and I did that.”

Bradley has had this major circled on his calendar for years and qualified by vaulting back inside the top 60 of the Official World Golf Ranking with his tie for second in the Wells Fargo Championship in May. He credited his two young kids for helping keep him take his mind off golf when he’s away from the course. Of son Logan, he said, “He thinks we’re on a vacation because he is — his cousins and his family are here. So I go home. I’ve got to be dad, and that’s sort of, I think, what’s helped me play well this week.”

“My wife sent me this picture as I was basically walking to the tee yesterday of my son completely passed out sleeping on his bed, and I texted her back,” he recalled. “It brings me such calm to know that he has no idea what sort of stress I’m under right now.”

And then there are all the familiar faces in his gallery rooting for the local boy to make good.

“I’ve tried really hard this week to look into the crowd and see the people. Every now and then I’ll look, and I’ll see an aunt or an uncle or a friend, and it’s really, really fun,” he said. “The crowds as usual here in Boston I think are the best in the world.”

Eleven years between victories at majors would put Bradley in some rare company with the likes of Ben Crenshaw (1984 and 1995 Masters) and Tiger Woods (2008 U.S. Open and 2019 Masters). Bradley, winner of four PGA Tour titles, hasn’t hoisted a trophy since the 2018 BMW Championship, but he knocked on the door earlier this year at the Players Championship, finishing fifth, giving him confidence that he’s still capable of winning golf’s biggest events.

“Tomorrow is going to be a tough day. I know that. It just is. It would be if I was playing in Tulsa,” he said. “Playing here, it’s going to be intense, but I’ve had this weird sense of calm over me this week.”

For Bradley, the diehard New England Patriots fan, to win a major just days after the Boston Celtics failed to win a title, well, it would be wicked awesome for him and the Massachusetts faithful.

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P.J. Tucker’s overdramatic flop against Jayson Tatum became an instant meme during Celtics-Heat Game 3

Whoa, Jayson Tatum must be super strong!

This time of year in the NBA, you might need an extra edge.

Of course, I’m talking about players acting at the slightest hints of contact, hoping a call goes your way. The art of flopping.

During the Miami Heat’s visit to the Boston Celtics (6.5-point favorites heading in) in Game 3 of the Eastern Conference Finals, P.J. Tucker had the latest great audition to enter the flop pantheon. When Jayson Tatum tried to make a slick dribble move on Tucker in transition, a light forearm (seemingly almost nonexistent!) sent Tucker flying across the floor:

The call? Why an offensive foul obviously!

Tatum must be really strong if he can send a 245-pound man like Tucker soaring and spinning across half of the floor. At least Tucker got the last laugh (he probably got the first one, too, right?) when he helped hold Tatum to 10 points on 3-of-14 shooting in an eventual 109-103 Heat win.

Take notes, young basketball fans: That’s how you act and defend.

NBA fans thought Tucker’s dramatics in such a big game was so hilarious that they even turned it into a meme:

NBA playoffs: Grant Williams, Celtics force game No. 7

NBA playoffs: Grant Williams, Celtics force game No. 7

Former Vol Grant Williams and Boston forced a seventh and deciding game in the NBA Eastern Conference semifinals.

Williams started and played 28 minutes for the Celtics in its, 108-95, victory against Milwaukee Friday at Fiserv Forum.

Williams had two points, five rebounds and two steals for second-seeded Boston in its win over the No. 3 and defending NBA champion Bucks.

The series is tied 3-3 and tipoff for the final game of the series is slated for Sunday at 3:30 p.m. EDT. ABC will televise the game.

Williams, a two-time Southeastern Conference Player of the Year for the Volunteers, was 0-for-3 from the field and 0-for-1 from beyond the 3-point arc. He was 2-for-5 from the free throw line.

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