logo
Four things to know about new Celtics forward Georges Niang

Four things to know about new Celtics forward Georges Niang

Boston Globe25-06-2025
Here are four things to know about Niang:
He is productive off the bench
When healthy, Porzingis made the Celtics a matchup nightmare in just about every facet of the game due to his length (7-foot-2), post game, rim protection, and ability to sink 3-point shots.
Advertisement
Niang won't be able to impact a game in the sheer variety of ways that Porzingis could do when he was locked in. But, the veteran could be a dependable piece for Joe Mazzulla off the bench in 2025-26.
Get Starting Point
A guide through the most important stories of the morning, delivered Monday through Friday.
Enter Email
Sign Up
Related
:
Now set to enter his 10th season in the NBA, Niang spent the 2024-25 campaign with the Cavaliers before getting traded to the Hawks as part of the De'Andre Hunter trade.
Over 79 games (three starts) between the two teams last season, Niang averaged 9.9 points, 3.4 rebounds, and 1.4 assists
With
Advertisement
Niang's style should fit in well
Much like Simons, it should come as little surprise why a team like the Celtics would welcome a player like Niang to their roster.
The 6-foot-7 forward has built a reputation as an effective 3-point shooter over the course of his career, posting a career 39.9 shooting percentage from beyond the arc.
This past season, Niang converted on 40.6 percent of his shots from 3-point range.
With Tatum on the mend, a Celtics team starved for offense without its best player on the court could look to make up at least some of the production in the aggregate by adding a pair of sharpshooters to Mazzulla's squad in Niang and Simons.
Niang hails from Massachusetts
Niang already has plenty of ties to Boston, considering that he was born in Lawrence and grew up in Methuen as a Celtics fan.
Before making the jump to the college game at Iowa State, Niang was a force across the New England circuit, staring at the Tilton School while also playing for Boston AAU powerhouse BABC.
Related
:
As part of a Tilton School basketball program that has featured other NBA players like Nerlens Noel and Terance Mann, Niang stands as the school's all-time leading scorer with 2,372 points.
During his senior year at Tilton, Niang averaged 25.1 points, 7.2 rebounds, and 2.1 assists per game, earning 2012 NEPSAC Class AA Player of the Year honors.
He had an interesting encounter with Jaylen Brown during the 2023 playoffs
Niang drew the ire of now-Celtics teammate Jaylen Brown while the two faced off during the 2023 Eastern Conference semifinals between Boston and Philadelphia.
During Boston's Game 7 win over Philly, Brown was tripped up after Niang – sitting on the Sixers' bench — reached out from his seat and appeared to grab Brown's leg to slow him down at the start of a fast-break sequence.
Advertisement
Brown turned and yelled at the Sixers' bench after the play, with both Brown and Niang eventually assessed technicals after the sequence was reviewed.
'I think he just thought, like, 'Maybe let me just try to grab him to slow him down a little bit,'' Brown said. 'I don't think Niang's a bad guy or anything. I work out with him in the offseason. I just think he just got caught up in the intensity of the game and made a play and I responded to it.
'I don't know which way I should have responded to it. But if I didn't do anything it probably would have played on. … I don't think Niang was thinking when he did it. I don't think he's a bad guy, just caught up in the emotion of the game.'
Niang grabbing Jaylen Brown's leg
— Pull up shoot  (@NElGHT_)
Conor Ryan can be reached at
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Lakers jersey history No. 3 — Devean George
Lakers jersey history No. 3 — Devean George

USA Today

timean hour ago

  • USA Today

Lakers jersey history No. 3 — Devean George

Through the 2024-25 season, the Los Angeles Lakers have had a total of 506 players suit up for them, going back to their days in Minneapolis. Some were forgettable, some were serviceable, some were good and a select few were flat-out legendary. As the Lakers approach their 80th season of existence (they were founded back in 1946 as the Detroit Gems in the National Basketball League), LeBron Wire is taking a look at each player who has worn their jersey, whether it has been a purple and gold one or the ones they donned back in the Midwest during their early years. Here's a look at Devean George, a forward who played for the Lakers during the 2000s. George, a 6-foot-8 forward, was a star at Augsburg University (then known as Augsburg College), a Division III school located in Minneapolis, Minn., where he won back-to-back Minnesota Intercollegiate Athletic Conference MVP awards. Despite playing at a small school that very few people outside of the Midwest were familiar with, George was drafted by the Lakers with the No. 23 selection in the 1999 NBA Draft. He got very little playing time in his first two seasons, but he started to crack coach Phil Jackson's rotation during the 2001-02 season, his third in the league. He started to become a decent 3-point shooter and defender, and he won the NBA championship in each of his first three pro seasons. However, George never became a truly viable NBA player. He lacked the ability to put the ball on the floor and make plays without getting out of control and committing a turnover, and he was a bit inconsistent with his outside shooting. Despite being considered the most athletically talented player on the Lakers' roster, outside of perhaps Kobe Bryant, he just didn't pan out. In retrospect, some felt the Lakers made a mistake by not selecting Russian forward Andrei Kirilenko, whom the Utah Jazz chose with the No. 24 pick in 1999. Once Kirilenko made his NBA debut in the 2001-02 campaign, he instantly became an impactful complementary player on both ends of the floor, and he enjoyed a productive 13-year NBA career. But George did just well enough to stick with L.A. for seven seasons. He ended up playing 11 seasons in the league and averaging 5.6 points and 3.1 rebounds in 18.5 minutes a game.

Shaq opens up on painkiller use — and ‘heated' conversations over addiction
Shaq opens up on painkiller use — and ‘heated' conversations over addiction

New York Post

timean hour ago

  • New York Post

Shaq opens up on painkiller use — and ‘heated' conversations over addiction

Shaquille O'Neal was candid about his use of pain pills and the 'lifetime ban on strip clubs' that he sentenced himself to after going off the rails during his NBA career. During an appearance on the 'Armchair Expert' podcast, the four-time NBA champion recalled having to play through injuries on pain pills in order to 'play great' — and explained that he didn't realize he was addicted. 'You had to be on pain pills to play. You had to,' host Dax Shepard said, to which Shaq confirmed he did. 'Have you ever been scared about any of that addiction wise?' Shepard asked. 3 Shaquille O'Neal discusses navigating the fine line between pain relief and addiction during an appearance on the 'Armchair Expert' podcast with Dax Shepard on August 11, 2025. YouTube/Armchair Expert 'I have a question. Is addicting for the chemical effect or are you just taking it?' O'Neal said. 'Because I was having a heated discussion with my doctors like, 'You were addicted.' But I didn't feel high… [Yes, I felt the absence of pain]. So I didn't know that was addiction. '… I don't think I was suffering mentally. I think if I had a knack, I would take it [because] I don't want to feel that knack because we need this game.' '… Then I would do homeboy math. If it said take one, I'm taking three… I had to have them, so is that addiction?' 3 Lakers center Shaquille O'Neal (R) kisses the MVP trophy as teammate Kobe Bryant kisses the NBA championship trophy as they celebrate in the locker room after winning the NBA Finals against the Indiana Pacers, June 19, 2000. REUTERS O'Neal, 53, added that he was taking anti-inflammatories for 19 years as a part of his regular routine during the season. He did not take them in the summer and he didn't feel withdrawal effects. 'It's not that I was hiding it… the trainers knew. I mean, I'm not telling my wife or my kids or my boys,' O'Neal said. Nowadays, O'Neal reaches for Hookah to stay grounded and social. 'I've never been into weed. Hookah,' he said. 'No [it doesn't give me a buzz], it enables me to follow the routine of sit your ass down. When I was young and dumb and I lost my family — I lost my family by doing too much, being out, being in too many places. But now I don't go to clubs, I don't go to gentleman's clubs. 'If you see me in the club it's because I am DJing. I gave myself a lifetime ban that stuff. But I am not a mute. I don't just work and go home. I allow myself to go to a hookah bar.' 3 Shaquille O'Neal aka DJ Diesel. O'Neal and his ex-wife Shaunie Henderson share four children: sons Shareef and Shaqir and daughters Amirah and Me'arah. They married in 2002 and Shaunie filed for divorce in 2009. It was finalized in 2011. O'Neal has a daughter, Taahirah, from an earlier relationship — and Henderson's son Myles, also from a previous relationship, later took on O'Neal's surname.

Game 122: Red Sox at Astros lineups and notes
Game 122: Red Sox at Astros lineups and notes

Boston Globe

time2 hours ago

  • Boston Globe

Game 122: Red Sox at Astros lineups and notes

Houston will counter with Hunter Brown, who is having the best season of his career with a 2.51 ERA in 23 starts. Brown earned his first All-Star selection last month. First pitch in Houston is at 7:10 p.m. Eastern. Here's a preview. Advertisement Lineups RED SOX (66-55): TBA Pitching: RHP Walker Buehler (7-6, 5.40 ERA) Get Starting Point A guide through the most important stories of the morning, delivered Monday through Friday. Enter Email Sign Up ASTROS (67-53): TBA Pitching: RHP Hunter Brown (9-5, 2.51 ERA) Time: 7:10 p.m. TV, radio: NESN, WEEI-FM 93.7 Red Sox vs. Brown: Wilyer Abreu 0-4, Roman Anthony 1-3, Alex Bregman 2-3, Jarren Duran 1-5, Carlos Narváez 0-2, Ceddanne Rafaela 2-5, Trevor Story 0-2, Abraham Toro 1-6, Connor Wong 1-2, Masataka Yoshida 0-4 Astros vs. Buehler: Jose Altuve 1-8, Victor Caratini 3-10, Carlos Correa 3-7, Yainer Diaz 2-3, Mauricio Dubón 1-5, Cam Smith 0-2, Jesús Sánchez 2-7, Taylor Trammell 1-1, Ramón Urías 2-4, Christian Walker 6-27 Stat of the day: The Red Sox scored 10-plus runs for the 19th time this season on Tuesday. Notes: In his second outing with the Red Sox, May struck out eight and walked one. He tossed six scoreless innings for just the fourth time in his career. 'I definitely try to ride the highs,' May said. 'I had a lot of lows this year, so whenever I do have the good moments, I try to let my brain know that 'hey, you got it, it's still in you for sure.' ' ... Roman Anthony has homered twice in his last two games after homering twice in his first 50. He became the fourth Red Sox player to homer in back-to-back games at age 21 or younger, joining Ted Williams, Tony Conigliaro, and Rafael Devers. Anthony also drew four walks Tuesday. 'I understand the quality of hitters I have behind me, so it makes my life easier,' Anthony said. 'I'm more than glad to take my walks.' ... Buehler is 1-1 with a 3.72 ERA in four career starts against the Astros. He tossed 4 ⅓ innings against Houston on Aug. 2, allowing three earned runs and settling for a no decision in a Sox win at Fenway. ... Brown made his only career start against Boston on Aug. 1, allowing just one earned run on four hits over seven innings, but also had to settle for a no decision in another Sox win. Advertisement Amin Touri can be reached at

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store