1988–89 Boston Celtics season


The 1988–89 Boston Celtics season was the 43rd season of the Boston Celtics in the National Basketball Association. This was the first season for Jim Rodgers as head coach. Rodgers had been a Celtics assistant coach prior to this season. This year's Celtics team was severely hindered by the loss of star forward Larry Bird to a heel injury which required surgery. Bird played only six early-season games before being lost to injury. Initially, Bird was expected back in March, but it was delayed and ultimately became a season-ending injury. The results were dramatic as the Celtics, who had averaged over 60 wins per season thus far in the 1980s, fell to just 42 wins in this season. Coming into the season, the Celtics had been the Eastern Conference's #1 seed five years in a row. This season they were the #8 seed, clinching a playoff spot in the season's final game. This season included some bright spots, particularly the emergence of second-year guard Reggie Lewis, who had been only a minimal bench contributor in his rookie season of 1987-88, but averaged nearly 20 points per game as a starter in 1988-89.
The Celtics were still dangerous at Boston Garden but struggled mightily away from home, failing to record a road win over a team with a winning record.
The Celtics faced the Detroit Pistons in the postseason for the 4th time in 5 seasons, but this time much earlier, in the first round. The Pistons were heavily favored but hope arose for a competitive series when the Celtics activated Bird for their playoff roster. However, Bird never suited for a game and the Pistons easily dispatched the Celtics in a three-game sweep.

Draft picks

RoundPickPlayerPositionNationalityCollege
124Brian ShawSGUnited StatesUCSB
374Gerald PaddioSF/SGUnited StatesUNLV

Roster

Regular season

Season standings

Record vs. opponents

Game log

Playoffs

East First Round

Detroit Pistons vs. Boston Celtics: Pistons win series 3-0
Last Playoff Meeting: 1988 Eastern Conference Finals

Player statistics

Season

Playoffs

Awards and records