Maxwell has harsh assessment of Shaq’s eroding physical skills

Boston analyst Cedric Maxwell didn’t have much good to say about Shaquille O’Neal’s return to the lineup in Game 3 of the Celtics’ playoff series with Miami.

O’Neal has been hobbled with an injured calf since he was hurt in early April. And when he returned to action Saturday, the 39-year-old Neal hobbled like he was too heavy and too old, according to Maxwell. O’Neal produced two points, an assist and a steal in eight plodding minutes.

“He looks bad. If he was a horse, they would take him out right now and he’d be glue tomorrow,” Maxwell said on . “He can’t run and physically he’s limping on that leg. Here’s a tremendous athlete who’s played all his career and has not had these kind of problems. 

“At the end of the day if you have a bald spot on one of your tires your car isn’t going to run right. And that’s a bald spot on the tire for him. Essentially, he looks like he’s got one of those walking boots on when you break your toe.”  

Yes, that’s the same Cedric Maxwell who used to wave the towel for everything Boston back in the day.

Now, he’s too busy snapping it on O’Neal’s hobbling and heavy frame as the Celtics prepare for Monday’s game against the Heat.

Preview: Heat vs. Celtics; Thunder vs. Grizzlies

Express-News staff writer Mike Monroe breaks down the two series starting today:

East semifinals
Miami Heat? vs. Boston Celtics

Season series: Celtics won 3-1.

Key Matchup: LeBron James vs. Paul Pierce — James made only 43 percent of his shots against the Celtics in four regular season games, three of them losses. Pierce has been a playoff monster in seasons past and won’t shrink from this matchup. Then there’s this: before the first Celtics-Heat game in Miami this season, Pierce Tweeted he was “happy to be taking my talents to South Beach.”

Heat can win if: They understand how much better the Celtics have defended the post since Jermaine O’Neal came off the injured list. Their scoring will have to be from the perimeter, and James and Dwyane Wade are just he players to provide it.

Celtics can win if: Shaquille O’Neal can suit up for a game or two and Rajon Rondo can get enough easy looks for Pierce, Ray Allen and Kevin Garnett. Miami is soft in the middle and Shaq is still enormous.

Prediction: Heat in seven

West semifinals
Oklahoma City Thunder vs. Memphis Grizzlies

Season series: Grizzlies won 3-1.

Key Matchup: Kendrick Perkins vs. Zach Randolph — Nobody has to convince Spurs fans about Randolph’s emergence as one of the elite power forwards in the league. He dominated in Memphis’ 4-2 first-round upset of the No. 1 seeded team. He will have a hard time getting to the basket against Perkins, one of the league’s meanest post defenders. Both teams may need to hire a cut man. Is Dr. Ferdie Pacheco available?

Thunder can win if: Kevin Durant doesn’t shrink six inches before tipoff of Game 1 and Russell Westbrook remembers to pass occasionally. Sam Young isn’t quick enough to defend him and Tony Allen isn’t big enough. Westbrook is quicker and more athletic than Mike Conley and just needs to remember to share the ball, especially with Durant.

Grizzlies can win if: They check the Thunder’s regular season results and notice the Spurs beat them three times. That ought to be just the jolt of confidence required to convince them they can hang with another team that had a better regular season record. They’ll also need Marc Gasol to rebound as he did against the Spurs in the first round.

Prediction: Thunder in six

CP3′s monster game leads Hornets to series split, paces Sunday’s S&Ds

A slow start and a cut about his right eye couldn’t stop Chris Paul.

And neither could the Los Angeles Lakers.

Paul rebounded after finally scoring in the final 63 seconds of the first half to produce his first triple-double of the season with 27 points, 13 rebounds and 15 assists in the Hornets’ 93-88 Game 4 victory over the defending NBA champions.

“He’s maybe 6 feet and he had 13 rebounds,” New Orleans forward Trevor Ariza told reporters after the game. “He played unbelievable. He’s made our team go all year. He’s carried us when we were down.”

Paul played with his left hand tightly wrapped because of a jammed thumb. Later in the game, he received a cut above his right eye. But it couldn’t stop Paul’s big game as he became only the third player in the last 20 years to produce at least 25 points, 13 rebounds and 15 assists in a playoff game. It was his second career playoff triple-double.

“Chris Paul—that was one of the better performances I’ve seen in the playoffs,” New Orleans coach Monty Williams told reporters after the game. “A lot of guys score. He scored. He assisted. He rebounded.”

Paul’s big effort enabled him to lead Sunday’s Studs and Duds of the top NBA performers.

“It was cool,” Paul told reporters. “Fun.”

STUDS

New Orleans G Chris Paul: Notched his first triple-double of the season with 27 points, 13 rebounds and 15 assists and was plus-9 in the Hornets’ 93-88  Game 4 victory over the Los Angeles Lakers.  

Boston F Kevin Garnett: Went for 26 points, 10 rebounds, two blocked shots and was plus-8 in the Celtics’ series-closing Game 4 101-89 triumph at New York.

Atlanta G Jamal Crawford: Came off the bench to score a team-high 25 points, provide six assists and was plus-5 in the Hawks’ 88-85 Game 4 victory over Orlando.

Boston G Rajon Rondo: Notched 21 points, five rebounds, 12 assists and was plus-6 in the Celtics’ victory at New York.  

Atlanta G Joe Johnson: Produced 20 points and nine rebounds and was plus-2 in the Hawks’ victory over the Magic.

New Orleans F Trevor Ariza: Went for 19 points, six rebounds and three assists in the Hornets’ triumph over the Lakers.

Philadelphia G Lou Williams: Hit the go-ahead 3-pointer with 8.1 seconds left, leading Philadelphia to oan 86-82 Game 4 victory over Miami. Williams shared team scoring honors with 17 points.

Philadelphia G Evan Turner: Scored 17 points, grabbed six rebounds and was plus-4 off the bench to pace the 76ers’ victory over  the Heat.

Philadelphia F Andre Iguodala: Went for 16 points, five rebounds, four assists and two steals in the 76ers’ victory over Miami.

Atlanta F Al Horford: Tallied 14 points, 12 rebounds, four assists and was plus-5 in the Hawks’ triumph over the Magic.

New York F Carmelo Anthony: Produced 32 points, nine rebounds and three assists in the Knicks’ loss to Boston.

Miami F LeBron James: Tallied 31 points, seven rebounds, six assists, a steal and a blocked shot in the Heat’s loss at Philadelphia.

Orlando C Dwight Howard: Notched 29 points, 17 rebounds, two blocked shots and was plus-6 in the Magic’s loss at  Atlanta.

Miami G Dwyane Wade: Filled the stat sheet with 22 points, eight rebounds, five blocked shots, four assists and three steals in the Heat’s loss to the 76ers.  

Orlando G Gilbert Arenas: Came off the bench to score 20 points, grab five rebounds and dished off two assists in the Magic’s loss to Atlanta.

DUDS

Los Angeles Lakers G Kobe Bryant: Was shut out in the first half — the first time in a playoff game since May 25, 2004 — in the Lakers’ loss at New Orleans. Bryant finished with 17 points, six rebounds and eight assists, but clanked through a 5-for-18 shooting effort and was minus-1.

Orlando F Hedo Turkoglu: Went 2-for-12 in field-goal attempts, including missing all six 3-point attempts, in the Magic’s loss at Atlanta. Turkoglu missed a potential game-tying shot at the buzzer, had three turnovers and was limited to six points.

Orlando G J.J. Redick: Missed all six field-goal attempts, scoring two points and was minus-7 in the Magic’s loss at Atlanta.

Los Angeles Lakers F Lamar Odom: Went 1-for-7 from the field with two turnovers and was a team-worst minus-8 in the Lakers’ loss to the Hornets.  

Miami G Mike Bibby: Missed all six-field goal attempts was shut out and was minus-15 in the Heat’s loss to the 76ers.

New York F Amar’e Stoudemire: Went for 19 points and 12 rebounds, but struggled through a 5-for-20 effort from the field with five turnovers in the Knicks’ loss to the Celtics.

New York G Toney Douglas: Clanked through a 3-for-11 shooting effort and was a team-worst minus-14 in the Knicks’ loss to the Celtics.

New Orleans G Marco Belinelli: Went 3-for-11 from the field and was minus-2 in the Hornets’ victory over the Lakers.