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04-24-2007, 03:41 PM #1
Celtics & Telfair Parting Ways
Less than a week after Sebastian Telfair was arrested on a gun possession charge, the Boston Celtics are severing ties with the guard after one season.
"I wanted to let you know that we have removed Sebastian's nameplate from his locker in Waltham. The facts and circumstances of his case have not been determined but he does not have a Celtics locker and we do not anticipate that he will," Celtics managing partner Wyc Grousbeck wrote in an e-mail to the Boston Globe on Tuesday.
Telfair was arrested on a gun possession charge after the car in which he was driving was stopped for going 77 mph in Yonkers, N.Y., early Friday.
Telfair, a 21-year-old Brooklyn native, was charged with second-degree possession of a handgun and driving with a suspended license following the 3:53 a.m. stop on the Yonkers highway, Westchester County police said.
According to Westchester police, Telfair was driving his 2006 Range Rover on northbound Bronx River Parkway when it was clocked speeding in a 45-mph zone.
A passenger, Al Eden Fuentes of Queens, was in the car with Telfair when it was stopped on the parkway, about five miles north of Manhattan. Telfair produced a Florida driver's license that had been suspended.
After stopping the Range Rover, the officer found a loaded .45-caliber handgun sticking out from under the front passenger seat, according to the Westchester County spokesman.
Telfair and Fuentes, 28, said they knew nothing about the gun, Westchester County police spokesman Kieran O'Leary said. Police were still investigating whether the gun was registered.
Police charged Telfair with a misdemeanor count of second-degree aggravated unlicensed operation of a motor vehicle and issued summonses charging him with speeding and driving without a license, both violations.
Telfair pleaded not guilty Friday at Yonkers City Court to the charges and bail was set at $7,500. He and Fuentes were due back in court May 17.
O'Leary said Telfair was polite and cooperative.
"Our officers said he behaved like a gentlemen," O'Leary said.
Telfair's cousin, New York Knicks point guard Stephon Marbury, showed up to support him hours before he was arraigned, the Daily News reported on its Web site.
"The players on the Celtics have been explicitly warned, this year, to obey the team and league gun prohibition as well as state laws. We take this very seriously and will act accordingly once the facts have been determined," Grousbeck said Friday night.
Telfair's brief NBA career has been marred by controversy, starting with his 2005 fine by the Portland Trail Blazers after a loaded gun was found on the team's private jet at Boston's Logan Airport.
The handgun was found in a pillowcase belonging to Telfair as the team plane was being prepared for a flight from Boston to Toronto. Telfair explained to local authorities that the gun belonged to his girlfriend and that he had inadvertently grabbed the wrong bag when leaving for the team's road trip.
In October 2006, Telfair reported a $50,000 chain was snatched off his neck at a Manhattan night club. He was unable to identify the men who stole the chain.
The 6-foot Telfair, a former New York schoolboy hoops legend, averaged 6.1 points and 2.8 assists a game this season for the Celtics.
Information from The Associated Press was used in this report.
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04-24-2007, 03:56 PM #2
Why is it some of the most talented are also among the dumbest! But he can't blame anyone but himself. Great to see the celtics step up like that. Stop these morons before they actually hurt someone!
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04-24-2007, 07:02 PM #3
It is not really stepping up when they cut a player who put up stats like this.
The 6-foot Telfair, a former New York schoolboy hoops legend, averaged 6.1 points and 2.8 assists a game this season for the Celtics.
I do agree with you though that it was a good move to cut him. I hope that other teams cut problem players. It would be nice if they did that for all players that have these kinds of issues. I highly doubt they would have cut him if he was a superstar.
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04-24-2007, 07:37 PM #4
The sad part about this is that Telfair has the potential to be a huge star in the league. I am glad that the Celtics are actually going to release him and I feel as though many other teams in all sports should take a stand and do this to players who repeatedly step out of line. They probably wouldn't do that to an established superstar but at least it is a start. I am sick and tired of seeing pro athletes getting away with things that anyone of us would windup doing time for or getting fired from our jobs. I applaud the Celtics and I hope that many other organizations start doing the same.
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04-24-2007, 11:28 PM #5
Its sad to watch sports news and hear about 10 players from different leagues having run-ins with the law. Yet most of the time nothing happens to them. I think it sends the wrong signal to our kids. I like the fact that at least the nfl commissioner brought in new code of conduct rules. The Nba is pretty good with its fines but a little more of this I believe is necessary to reign in some of these guys who still think their thugs from the hood.
The way I see it is. Every year theirs a new crop of players so if the guys don't want to play in the NBA cut them loose! It goes for all sports in general
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