Marbury clears waivers
By The Associated Press
WALTHAM -- Stephon Marbury cleared waivers, and the Boston Celtics hoped to have the New York Knicks castoff in uniform for Friday night's game against the Indiana Pacers.
Marbury, a former All-Star guard who alienated Knicks management, teammates and fans, was having his physical at the Celtics' suburban practice facility.
He agreed to a buyout of his $20.8 million contract and was waived by New York on Tuesday. The Celtics were expected to sign him for a pro-rated share of the veteran's $1.3 million minimum.
"There's still a lot to be worked out," general manager Danny Ainge said. "I'm guessing it will all be done today. I'm hoping."
Marbury, who turned 32 last week, hasn't played a regular-season game in more than a year.
"I believe all systems are go and we will have Stephon on the roster later today," Celtics owner Wyc Grousbeck said in an e-mail to The Associated Press about an hour after Marbury cleared waivers.
Marbury could be seen from the public area of the workout facility wearing a white, long-sleeved T-shirt and sweatpants, jumping up and down as he took the practice court, smiling and chest-bumping with several people wearing Celtics gear. After few minutes, the automatic shades were lowered.
Marbury is expected to back up Rajon Rondo at point guard, a role Sam Cassell served when the Celtics won their 17th NBA title last season. Eddie House, who is more of a shooter, has been forced into the role this year; Cassell did not play in a game for Boston this year before he was traded to the Sacramento Kings and released last week.
Marbury took a long leave of absence from the Knicks when his father died in December 2007, then had season-ending ankle surgery and has not played since Jan. 11, 2008.
He returned to the Knicks in training camp, but when the sides tried to negotiate a buyout early in the season, Marbury at first refused to surrender any more than $1 million of his $20.8 million salary and the team told him to stay home until it could be completed.
Even before the final breakdown, Marbury was at the center of controversy during his five years in New York, from feuding with coaches to skipping games.



This is grrrrrrreat!
I have my James Brown on, and am doing the "I feel good dance'' :) You gotta love it Celtic fans, and I know Garnett can't wait to play with his former team mate. My advice to Doc is to be patient with Stephan, he has alot to learn...especially on the defensive end. He ain't a defensive player and that bothers me, especially when playing teams like Orlando or Atlanta. He's points per game is vital, he needs to perform every night.
Now Rondo has a veteran point guard to learn from...which is excellent for his game - teach the little brother some slashy moves Stephan! I have a bet already in place for the NBA title, and I think Stephan is the luckiest New-Yorker right now : )
Is there some reason another team can't claim him off waivers? Other than the fact that other teams might not want this guy, wouldn't teams with a worse record get first dibs on him? Maybe it doesn't work that way in the NBA.
Anyway, let's stop blowing this out of proportion. If he screws up, he's out and the C's don't lose much money.
Let the Starbury era begin baby!
Is it Starbury or Hogbury, because he's a shoot first, pass second kind of guy. Anyway, let the era begin. I wonder if he'll be a younger version of Sam "I never met a shot I didn't like" Cassel.
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