The Denver Post

TRADE MEANS NEW TEST FOR THOMAS

- By Kyle Hightower

BOSTON» Isaiah Thomas’ basketball journey is littered with decision-makers who have underestim­ated the diminutive guard.

He was selected last in the 2011 NBA draft coming out of Washington, and when he arrived in Boston he looked only to be a role player for the storied franchise. Thomas has had to prove his worth with every stop.

Now, following the biggest slight of his NBA career, he’ll have to do it again.

All eyes will be watching how he rebounds after Tuesday’s blockbuste­r trade. The Celtics sent the two-time all-star packing from a franchise and city that he’d embraced with every ounce of his 5-foot-9 frame. He’s now bound for Cleveland in exchange for a bigger star — and what the Celtics believe is a better point guard for them — in Kyrie Irving.

For all the praise Boston president of basketball operations Danny Ainge showered on Thomas in explaining what he’s meant to the Celtics, the organizati­on took Irving — a four-time all-star, Olympic and NBA champion — over the scrappy underdog who’s just beginning to build his résumé.

It’s the ultimate reminder of how fickle the business of the NBA can be.

“I’ll leave it to your own imaginatio­ns to realize how difficult that conversati­on might have been for me and Isaiah,” Ainge said of informing Thomas of the trade.

“You do pay a heavy price for a player of that age and that caliber,” Ainge said of acquiring Irving.

Many have paid a hefty price for undervalui­ng Thomas, and Ainge may not be done paying yet.

Thomas always plays with a chip on his shoulder and he was not only traded for a player who plays the same position, in the same conference, but he was dealt to the team Ainge and the Celtics are trying to beat. Now he will be playing alongside arguably the best player in the world in LeBron James, and both will be motivated to deny Boston a shot at the title — once again.

It was just three months ago that Thomas was trudging into the most melancholy offseason of his six-year career. The 28-yearold was battered after leading Boston to the top seed in the Eastern Conference, only to have a hip injury leave him sidelined for the majority of the conference finals.

That journey also was overshadow­ed by the sudden death of his younger sister on the eve of the playoffs.

 ?? Elsa, Getty Images file ?? Isaiah Thomas, right, and Kyrie Irving have switched teams for the 2017-18 season.
Elsa, Getty Images file Isaiah Thomas, right, and Kyrie Irving have switched teams for the 2017-18 season.

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