The Mercury News

Irving has own reasons for leaving

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Kyrie Irving didn’t try to hide his giddiness Friday when he was introduced as the newest addition of a Boston Celtics franchise he grew up watching.

“It’s about to be crazy, G,” Irving said in the ear of fellow new Celtics teammate Gordon Hayward as they sat on the dais two days after Boston’s blockbuste­r trade with the Cavaliers was completed.

Boston sent Isaiah Thomas, Jae Crowder, Ante Zizic and two draft picks to Cleveland for Irving. Hayward signed as a free agent in July.

Hayward and Irving smiled and bantered like old friends as they posed for pictures holding their new Celtics jerseys.

But not lost on Irving is that he’s joining one of the league’s most-storied teams because of his trade request from the team that drafted him and made him an NBA champion.

Irving acknowledg­ed he wanted to leave the Cavaliers and his partnershi­p the past three seasons with LeBron James. But he said the decision was about maximizing his own potential and not because of any specific issue with the Cavs or any individual.

Irving said he hasn’t spoken to James since the trade, but is grateful for the time he spent alongside a player he called one of the game’s greats.

Being in Boston, Irving said, allows him to “be with a group of individual­s that I can grow with.”

“That is not a knock on anything that has transpired in my six years because it was an unbelievab­le experience,” he said. Golf

JOHNSON ON A ROLL >> One week after Dustin Johnson ended a five-month dry spell brought on by a back injury, he easily handled the early cold and a steady wind at TPC Boston for a 5-under 66 to take a one-shot lead in the opening round of the Dell Technologi­es Championsh­ip. Masters champion Sergio Garcia opened with five birdies on the front nine and finished with a 67, sharing second with Jon Rahm, Marc Leishman and Kyle Stanley.

Phil Mickelson, in his last tournament before the picks are made for the Presidents Cup, felt more energy after seeing a doctor and kept his focus on enough good shots for a 69.

LEWIS HAS RELIEF PLANS >> Stacy Lewis shot an 8-under 64 for a share of the Cambia Portland (Oregon) Classic lead and a chance to make a big donation to hurricane relief in her hometown. From The Woodlands in the Houston area, Lewis is giving her earnings this week to the relief efforts. Two-time defending champion Brooke Henderson and firstround leader In Gee Chun matched

Lewis at 10-under 134.

SUTHERLAND LEADS BY ONE >> Kevin Sutherland shot an 8-under 62 to take one-stroke lead over Scott McCarron in the PGA Tour Champions’ Shaw Charity Classic in Calgary, Alberta. Motor sports

ROSSI KEEPS RIDE WITH ANDRETTI >> Indianapol­is 500 champion Alexander Rossi will return to Andretti Autosport for the 2018 IndyCar Series season. The multiyear agreement was announced at Watkins Glen Internatio­nal in New York. Soccer

PSG UNDER SCRUTINY >> UEFA put Paris Saint-Germain’s finances under formal investigat­ion, citing “recent transfer activity” that triggered concern the club was again flouting rules designed to control excessive spending by top European clubs. UEFA’s club finance monitoring panel intervened after Qatar-owned PSG broke the world record fee to sign Neymar and Kylian Mbappe. WNBA

BIRD SETS MARK >> Sue Bird broke the WNBA’s all-time assists record Friday night, passing Ticha Penicheiro with her 2,600th career assist. Bird moved ahead of Penicheiro in the first quarter on a pass to Carolyn Swords for the basket.

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