Allen’s grind inspiring Grizzlies’ run
One of his old Boston Celtics teammates remembers Tony Allen chasing LeBron James baseline to baseline in a playoff game. The Celtics had struggled to stop the NBA’s Most Valuable Player, but Allen had come for him with an uncommon ferocity. For a few minutes, James struggled to find space or shots, and finally there unfurled the strangest look upon his face.
Essentially, the expression asked: Who is this guy?
“My assignment was not to let you score,” Allen was heard telling LeBron on the floor. “And I did not let you score.”
Allen is still surprised the Celtics let him leave for the Memphis Grizzlies. As it’s turned out, he has been dollar-for-dollar the most impactful signing of the biggest free-agent class in the sport’s history. His agent Derrick Powell negotiated him a three-year, $9.5 million contract, and tried to get the Celtics to match and keep him. When pressed for a rapid response, Celtics general manager Danny Ainge declined to match the offer and Allen’s heart crumbled.
“I didn’t think there was even going to be a negotiation with Boston,” Allen told Yahoo! Sports this week. “I didn’t think there would need to be a recruiting process. I just thought it would get done.”
So Allen, 29, moved to Memphis and became a folk hero, an indispensible part of an improbable eighth seed in the Western Conference playoffs. For the $82 million the Grizzlies used to re-sign Rudy Gay, they were a better team after Gay dislocated his shoulder in mid-February and Allen commandeered his minutes. Allen has come with tenacity, toughness and grind. He’s scored the ball, slowed stars on offense and taught his teammates the lessons of dutiful defense.
Once, Allen had been cast as a troubled kid out of Oklahoma State. There were fights and close ties with bad characters in his hometown of Chicago. There were criminal charges over a barroom fight, and NBA and Chicago police buffering the Celtics at a playoff game in 2009 because some nefarious character had targeted and threatened Allen over a dispute.
This reputation came close to running Allen out of the league, but he grabbed hold of his life and made a career for himself.
“I was immature coming into the league, and I definitely had the wrong group of guys around me growing up,” he says. “I found out fast that the path I was going on wasn’t going to keep me in the league very long. I got into trouble and learned from it. You get into trouble once or twice, and that third time is going to be strike three.
“I got wiser, put my time in the gym and tried to build away from that negative image around me. People see me as a competitor now, a winner.”









