Boston Celtics coach Brad Stevens has masterminded a dramatic turnaround in Boston's fortunes. Jared Wickerham / Getty
Boston Celtics coach Brad Stevens has masterminded a dramatic turnaround in Boston's fortunes. Jared Wickerham / Getty
Boston Celtics coach Brad Stevens has masterminded a dramatic turnaround in Boston's fortunes. Jared Wickerham / Getty
Boston Celtics coach Brad Stevens has masterminded a dramatic turnaround in Boston's fortunes. Jared Wickerham / Getty

Brad Stevens deserves credit for guiding Boston Celtics to play-off place


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Coach Brad Stevens and his Boston Celtics, more than most teams this season, deserve credit for a job well done.

With three games remaining the Celtics, improbably, have become a very probable play-offs team in the Eastern Conference. This is, presumably, not what Boston’s upper management were hoping for this season, given the significantly higher value an early pick in the draft lottery offers a rebuilding team than a token appearance in the play-offs.

But Stevens, 38, has shown what an excellent young coach he is, guiding a young group of misfit toys into what is now the seventh seed in the East and a date with LeBron James’s Cleveland Cavaliers. They could still sneak into the sixth seed, past Milwaukee, and get a shot at the beatable Toronto Raptors.

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Either way, the Celtics have proven a fun under-the-radar club this season, and it is nice to see they will get at least one series to show their stuff in the very above-the-radar play-offs.

It is a remarkable feat considering the Celtics may not have a player who could start for any other play-off team, with apologies to the currently all-conquering Isaiah Thomas and the very solid Avery Bradley.

Stevens has instilled a cohesion in his team, imparted an understanding of their roles to the likes of Brandon Bass, Jared Sullinger, Kelly Olynyk, Evan Turner, Tyler Zeller and Jae Crowder.

If the Atlanta Hawks are the high-functioning version of a “team without stars”, a group of very good players worth more than the sum of their parts, then the Celtics have something like the lower-rent version in place this season.

None of the likes of Sullinger or Turner or Olynyk would be important players on a contending team. But Stevens has been able to coax out of each just one thing to contribute to the greater good: the undersized Sullinger with his physical rebounding, tall and gangly Olynyk with his three-point shooting, Turner with his playmaking flashes.

The Celtics are not a real threat in this year’s play-offs and they likely won’t be next season, either, but they have shown they have the underlying foundation in Stevens and the philosophy he has instituted in Boston to be a contender in the not-too-distant future, even with a later pick in the June draft.

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World record transfers

1. Kylian Mbappe - to Real Madrid in 2017/18 - €180 million (Dh770.4m - if a deal goes through)
2. Paul Pogba - to Manchester United in 2016/17 - €105m
3. Gareth Bale - to Real Madrid in 2013/14 - €101m
4. Cristiano Ronaldo - to Real Madrid in 2009/10 - €94m
5. Gonzalo Higuain - to Juventus in 2016/17 - €90m
6. Neymar - to Barcelona in 2013/14 - €88.2m
7. Romelu Lukaku - to Manchester United in 2017/18 - €84.7m
8. Luis Suarez - to Barcelona in 2014/15 - €81.72m
9. Angel di Maria - to Manchester United in 2014/15 - €75m
10. James Rodriguez - to Real Madrid in 2014/15 - €75m

The more serious side of specialty coffee

While the taste of beans and freshness of roast is paramount to the specialty coffee scene, so is sustainability and workers’ rights.

The bulk of genuine specialty coffee companies aim to improve on these elements in every stage of production via direct relationships with farmers. For instance, Mokha 1450 on Al Wasl Road strives to work predominantly with women-owned and -operated coffee organisations, including female farmers in the Sabree mountains of Yemen.

Because, as the boutique’s owner, Garfield Kerr, points out: “women represent over 90 per cent of the coffee value chain, but are woefully underrepresented in less than 10 per cent of ownership and management throughout the global coffee industry.”

One of the UAE’s largest suppliers of green (meaning not-yet-roasted) beans, Raw Coffee, is a founding member of the Partnership of Gender Equity, which aims to empower female coffee farmers and harvesters.

Also, globally, many companies have found the perfect way to recycle old coffee grounds: they create the perfect fertile soil in which to grow mushrooms. 

The biog

Favourite pet: cats. She has two: Eva and Bito

Favourite city: Cape Town, South Africa

Hobby: Running. "I like to think I’m artsy but I’m not".

Favourite move: Romantic comedies, specifically Return to me. "I cry every time".

Favourite spot in Abu Dhabi: Saadiyat beach

Another way to earn air miles

In addition to the Emirates and Etihad programmes, there is the Air Miles Middle East card, which offers members the ability to choose any airline, has no black-out dates and no restrictions on seat availability. Air Miles is linked up to HSBC credit cards and can also be earned through retail partners such as Spinneys, Sharaf DG and The Toy Store.

An Emirates Dubai-London round-trip ticket costs 180,000 miles on the Air Miles website. But customers earn these ‘miles’ at a much faster rate than airline miles. Adidas offers two air miles per Dh1 spent. Air Miles has partnerships with websites as well, so booking.com and agoda.com offer three miles per Dh1 spent.

“If you use your HSBC credit card when shopping at our partners, you are able to earn Air Miles twice which will mean you can get that flight reward faster and for less spend,” says Paul Lacey, the managing director for Europe, Middle East and India for Aimia, which owns and operates Air Miles Middle East.

Fixtures:

Wed Aug 29 – Malaysia v Hong Kong, Nepal v Oman, UAE v Singapore
Thu Aug 30 - UAE v Nepal, Hong Kong v Singapore, Malaysia v Oman
Sat Sep 1 - UAE v Hong Kong, Oman v Singapore, Malaysia v Nepal
Sun Sep 2 – Hong Kong v Oman, Malaysia v UAE, Nepal v Singapore
Tue Sep 4 - Malaysia v Singapore, UAE v Oman, Nepal v Hong Kong
Thu Sep 6 – Final

THE BIO: Mohammed Ashiq Ali

Proudest achievement: “I came to a new country and started this shop”

Favourite TV programme: the news

Favourite place in Dubai: Al Fahidi. “They started the metro in 2009 and I didn’t take it yet.”

Family: six sons in Dubai and a daughter in Faisalabad

 

Name: Peter Dicce

Title: Assistant dean of students and director of athletics

Favourite sport: soccer

Favourite team: Bayern Munich

Favourite player: Franz Beckenbauer

Favourite activity in Abu Dhabi: scuba diving in the Northern Emirates 

 

Terror attacks in Paris, November 13, 2015

- At 9.16pm, three suicide attackers killed one person outside the Atade de France during a foootball match between France and Germany- At 9.25pm, three attackers opened fire on restaurants and cafes over 20 minutes, killing 39 people- Shortly after 9.40pm, three other attackers launched a three-hour raid on the Bataclan, in which 1,500 people had gathered to watch a rock concert. In total, 90 people were killed- Salah Abdeslam, the only survivor of the terrorists, did not directly participate in the attacks, thought to be due to a technical glitch in his suicide vest- He fled to Belgium and was involved in attacks on Brussels in March 2016. He is serving a life sentence in France