Click here to find out more
 


Click Here to Shop  -- Meridian Marketplace

LDSGetaway.com
LDSPro.com




Click here to find out more






Share the article on this page with a friend.
Click here.
Meridian Magazine : : Home

Faith Matters to NBA Champions' General Manager

BOSTON — The fairytale season for Danny Ainge and the Boston Celtics ended this month in the best possible way — a drubbing of the Los Angeles Lakers to win the NBA championship, Boston's 17th overall, ending a 20-plus-year championship drought.

Ainge, the Celtics' general manager and the National Basketball Association's Executive of the Year, obviously managed the club very well this past season.  As The Boston Globe noted in an editorial 19 June, two days after the championship game:

The team that Danny Ainge assembled last summer did to Kobe Bryant and the Los Angeles Lakers what the Visigoths once did to Rome .

And they did it the way (Red) Auerbach would have wanted it done. They played unselfishly.

Although Ainge is grateful for his professional success, he is also grateful for being a member of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints.

“The service element helps me to balance my life,” he said. Currently he is a member of a ward bishopric.  He has worked a lot with Latter-day Saint youth in the past, including on one occasion when he served alongside fellow Mormon Dave Checketts, former New York Knicks president, in a regional youth leadership committee.

These and other service opportunities in his Latter-day Saint congregation “buoy him up,” Ainge said.

As the Celtics' general manager, Ainge loves hearing about how much fans have enjoyed following the team this year.  He also gets animated when talking about people wanting to find out more about his faith. “I just had a couple walk into our ward who were researching the Church online and had been impressed,” he said.

While he was a player with the Boston Celtics, there were two other members of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints on the team, Fred Roberts and Greg Kite. 

He also played professional baseball with the Toronto Blue Jays with five other ballplayers who were also Latter-day Saints.

Ainge had an outstanding collegiate career at Brigham Young University , leading the 1981 BYU team (his senior season) to the Elite Eight in the NCAA Tournament. He was also named College Basketball Player of the Year that season.

He and his wife, Michelle, have six children: Ashlee, Austin, Tanner, Taylor, Cooper and Crew.

He said he feels very fortunate to have played in Boston with a team of great players (Larry Bird, Kevin McHale, Robert Parrish and Dennis Johnson were the other starters for the Celtics during Ainge's time there) and then currently in “putting this team together to see them win together.”

Since the team Ainge has put together is still relatively young, it would seem that there will be more significant seasons to celebrate.

This article was prepared by the LDS Newsroom at lds.org.

Return to Top of Article

Click here to sign up for Meridian's FREE email updates.


© 1999-2008 Meridian Magazine.  All Rights Reserved.

Related Resource:

Church Update Archive

Click here to learn more and to buy

We have been living in an unprecedented time in the history of the Church. All of us have been witnesses to the greatest temple-building era in the history of the world! Documented on DVD, Meridian brings you Gordon B. Hinckley - Temple Builder, Up Front and Personal. Meridian's founders, Scot & Maurine Proctor, invite you right to a front row seat of temple dedications and significant events with President Hinckley all over the world. Celebrate this part of President Hinckley's amazing mission and life. With stunning photography, powerful video clips from conference and beautiful music, the experience will inspire you and lift you - bring you to tears. More than a million Latter-day Saints have read some of these accounts on Meridian - Now they come to you on DVD. Price: $16.50.

Click here to buy

What do you think?
Format for Print
Click Here

 

Share the article on this page with a friend.
Click here.