In 1998, the Boston Celtics used the tenth overall pick in the NBA Draft to select Paul Pierce from the University of Kansas. The Celtics were not good. They had not been good for several years. Pierce arrived as a promise — the franchise player who would eventually, if everything went right, return Boston to relevance. It took a decade and the arrival of Kevin Garnett and Ray Allen. But it happened. And when the 2008 championship banner went to the rafters of the TD Garden, Paul Pierce's name was on it first.
Pierce's #34 was retired by the Celtics in February 2018. The number represents fifteen seasons as the face of the franchise, one championship, one Finals MVP, ten All-Star selections, and a career built on the most valuable quality in basketball: the certainty that in the most important moments, you can score.
The Truth
The nickname came from Shaquille O'Neal. During the 2001 Eastern Conference Finals, Pierce scored 46 points against a Lakers team that most people assumed would sweep the series. O'Neal, after the game, told the assembled media that Paul Pierce "is the truth." The nickname stuck because it was the right word. Pierce was the truth about what a mid-range scorer, a pull-up artist, and a free-throw-drawing wing player looked like operating at full capacity. He was not flashy in the way the era rewarded. He was accurate, and accuracy is a different kind of beautiful.
He made shots over defenders who had perfect position. He drew fouls from players who had committed to not fouling him. He scored in the post, off the dribble, off screens, in isolation, in the fourth quarter when the defense was designed specifically to stop him. Pierce averaged 19.7 points per game over his career — more than Larry Bird, more than Bob Cousy, more than every Celtic who was not Bill Russell on the all-time scoring list.
The 2008 Championship
When Kevin Garnett and Ray Allen arrived in Boston in 2007, the story became about the Big Three. But Pierce had been the one waiting — carrying the franchise through its worst years, scoring forty points in playoff losses, winning nothing. The 2008 championship was everyone's. But it was Pierce's most.
In Game 1 of the 2008 Finals against the Los Angeles Lakers, Pierce appeared to suffer a serious knee injury in the third quarter, left the game in a wheelchair, and returned minutes later to score fifteen points and help Boston to victory. He was named Finals MVP after averaging 21.8 points, 4.5 rebounds, and 6.3 assists across six games. The Celtics won their seventeenth championship. Pierce had delivered on every promise the tenth pick in 1998 had implied.
The Legacy of Fifteen Summers
Paul Pierce played fifteen seasons in Boston before finishing his career with six other teams. He was inducted into the Basketball Hall of Fame in 2021. His #34 in the Garden rafters honors what he gave to the franchise during the years between dynasties — the decade when showing up and being great had to be enough, when the championships hadn't come yet, when the only thing he could control was whether he made the shot. He made the shot. Every single night, for fifteen years, he made the shot.



