Speaking to Chris Mannix of SI.com about his relationship with longtime teammate Jaylen Brown, Celtics forward Jayson Tatum said he never wanted Brown traded, but admitted that he could have expressed that sentiment more vocally earlier in his career as trade rumors swirled around the 2016 lottery pick.
“I’ve always told him that maybe I could have done a better job of voicing my feelings in the public eye,” Tatum said. “He always knew that I wanted him here. I would always tell him like, ‘Man, I don’t get involved with any of those talks.’
“I never went to (Celtics president of basketball operations) Brad (Stevens) or went to any player like, ‘Yo, I want this guy in, I want this guy out of here.’ I show up and I want to do my job and play basketball. And looking back on in those moments, I didn’t know how that could affect somebody, because I was never in that situation. I feel like maybe I could have done a better job of publicly saying, ‘No, we don’t want anybody, we want JB.’ I just was always like, ‘I want to stay out of it.'”
The Celtics made it to the Eastern Conference Finals or NBA Finals in five of Brown’s first seven seasons, but were unable to break through and win a championship until 2024. Now that they have that title under their belt, Tatum is relieved that he and Brown should no longer have to face questions about whether it can thrive together and win at the highest level.
“We’ve figured out that we need each other,” Tatum told Mannix. “We have learned how to coexist. And we know we need to be the best version of ourselves in order for all of this to work. We weren’t necessarily the best play-makers early in our careers but we developed into guys that really bleed the game. We want to be a great example of guys that play on both ends as a floor and guys who are the best teammates that we can be.”
Here’s more from around the Atlantic:
- After locking up most of their rotation players to multiyear deals, the Celtics project to have the NBA’s first ever $500MM roster in 2025/26, as Tim Bontemps of ESPN writes. That $500MM+ figure, which includes both player salaries and luxury tax penalties, will loom large over the organization as the team looks to defend its title and the ownership group looks to sell a controlling stake in the franchise.
- Josh Lewenberg of TSN.ca takes a closer look at the unconventional path that Raptors rookie Jonathan Mogbo – the No. 31 pick in this year’s draft – took to the NBA and details how the 6’7″ forward boosted his stock significantly during the pre-draft process. According to Lewenberg, entering the second day of the draft, the Raptors did some extra homework on the projected first-round picks who were still available after day one – such as Kyle Filipowski and Johnny Furphy – but ultimately decided they preferred Mogbo, whom they’d ranked in the early 20s. Eventual No. 41 pick Adem Bona was also high on Toronto’s board and received some consideration at the start of the second round, Lewenberg adds.
- Tom Thibodeau‘s new three-year extension with the Knicks doesn’t include any option years, according to Ian Begley of SNY.tv. While Begley doesn’t have the full salary details on Thibodeau’s new deal, he says it’s is “in line with the current market for head coaches” (Twitter link).
Raptors will regret not drafting Filipowski.
Can’t fault the CELTICS owners for selling now ….. he’s leaving a champion team, so the valuation/price will be as high as can be – he’s also selling just when the operational costs ramp up to historical highs.
That’s about as good timing that you can get.
I felt the Knicks should have traded up for Flipowski or Ware. Ware looks great in Miami. Let’s go Knicks Thibs 3 year window starts now.
If there’s any lesson from this draft, it’s that my team–like all teams–should’ve traded up (or down) to draft Filipowski.
In Thibs we Trust ……
why don’t they just say what the numbers are. Can’t find it anywhere …. we all know Dolan ain’t cheap.
Filipowski is not ready. He’s yrs away. Needs muscle and weight.
I think there will be plenty teams wishing they looked at Ware more. He’s got a future.
Celts J’s both have good heads on their shoulders.
As to Celts Summer League, Baylor Scheierman reminds me of Jason Brunson or Luka. In charge, Baylor has vision and can really pass, or play slow with good footwork down in the lane. And he squares up for three pointers like both. Jordan Walsh is aggressive! Perfect. Now he needs to work on making his threes and finishing better. As to Anton Watson, looks fundamentally sound.
Go Celtics!
The best owners realize it is about improving the value of the franchise. The Celtics franchise before being sold is valued at $5 billion and rising as media contracts increase seasons extended by long playoff runs bring in more revenues.