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Tag: Jayson Tatum

  • Ramp to Camp: Predicting bold midseason headlines for 2025-26 Celtics

    We’ve spent most of our Ramp to Camp series trying to answer the big questions surrounding the Boston Celtics to open the 2025-26 season. Now, only a few days out from the first training camp practice of the year, we are really hitting the accelerator on this year’s squad.

    For Day 17, and continuing our Predictions Week, we asked our panel to fast forward all the way to early February and give us one bold midseason headline about the Celtics that you might read on NBC Sports Boston before the All-Star break.

    What will we be screaming about on Early Edition? What will occupy the conversations on Pregame Live?

    We all know that, heading into March and April, the speculation about Jayson Tatum’s return is likely to crescendo (but we tackled that on Tuesday). So, what else will be top of mind as the Celtics make the turn to the back nine of the 2025-26 season?

    Our headline: “How Payton Pritchard set the tone for overachieving Celtics.”

    Good things happen when Pritchard is on the floor for the Boston Celtics. Two seasons ago, even before last season’s Sixth Man of the Year glow-up, Pritchard finished second in the NBA in net rating (+13.6, trailing only teammate Sam Hauser). 

    Now the Celtics are going to heap even more on Pritchard’s plate, regardless of his role, and we think his energy and grit could define how the 2025-26 Celtics play. 

    Pritchard’s playing time is going to spike, particularly if he slides into a starter role. Last season, he posted per-36 minute averages of 18.6 points, 4.9 rebounds, 4.4 assists, and 1.1 steals, all while displaying some of the best ball security in the NBA.

    We’ll keep saying it: If Boston is better than the pundits expect out of the gate, then either Pritchard or Derrick White is going to claw their way to All-Star status.

    After making a strong case in each of the past two seasons, it’s easy to see a pathway for White landing that elusive nod. But we can’t shake this feeling that Pritchard will thrust himself into that conversation, too.

    Pritchard should serve as a bit of a role model to the younger players on Boston’s roster. He’s proven to be a professional, even when the depth chart conspired against him. He not-so-patiently waited for his opportunity and was ready when it arrived.

    Now he has a chance to do the same thing yet again in the 2025-26 season. And the rest of the Celtics should follow his lead.

    Heck, the NBA is tweaking its own rules based on Pritchard’s recent impact. He hit so many big heaves during Boston’s 2024 title run that the league is changing heave rule statistics to inspire more players to be like him.

    The younger Celtics should want to be like Pritchard, too. If they operate with the same energy and desire as Pritchard, the 2025-26 Celtics will go a long way toward masking the talent that was lost in the overhaul brought upon by the second apron.

    Let’s check out the headlines our panel came up with:

    Darren Hartwell, Managing Editor

    “Celtics still have playoffs in sight after Simons trade.”

    I can absolutely see this group overachieving and being in the postseason mix as the Feb. 5 trade deadline nears. I can also see Brad Stevens finding a trade partner for Simons’ expiring contract as part of Boston’s goal to get out of the luxury tax.

    This might be the one unpopular move Stevens makes — especially if Simons is playing well — and how Celtics players respond in this totally hypothetical scenario will be fascinating to watch.

    Michael Hurley, Web Producer

    “Amari Williams isn’t bad.”

    Is that bold enough? I like the idea of a young 7-footer getting increased opportunities and playing well. I wouldn’t expect a rookie to have the know-how of Al Horford, but can he help replace Horford’s nightly production (9.0 points, 3.8 rebounds, 3.5 assists) while blocking a shot or two per game?

    Perhaps he’s not at all ready, but you asked me for a bold headline, Chris, so you freaking got one, buddy.

    Sean McGuire, Web Producer

    “Jaylen Brown is in the running to win the 2025 NBA MVP.”

    What does in the running mean? Brown opened at 100-1 to win the award behind the heavily-favored Nikola Jokic, Shai Gilgeous-Alexander and 12 other players including Cade Cunningham, Jalen Brunson, Joel Embiid and Kevin Durant.

    When the trade deadline nears in early February, Brown will be in the top six.

    Josh Canu, Media Editor

    “Are the Celtics real contenders in the East?”

    I think this team is capable of winning a lot of games, and odds are one of the projected top teams in the East will deal with injuries or underachieve, so I think the Celtics could be in the mix even without Tatum.

    We know the East is thin, so I don’t think it is that crazy the Celtics could be perceived as real contenders.

    Kevin Miller, VP, Content

    “Minott Us?!”

    Josh Minott becomes a fan favorite and finds a sustainable role on a good team.

    Adam Hart, EP, Content Strategy

    “Winning DNA has Celtics in the drivers’ seat.”

    Regular-season basketball is different, and this team will remain competitive for the top spot in the East.

    Kayla Burton, Celtics Pregame Live host

    “A new home for Hauser: The Boston Celtics trade away Sam Hauser.”

    I am not going to say where because I have no idea, and as sad as this headline makes me feel, I just think they make a bold, somewhat sad move around the trade deadline and acquire a big man.

    Chris Forsberg and NBC Sports Boston Staff

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  • U.S. men’s basketball punches ticket to knockout round with easy win over South Sudan :: WRALSportsFan.com

    U.S. men’s basketball punches ticket to knockout round with easy win over South Sudan :: WRALSportsFan.com

    It wasn’t quite as overwhelming as some may have expected, but in the end Team USA did what it came to do. Bam Adebayo (18 points) and LeBron James (12 points, seven rebounds, five assists) led a ruthlessly efficient offensive attack and the U.S. flipped things into cruise control in the second half en route to a 103-86 win over South Sudan on Wednesday. The victory moves the U.S. to 2-0 and the top of Group C, and guarantees it a place in the quarterfinal next week. Here’s how it all went down.

    FULL BOX SCORE

    SEE MORE: Full LeBron James highlights from U.S. win over South Sudan

    U.S. 103, South Sudan 86: Full recap and key takeaways

    Jayson Tatum starts, Joel Embiid sits

    The biggest storyline coming out of the dominant opening win over Serbia was Jayson Tatum, who surprisingly didn’t play a single minute. Kerr almost immediately expressed regret for the decision, chalking it up Kevin Durant‘s return and the depth of his roster and vowing that Tatum would play in Team USA’s next game.

    Turns out, he kept his word and then some: Not only did Tatum play, he started alongside Steph Curry, LeBron James, Devin Booker and Anthony Davis. Tatum didn’t exactly light it up, scoring just two points on 1-of-3 shooting, but he added five rebounds and a couple of assists and generally seemed content to keep the ball moving and play rugged defense. Most importantly, he seemed 100% engaged, which will hopefully go a long way toward putting this controversy to rest.

    Of course, where one controversy ends, another begins: You may have noticed that Joel Embiid, who had been starting at the 5, wasn’t among the starters listed above. Embiid not only didn’t start but didn’t play a single minute, the only U.S. player to not appear in the game. Embiid’s battle with knee issues this year has been well-documented, and he didn’t look like himself against Serbia. Still, his absence was notable, as was how good the U.S. big-man rotation looked without him.

    SEE MORE: Full Bam Adebayo highlights from U.S. win over South Sudan

    Bam and the bench mob roll again

    The hallmark of this U.S. team is quickly becoming its bench, a luxury afforded to a team that has NBA All-Stars up and down its roster. That was true again on Wednesday: The game was tied at 10 when Anthony Edwards, Kevin Durant, Jrue Holiday and Bam Adebayo checked into the game with four minutes remaining in the first quarter; by the 8:42 mark of the second, the U.S. led 33-14, and the game was never in doubt again.

    “Since the start of camp, we’ve been calling ourselves the bench mob for a long time now,” Adebayo said. “And it doesn’t matter who’s in the lineup, we always seem to figure it out.”

    Whether in the half-court or in transition, the U.S. kept the ball flying around. Adebayo and Davis gave the U.S. the ability to switch everything and create easy fast-break opportunities. U.S. ballhandlers were constantly getting into the paint, either finishing themselves, throwing lobs to rim-runners or spraying the ball out to 3-point shooters. Team USA tallied assists on 29 of its 37 made baskets, an excellent sign given how stagnant the offense got at times during its pre-Paris tuneup games. 

    Five different Americans finished in double-figures, including Durant (14), White and Booker (10 each), and the Americans shot 53% from the field and 43% from deep on a steady diet of clean looks.

    “I just think our defensive intensity,” James said when asked what made the difference. “That’s what we started with to start the game and even though they got better into the game, they’re a pretty good team, we were able to get stops when needed.”

    A slightly sloppy second half

    The U.S. did let its foot off the gas just a little bit after halftime, as South Sudan started to warm up from the outside. Nuni Omot and Bul Kuol were excellent, combining for 40 points on 14-of-22 shooting, and an Omot 3 cut the lead to just 11 midway through the third. That was as close as the Bright Stars would get, though, as Edwards and Adebayo went on a mini-spurt to stretch the lead back to 16 by the end of the period. From there, the rest was academic.

    What’s next for the U.S.?

    Team USA has already secured a spot in the quarterfinals, but that obviously isn’t the standard here. There’s still one more game of group play left, and the U.S. needs a win against Puerto Rico to ensure that it finishes atop Group C. Tip is set for Saturday at 11:15 a.m. ET.

    SEE MORE: How to watch the U.S. men’s basketball team at the Paris Olympics: TV and stream schedule

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  • The Boston Celtics Did What the Sixers Haven’t Been Able to – Philadelphia Sports Nation

    The Boston Celtics Did What the Sixers Haven’t Been Able to – Philadelphia Sports Nation

    From top to bottom in the Celtics‘ organization, they did what needed to be done to win a championship.

    Whether it was role players going above and beyond, the number 2 option exceeding expectations, the scouting department finding the right guy, the coach leading them to victory, etc., they succeeded at the highest level.

    Every team in the league should use the Celtics as a blueprint for winning a championship.


    The Celtics Stuck With Their Guys

    Jaylen Brown and Jayson Tatum have played their whole careers in Boston together. They have grown and developed into one of the best (if not THE best) duos in the NBA today. Even after coming up short for a few years, the front office kept building around them and drafting other guys who contributed to the team in major ways.

    Not every guy on the team was drafted by them, but a few of the free agents they’ve signed have played for them for multiple years. Derrick White, Luke Kornet, and Al Horford have all spent time on different teams, but they’ve been on the Celtics for at least the last 2 years, building chemistry with the main guys (Brown and Tatum).

    Also, Sam Hauser and Payton Pritchard, drafted in 2021 and 2020, both have spent their short careers fully with the Celtics. Having 7 guys who know the organization and build chemistry together for years will yield strong results a lot of the time. That’s exactly what happened with the Celtics.

    The Value of Drafting

    Over the years, the Sixers have traded many of their picks away to get a “star” in return. How has that worked out?

    The Celtics use their draft picks much more productively to acquire talent. Not only do they choose better players, they are much more patient to let the talent develop. Outside of the top-5, most players need time to grow into real contributors. The Celtics understand that. They let their players develop over time and learn how to play around the guys they have on the team. This gives the team cheap talent, which helps them acquire players like Kristaps Porzingis and Jrue Holiday.

    The Sixers need to value their drafting more. If they invest more into their scouting department and take the draft more seriously, they could give Tyrese Maxey another great player who could play with him for years to come.

    Celtics are Smart with their Contracts

    When teams draft and develop their own players, it also allows them to keep players on more affordable contracts instead of overpaying in free agency. This year, the Finals MVP (Jaylen Brown) only made the 4th most money on his team, and the team leader (Jayson Tatum) made the 3rd most. Drafting these two guys put the Celtics in a very good position to build talent and get the job done.

    While they did make some major additions with Jrue Holiday and Kristaps Porzingis, they didn’t just sign someone because of their name. The Sixers seem to have a tendency to sign names rather than players, while the Celtics do the opposite.


    Players like James Harden make way too much money than they believe they are worth, which puts teams in a bad spot. The Sixers couldn’t get it done with him, and neither could the Clippers.
    The Sixers need better league and draft scouting. Finding players on more valuable contracts could send them to the next level.

    PHOTO: Getty Images

    Collin Benjamin

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  • Celtics star, former Blue Devil Jayson Tatum reflects on Father’s Day on how being a dad changed his life and career :: WRALSportsFan.com

    Celtics star, former Blue Devil Jayson Tatum reflects on Father’s Day on how being a dad changed his life and career :: WRALSportsFan.com

    — BOSTON (AP) — Boston Celtics star Jayson Tatum spent part of his Father’s Day thinking about how his son made him a better person — and probably a better basketball player, too.

    Speaking at practice the day before Game 5 of the NBA Finals, Tatum acknowledged that he was “a little selfish” when he learned, as a teenager still in college with hopes of basketball stardom, that he would be a father.

    “I’d be the first to say I wasn’t super-thrilled to find out I was going to be a dad, and quickly realized that it was the best thing that ever could have happened to me. There’s nothing better than being a dad,” Tatum said Sunday. “I’m a firm believer that everything happens for a reason.”

    Now 26 and in his seventh season, Tatum is a five-time All-Star who has led Boston to the Eastern Conference finals five times and to the NBA Finals twice. The Celtics lead the Dallas Mavericks 3-1 in the best-of-seven series; after missing their first chance to clinch a title on Friday, they have a second shot at an unprecedented 18th championship banner on Monday night.

    Tatum had just turned 19 and was in his only year at Duke when he learned his girlfriend at the time was pregnant.

    “I wasn’t ecstatic,” Tatum said Sunday. “I was a little selfish at that point because I knew that I was about to go chase my dream and be in the NBA. I felt like that was going to affect what people thought of me, affect where I went in the draft.”

    Tatum was picked No. 3 overall by the Celtics, and Jayson Tatum Jr. – familiar around the Celtics as “Deuce” – was born in December of his father’s rookie season. Having a son helped the NBA star manage the expectations of his new wealth and fame, and the temptations that came along with them, too.

    “It taught me a sense of responsibility,” Tatum said. “Nobody can help you or prepare you for what it’s like to be 19 and have millions of dollars.

    “And I think — not that I think, I know — that having Deuce at that age grounded me. Because whatever decision I wanted to make, I had to make sure that he was taken care of. I couldn’t just up and go or do everything that some of my peers were doing because I had to go home and put him to bed. Or for Father’s Day weekend I was going out of town, or I had to skip out on this trip with my friends because it was my weekend with him.

    “Not that it’s a sacrifice. I willingly would choose those things. But it has taught me a sense of responsibility — as well as just making the right decisions, knowing that there’s a 6-year-old ‘mini me’ essentially watching everything that I do and knowing that I have to be the best version of myself. I have to make the right decisions, because he’s always watching.”

    ___

    AP NBA: https://apnews.com/hub/nba

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  • Nuggets Podcast: Who will stay, who will go for Denver this offseason, plus Luka Doncic vs. Nikola Jokic

    Nuggets Podcast: Who will stay, who will go for Denver this offseason, plus Luka Doncic vs. Nikola Jokic

    In the latest edition of the Nuggets Ink podcast, beat writer Bennett Durando and sports editor Matt Schubert reconvene a day before the NBA Finals with plenty to talk about. Among the topics discussed:

    • The NBA Finals are here, with the Dallas Mavericks set to face the Boston Celtics. Is Luka Doncic the truth? Could he take the World’s Best Basketball Player title from Nikola Jokic if he beats the Celtics in the Finals?
    • The fellas hold a quick and informal draft of the top players in the NBA Finals. How many of the top eight players are Celtics? And who ultimately wins the series?
    • Looking ahead to free agency: Who is likely and who is completely unlikely to join the Nuggets this summer? Does Denver have any chance of bringing an impact player into the fold without trading one of its marquee starters?
    • Is Jayson Tatum a top-five player? Is Joel Embiid still in the conversation?

    Subscribe to the podcast
    SoundCloud | iTunesSpotify | YouTube Music | RSS

    Producer: AAron Ontiveroz
    Music: “The Last Dragons” by Schama Noel

    Want more Nuggets news? Sign up for the Nuggets Insider to get all our NBA analysis.

    Matt Schubert, Bennett Durando, AAron Ontiveroz

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  • Caitlin Clark Is March

    Caitlin Clark Is March

    You know the lore behind many men’s basketball greats: Michael Jordan, Larry Bird, Hakeem Olajewon, Allen Iverson, Wilt Chamberlain…I could go on. We talk about shoe deals and the dominance of iconic brands like Nike and Converse thanks to the success of basketball.


    I could name almost every team in the men’s National Basketball Association off the top of my head. I know star players like Joel Embiid, Shai Gilgeous-Alexander, Jayson Tatum, LeBron James, Steph Curry. I can argue with the best of them that Embiid is a better center than Nikola Jokic…but what about the WNBA?

    Women’s basketball has scandalously been a fourth-world sport for close to 30 years. The salaries barely above a livable wage, the game attendance often lackluster at best, the buzz behind jersey sales and star players is minimal. In fact, you rarely see many front-page stories on women basketball professionals.

    All it takes is one…as Nike told Michael Jordan: it’s not about the shoe, but who’s wearing the shoe. Over the past few years, it hasn’t been the WNBA that’s drawing attention to women’s basketball…but the NCAA Women’s Basketball League.

    “The One” in question is Iowa Hawkeye, Caitlin Clark. During the month of March, NBA devotees ripped their attention away to the NCAA March Madness tournament. And while the men’s teams generally dominate our screens, the women have recently stolen the show.

    Who Is Caitlin Clark?

    Caitlin Clark

    AP Photo/Abbie Parr

    Hailing from Des Moines, Caitlin Clark quickly became one of the most talked about players in college basketball. This past season, the 6-foot guard averaged 32 points per game, 7 rebounds, and 9 assists. She’s widely regarded as one of the greatest female basketball players of all time, and she’s only 22 years old.

    As a senior with another year of eligibility due to the pandemic, Clark has options. She can continue to eviscerate all competition in her path and continue working towards an NCAA championship…or she can test her luck in the WNBA.
    And then there are the multi-million dollar offers from 50 Cent and Barstool’s Dave Portnoy to play in their respective leagues.

    Clark is set to become the highest paid female basketball player, and for a good reason. A first team All-American, the recipient of the John Wooden Award, an NCAA Division I all-time leading scorer
    among both men and women — I could go on…

    She’s making women’s basketball not only
    cool, but she’s had an effect similar to the one Taylor Swift had on football. The Caitlin Clark Effect knows no boundaries: the 2023 NCAA Championship game versus Coach Kim Mulkey’s LSU Villainesses was the most-viewed women’s college game in history. Each team that Iowa played saw their highest attendance ever, and Iowa’s home games were seeing equally sold-out successes.

    Celebrities are suddenly flying to Iowa just to see Clark play. During April 1’s LSU-Iowa rematch, Jason Sudeikus cheered on Clark. Her fan base includes Travis Scott,
    Tom Brady, Billie Jean King, and Ashton Kutcher. A game in Iowa City now resembles the courtside section of Madison Square Garden.

    Clark is a joy to watch. A true anomaly of a human whose basketball prowess borderlines on the robotic, it’s that impressive. She makes an NCAA game look like the prime Golden State Warriors…and she’s not alone in women’s college basketball superstardom.

    Who Are The Women’s NCAA Basketball Stars?

    Caitlin Clark and Angel Reese

    Angel Reese taunting Caitlin Clark in the 2023 NCAA Championship

    Tony Gutierrez/AP

    It feels like there’s a superstar on every team in the women’s 2024 March Madness tournament. This made the tournament a thrill to watch, because every game has been a head-to-head matchup of some of the hottest young talent heading into the WNBA.

    Caitlin Clark’s next matchup are the UConn Huskies, who have their own star in guardPaige Bueckers. Bueckers has garnered a host of awards and accolades throughout her college career: the 2021 Wooden Award recipient, Big East player of the year and freshman of the year, etc.

    Bueckers and the Huskies just knocked off USC’s Trojans led by true freshman guard JuJu Watkins. Watkins is yet another thrilling name in the realm of women’s hoops and the face in Nike and AT&T Wireless commercials alongside NBA stars like Joel Embiid.

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=M_XCmAHlZ6w

    And then there’s the aforementioned “villainesses” at Louisiana State University. Led by power dresser and controversial coach, Kim Mulkey, the LSU women’s basketball team is constantly the talk of the town.

    After LSU lambasted Iowa last year in the tournament, all eyes were on the trash-talking, bold LSU Tigers. Guard Angel Reesebacked up her trash talk with a killer performance on the court, and off the court, she embraces the villain role with open arms.

    She’s not wrong. The LSU team undoubtedly gets a majority of the heat from the public. It’s not lost on me that it’s often a bunch of grown men trolling the women’s physical appearance on social media and harping on their “unladylike” behavior rather than their commanding presence on the court.

    One more point Angel Reese wasn’t wrong about: they’re like The Beatles. There’s fervent support and a cult-like following surrounding women’s college basketball. And as these powerhouses progress in their careers, there’s been a WNBA resurgence. Men are opting to watch 22-year-old Caitlin Clark over 39-year-old LeBron James.

    Welcome To The Women’s Basketball Takeover

    Don’t believe me? The proof is in the numbers. Games featuring Iowa and Caitlin Clark during her final season are reported as the most-viewed women’s college basketball games of all time across platforms like ABC, Fox, and NBC. Clark’s final regular season game – when she broke the scoring record – was the second most-watched game (men or women) of the season.

    Tickets for the Iowa-UConn matchup are currently going for over $1000, and the Iowa-LSU matchup on April 1 recorded 12.6 million viewers. That smashes last year’s previous record of 9.9 million…but, before that the record was in 2002, at 5.6 million.

    To put that in perspective, they’re not that far behind men’s basketball – the NC State-Duke game peaked at 15.1 million viewers. The game was more viewed than the 2023 World Series and NBA Championship. And although you can’t yet bet on women’s basketball, I would say we aren’t far behind.

    It’s a new era for women’s basketball. A new investment. And we can’t wait to see what happens next.

    Jai Phillips

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  • Bad teammate? Jayson Tatum stands strong for Grant Williams: ‘He’s a brother for life’

    Bad teammate? Jayson Tatum stands strong for Grant Williams: ‘He’s a brother for life’

    Boston Celtics forward Jayson Tatum, left and Charlotte Hornets forward Grant Williams, right, hug one another following the team’s game at Spectrum Center in Charlotte, NC on Monday, April 1, 2024. The Celtics defeated the Hornets 118-104.

    Boston Celtics forward Jayson Tatum, left and Charlotte Hornets forward Grant Williams, right, hug one another following the team’s game at Spectrum Center in Charlotte, NC on Monday, April 1, 2024. The Celtics defeated the Hornets 118-104.

    jsiner@charlotteobserver.com

    Grant Williams interrupted his typical pregame routine to make a beeline — straight for the Boston Celtics’ side of the court.

    The Charlotte Hornets forward certainly had a few recognizable faces to catch up with, given this was his first outing against his old team since February’s NBA trade deadline deal brought Williams here from Dallas. Most of Williams’ time was reserved for one person in particular, though: Celtics star Jayson Tatum.

    It was no different after the final buzzer sounded in the Hornets’ 118-104 loss to Boston at Spectrum Center on Monday night, when the two met near half-court, sharing a lengthy embrace following a long discussion.

    Clearly, Williams couldn’t pass up the opportunity to chat it up with the Duke product, probably thanking him face-to-face for having his back and dispelling the notion he’s not a good teammate.

    That chatter hit a crescendo last month following inflammatory comments by Celtics play-by-play commentator Mike Gorman, when he described Williams as a bad locker room guy with Boston and Dallas, sparking chatter about how he also caused issues with Mavericks star Luka Dončić. Tatum came to Williams’ defense then, and it’s obvious he has an affinity for the 25-year-old. The two still share a strong bond, making Monday’s outings just a tad different.

    “It was good,” Tatum said. “He’s a brother for life, so it’s always good to see him, good to compete with him. Just having fun out there, competing against each other.”

    Williams appreciates having someone with Tatum ‘s stature in his corner.

    “Yeah, that’s always going to be my brother, man,” said Williams, who posted 23 points and seven rebounds. “He’s family. All the guys on that team. We had tremendous years together. Whether it’s Sam (Hauser) going to his wedding last summer, whether it’s Payton (Pritchard), who’s getting married here soon, J.T. J.B. (Jaylen Brown), Luke Kornet, actually one of the best guys in the league, one of the best teammates I’ve ever had. Al (Horford) being my vet.

    “It’s definitely nostalgic seeing those guys and it’s also fun competing against them.”

    Of course, Williams made sure to let Tatum know all about it during their individual battles. A little trash talk between the two was in the cards, when they guarded each other, injecting some spice into an otherwise mundane late-season matchup featuring a pair of teams going in the opposite direction.

    “Grant always has got some – – – – to say,” Tatum said. “But as I was just saying, that’s my brother for life. It’s cool. I don’t talk trash at all, but if it’s somebody I’m close with, that I know, like today with Grant, I like to have fun out there. So, it’s always good to see him, competing against him. So, we just had some fun out there.”

    Lots of it, apparently.

    “Him and D-White (Derrick White) constantly called me a hack and I’m always like ya’ll are hacks and you just don’t get called for it because you are superstars,” Williams said. “ And I always tease them about that, because I think he was saying I was fouling K.P. (Kristaps Porzingis) or something like that. And I was just like, ‘Hey man, you fouled A.P. (Aleksej Pokuševski) and Brandon (Miller) on two possessions in a row, and they just didn’t call a foul on you because you are light-skinned and you think you are pretty.’ But that’s all it was.”

    Getting moved to the Hornets, along with Seth Curry in exchange for PJ Washington and playing for the team he grew up rooting for has been a good thing for Williams. Entrenched in the Hornets’ reserve unit since his arrival, he’s come off the bench in all but five of the 24 games. But with Nick Richards sitting out due to right plantar fascia, adding another body to their injury-riddled roster, Williams got the starting nod at center, making the Hornets awfully small against Boston’s big front line led by Horford and Porzingis.

    Versatility is just one of the things Williams has brought to the Hornets during his short tenure. He’s boosted them in other areas, too, and even his former coach picked up on it during film study preparing for Boston’s date with the Hornets.

    Charlotte Hornets forward Grant Williams, left and Boston Celtics forward/center Al Horford, right, catch up with one another prior to the team’s game at Spectrum Center in Charlotte, NC on Monday, April 1, 2024.
    Charlotte Hornets forward Grant Williams, left and Boston Celtics forward/center Al Horford, right, catch up with one another prior to the team’s game at Spectrum Center in Charlotte, NC on Monday, April 1, 2024. JEFF SINER jsiner@charlotteobserver.com

    “I’ve seen just his playmaking,” Celtics coach Joe Mazzulla said. ”He’s really good against the switch, creates some indecision for you on whether you should switch or not switch with his ability to go fake and his screen angles.

    “And then they are running some off-ball stuff to where he facilitates at the elbow for (Miles) Bridges. And I think that’s one of the biggest keys versus him, is really have communication versus the coverage so he doesn’t take advantage of it.”

    Praise for Williams comes from all directions, which doesn’t fall in line with the premise that he’s supposedly bad for team chemistry. His value behind the scenes hasn’t gone unnoticed, particularly from the man roaming the Hornets’ sidelines.

    “He’s great,” coach Steve Clifford said. “He’s very verbal and very upbeat. He’s a terrific competitor, which to me is the No. 1 thing you look for. So, you never have to worry about his effort. He’s always on top of the game plan. He plays a very physical, intelligent game. With us, because it’s a different role than he’s had in Boston or in Dallas, you’re getting to see he has a playmaking aspect of his game that just, again, because of what we need him to do, he gets a chance to do well.”

    And provide a boost in areas of need.

    “So much of defense just starts with talking, and he’s good at it,” Clifford said. “I think the biggest thing he’s brought for us is the physicality part. He’s getting a chance here to play more as a playmaker, which he’s done a good job with. It’s a good fit and it’s a good opportunity for him, too.

    “It’s a little different with our team. He’s not out there with Tatum and Brown or he’s not out there with Dončić and Kyrie (Irving). So, it’s different.”

    And a role Williams is eager to run with. He has three years and $40.8 million remaining on the deal he inked last summer, likely tying him with the Hornets for the immediate future. Barring something unexpected, he should be a part of the Hornets moving forward, providing him with the chance to help turn the franchise around and finally send it in the right direction.

    Incorporating lessons learned in Boston could eventually greatly benefit the Hornets.

    “When you are on the team, you don’t realize how good they are,” Williams said. “But when you go against them, you realize what it was like to get to that level, to be winning at that rate every single night. Because we had a decent game. It’s not like we played terrible on the offensive end.

    “But we’ve got to do a better job of honing in on the defensive side of the basketball, too, and it shows we have a ways to go. But I’m excited about this team, and when we get all our guys and a full deck to play against them next year.”

    Roderick Boone joined the Observer in September 2021 to cover the Charlotte Hornets and NBA. In his more than two decades of writing about the world of sports, he’s chronicled everything from high school rodeo to a major league baseball no-hitter to the Super Bowl to the Finals. The Long Island native has deep North Carolina roots and enjoys watching “The Fresh Prince of Bel Air” endlessly.
    Support my work with a digital subscription

    Roderick Boone

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  • Jayson Tatum cooks Knicks, again, with 35-point performance in Celtics victory

    Jayson Tatum cooks Knicks, again, with 35-point performance in Celtics victory

    BOSTON — It’s hard to beat the Celtics when Jayson Tatum is this good.

    Tatum had 18 points through the first three quarters before scoring 17 in the fourth period alone to finish with 35 points in the Celtics’ 114-98 victory over the Knicks at the TD Garden on Monday.

    The All-Star forward shot 13-of-23 from the field and 5-of-12 from downtown while also logging seven assists and six rebounds on the night.

    “A player like that, of that caliber, you’ve gotta give him a lot of credit,” said Knicks star Jalen Brunson. “He hits shots like that, makes it look easy. We’re playing good defense. He’s making tough shots. I think next time, we’ve gotta be more prepared and be ready to adjust a little bit, but you’ve just gotta give him a lot of credit.”

    Tatum’s fourth-quarter run started two minutes into the period when the Knicks fought back from a 10-point third-quarter deficit. Isolated on the left wing against Josh Hart, who got the start in place of RJ Barrett (migraine), Tatum lowered his shoulder, took a dribble into Hart’s chest then stepped back for a mid-range two.

    Two minutes later he did the same thing, only this time from the left wing for a step-back three over Hart’s contest. The Knicks had cut the Celtics lead to just three before Tatum’s shot stunted their momentum.

    Tatum did his damage in spurts. Two minutes later, he shed Hart on a top-of-the-key screen, then lost Mitchell Robinson with an in-and-out before euro-stepping around help defender Immanuel Quickley for a layup at the rim.

    Then came the daggers: a step-back three over Robinson, a side-step corner three over Julius Randle, and a wide-open three as the shot clock sounded to put the icing on the cake and give the Celtics a 17-point lead with a minute left in regulation.

    “He’s a great player, he’s a great scorer,” said Randle. “The game always balances out or evens out. Josh, the other guys, did a good job of making it tough for him. Unfortunately, he got it rolling there in the end. He hit some deep threes there, too.”

    Tatum is now averaging 34.5 points through two games against the Knicks after hanging 34 in the season opener at Madison Square Garden.

    “Yeah, obviously a great player. Try to make him work,” said Knicks head coach Tom Thibodeau. “I thought Josh, Quentin [Grimes], they were there. He’s got the ability to make. And you know. Take a look at the film, see what we can do better.”

    The Knicks don’t play the Celtics again until Feb. 24, well after both the NBA All-Star break and trade deadline.

    That gives them more than three months to come up with a recipe that’ll keep Boston’s top chef from cooking the Knicks the third time around.

    Kristian Winfield

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  • Nets to face the ultimate litmus test against undefeated Boston Celtics

    Nets to face the ultimate litmus test against undefeated Boston Celtics

    The circumstances surrounding Saturday’s game against the Celtics couldn’t be tougher for the Nets.

    Fresh off a four-game road trip ending Friday in Chicago, the Nets will be playing on the second night of their first back-to-back of the season. Boston, meanwhile, comes to Barclays Center fresh, having last suited up Wednesday.

    The Nets are still nursing key injuries, with the calf strain Cam Johnson suffered in the first game of the season set to be re-evaluated next week. Nic Claxton, who sprained an ankle in the season opener, also hasn’t played since.

    That’s not to mention the reloaded Celtics are really, really good. They’re a legit 4-0 with their margin of victory increasing in every win — most recently with a 51-point blowout of the Indiana Pacers.

    It all adds up to Saturday being the ultimate early-season stress test for the new-look Nets.

    Now 10 months removed from the Kevin Durant and Kyrie Irving era, the superstar-less Nets have largely lived up to their manta of competing with effort and depth. They hung close in losses to the playoff-contending Cavaliers and Mavericks; cruised to a convincing win over the less-talented Hornets; and had unlikely heroes emerge in a comeback victory over the defending Eastern Conference champions, the Miami Heat.

    Boston is a different animal, boasting superstar talent at the top and enviable depth to supplement it.

    Jayson Tatum is off to another stellar start, averaging 29.8 points, 9.3 rebounds and 4.0 assists. Fellow well-rounded wing Jaylen Brown is also playing at an All-Star pace, averaging 22.5 points, 6.3 rebounds and a team-leading 1.5 steals. Both are plus defenders, as is battle-tested point guard Jrue Holiday, the five-time All-Defensive Team selection whom Boston acquired right before the season.

    The Celtics’ other All-Star addition over the offseason, Kristaps Porzingis, has also made an immediate impact. The matchup-nightmare center is averaging 18.8 points and sank a game-winning three-pointer against his original team, the Knicks, in Boston’s season opener.

    How the rebuilt Nets, even in their undermanned state, hold up against the juggernaut Celtics will say much about their work-in-progress identity and how they measure up against the East’s elite.

    Kristaps Porzingis was one of the Boston Celtics’ big additions over the offseason. (Maddie Meyer/Getty Images)

    Can they make life difficult for standout scorers like Tatum and Brown, who excel at getting to the basket and are both shooting above 40% from three? Throughout the preseason, the Nets preached their potential as a lockdown defense, with the lanky Mikal Bridges, Ben Simmons and Dorian Finney-Smith among those capable of guarding multiple positions.

    They’ve struggled thus far against opposing All-Stars, however, with Cleveland’s Donovan Mitchell scoring 27 points on 11-of-21 shooting and Dallas’ Luka Doncic exploding for 49 points on 16-of-25. Both dominated down the stretches of their games and finished off victories with go-ahead three-pointers. Brooklyn fared better against Miami’s Jimmy Butler, who put up 20 points on 7-of-16 shooting and was held scoreless over the final four minutes.

    Can Cam Thomas deliver another offensive outburst? The 22-year-old sensation scored at least 30 points in each of the Nets’ first three games but came back to Earth against defensive-minded Miami, struggling to find any rhythm in an ugly 13-point effort on 4-of-19 shooting. It only gets harder against Holiday and company.

    The 6-3 Thomas’ defense could also prove a liability against capable backcourt scorers in Holiday and Derrick White.

    Will the Nets have an answer for Porzingis? They certainly didn’t against another uniquely talented — albeit very different — All-Star center in Miami’s uber-athletic Bam Adebayo, who scored 21 points on 8-of-12 shooting and grabbed 14 rebounds. The Nets repeatedly rolled out a small starting lineup without the 6-10 Claxton, with the 6-7 Finney-Smith suiting up as the de facto center. That won’t cut it against the 7-3 Porzingis, who is shooting 45% from three.

    Boston Celtics' Jayson Tatum plays against the Brooklyn Nets during the second half of an NBA basketball game, Friday, March 3, 2023, in Boston. (Michael Dwyer/AP)
    Jayson Tatum, pictured here in the Boston Celtics’ March 3 game against the Nets last season, is off to another strong start. (Michael Dwyer/AP)

    And can Bridges rise to the occasion and keep up with Boston’s stars? Bridges, who last season averaged 26.1 points in the 27 games after the Nets acquired him in the Durant trade, saw that mark drop to 20.8 through the first four games of this season.

    Bridges has spoken about his desire to emerge as the Nets’ go-to guy. After being held scoreless in the fourth quarter of the Dallas loss, Bridges stepped up as Brooklyn’s closer in the win over Miami, scoring nine of the Nets’ final 11 points and assisting on the other two.

    The schedule-makers did the Nets no favors to start the season, between the early four-game road trip and a downright brutal upcoming stretch in which they host the Celtics on Saturday, the Bucks on Monday and the Clippers on Wednesday before traveling to Boston for another bout with the Celtics next Friday.

    “I want us to embrace that,” Nets coach Jacque Vaugn said last month of the tough schedule. “It’s extremely important for us to be ready to play at the beginning of this year to kind of set an avenue, a tone, for us going forward.”

    Saturday marks his team’s greatest litmus test yet.

    Peter Sblendorio

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  • Thunder blow out Celtics 150-117 without Gilgeous-Alexander

    Thunder blow out Celtics 150-117 without Gilgeous-Alexander

    OKLAHOMA CITY — Oklahoma City’s top scorer was out, so everybody pitched in to make things work.

    Josh Giddey scored a season-high 25 points and the short-handed Oklahoma City Thunder blew out the NBA-leading Boston Celtics 150-117 on Tuesday night.

    Oklahoma City’s Shai Gilgeous-Alexander, who ranks among the league’s leaders with 30.8 points per game, sat out with an illness. Without him, the Thunder set a record for points since the team moved to Oklahoma City from Seattle before the 2008-2009 season. The previous mark was 149 points in 2013.

    Lu Dort scored 23 points and Jalen Williams, Tre Mann and Isaiah Joe each added 21 points for the Thunder. They shot 59.2% from the field.

    It was a record-tying performance. Including playoffs, it was the 18th time in NBA history that a team had five players score at least 21 points in a game. The most recent instance was also by Oklahoma City, when Steven Adams, Danilo Gallinari, Chris Paul, Dennis Schröder and Gilgeous-Alexander did it against Minnesota on Dec. 6, 2019.

    “I just think we’ve got great players and great people,” Mann said. “Guys who don’t really care who gets the credit.”

    The Thunder hadn’t won a game by more than 16 points and the Celtics hadn’t lost by more than 16 this season. Oklahoma City coach Mark Daigneault said the result came from his team’s approach.

    “I told them after the game, I want them to realize what got it going, which was we had a great practice yesterday, came into the game with great focus on both ends of the floor, what we had to do, and that’s what allowed us to have fun tonight,” he said. “And we can’t lose sight of that.”

    Oklahoma City took advantage of the fact that Robert Williams, one of Boston’s primary rim protectors, was out managing his injured left knee. The Thunder made 38 of 58 shots inside the 3-point line.

    “You have to play with a sense of humility every night knowing your opponent wants to beat you,” Celtics coach Joe Mazzulla said. “We have to match that, and we didn’t. We got outplayed in every aspect of the game.”

    Jaylen Brown scored 29 points for Boston, and Jayson Tatum added 27.

    The Thunder led 74-54 at halftime behind Joe’s 17 points on 6-for-9 shooting. Oklahoma City shot 57% in the first half. The Celtics trailed big, despite Brown’s 18 points in the first half.

    A 10-0 run put Oklahoma City ahead 90-63 just over three minutes into the second half, and the game was never close after that. The Thunder scored 48 points in the third quarter — the most ever for an Oklahoma City team in a quarter — and shot 67.9% in the third to lead 122-91 heading into the fourth.

    Oklahoma City’s largest lead was 37 points.

    “Late in the second quarter, they sort of put their head down, Boston did, and they got to the line and they were trying to play through us and they were just trying to like jam their way back into the game,” Daigneault said. “And we needed to stand in there in order to fend that off. And I thought the guys did a really good job of that.”

    TIP-INS

    Celtics: Mazzulla and G Marcus Smart attended the Oklahoma State-West Virginia game Tuesday in Stillwater and sat together. Smart played college ball for Oklahoma State and Mazzulla played for West Virginia. Oklahoma State won 67-60. … Smart was called for a technical in the second quarter and ejected in the third for berating an official.

    Thunder: Even Oklahoma City’s fans were hitting shots from deep. Johnnie Durossette, a 20-year-old from Muskogee, Oklahoma, made the MidFirst Bank halfcourt shot during a timeout to win $20,000. … F Aaron Wiggins scored 17 points.

    AT HOME

    The Celtics had their shootaround at the Oklahoma City facility where Celtics F Blake Griffin’s AAU basketball program practices. Griffin is from Oklahoma City and he played college ball at the University of Oklahoma.

    UP NEXT

    Celtics: At Dallas on Thursday night.

    Thunder: At Orlando on Wednesday night.

    ———

    Follow Cliff Brunt on Twitter: twitter.com/CliffBruntAP

    ———

    More AP NBA: https://apnews.com/hub/NBA and https://twitter.com/AP—Sports

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  • Leonard, George lead Clippers over NBA-best Celtics, 113-93

    Leonard, George lead Clippers over NBA-best Celtics, 113-93

    LOS ANGELES — Kawhi Leonard came to the bench with a message for his Los Angeles Clippers teammates.

    “Told the guys, ‘Let’s get out and run, let’s play faster,’” coach Tyronn Lue said.

    Behind 26 points from Paul George and Leonard’s season highs of 25 points and nine rebounds, the Clippers routed the NBA-leading Boston Celtics 113-93 on Monday night.

    “When your two best players come back, that’s a lot of energy,” Lue said.

    The Clippers’ defense held the Celtics under 100 points for the first time this season.

    “We did a great job pretty much across the whole board,” George said.

    Leonard also had six assists in his best all-around game of a young season that has been interrupted at times while he eases his way back from ACL surgery that cost him all of last season.

    “Only my ninth game,” Leonard said. “You can’t rush it. Yeah, just got to keep moving.”

    George has been hurt, too, although unlike Leonard, he’s no longer under a minutes restriction.

    “We’re still trying to figure out how we’re going to play on the court with one another,” George said. “It’s just good if both of us are playing aggressive.”

    Jaylen Brown scored 21 points to lead the Celtics, who dropped two in a row for only the second time this season. They had won eight of 10, including a loss at Golden State on Saturday. Jayson Tatum added 20 points — well below his 30-point average — and 11 rebounds, and Malcolm Brogdon had 18 points off the bench.

    “We made a conscious effort to make sure Tatum and Brown played in a crowd all night,” Lue said.

    Having the Celtics and their 21-7 record in town drew one of the Clippers’ biggest crowds of the season and created a playoff-like atmosphere. Boston fans showed out in the same colored gear as Marcus Smart’s green-hued hair.

    But the Clippers made most of the noise.

    Coming off a 2-2 East Coast trip, Los Angeles used a few big runs and solid defense to control the first half and take a 56-47 lead at the break.

    Leonard and George came out shooting to start the third. They each hit a 3-pointer while combining for 13 straight points that extended the lead to 69-55. Luke Kennard came off the bench and keyed a 7-0 run late, hitting a 3 before John Wall’s jumper put the Clippers ahead 88-72 going into the fourth.

    George and Leonard combined for seven straight points in the fourth and Kennard kept hitting, too, pushing the Clippers’ lead to 104-80.

    “How he played was huge, just seeing him get his rhythm back,” Lue said of Leonard. “The last couple games just playing with more pace. He’s been feeling good.”

    The biggest roar came when Smart missed a pair of free throws, ensuring fans free chicken sandwiches. Smart finished with three points and five fouls.

    George and Leonard were part of the Clippers’ 17-8 spurt in the second. Los Angeles ran off 11 points in a row as part of a 20-3 burst in the first.

    TIP-INS

    Celtics: Al Horford (personal reasons) is expected to rejoin the team when it returns home this weekend. … Former Clipper Blake Griffin started in Horford’s place. He picked up a technical foul in the second quarter for grabbing the net.

    Clippers: Norman Powell (left groin strain) is progressing well in individual workouts, but there’s no timetable for his return. … Ivica Zubac was a game-time decision to start after experiencing right groin soreness in Saturday’s game. He had four points, three rebounds and five fouls in 17 minutes.

    UP NEXT

    Celtics: At the Los Angeles Lakers on Tuesday in the second game of a back-to-back on Boston’s second-longest road trip of the season.

    Clippers: Host the Minnesota Timberwolves on Wednesday in the second of five straight home games.

    ———

    AP NBA: https://apnews.com/hub/NBA and https://twitter.com/AP—Sports

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