Current:Home > Contact'Partners in crime:' Boston Celtics stud duo proves doubters wrong en route to NBA title -FutureWise Finance
'Partners in crime:' Boston Celtics stud duo proves doubters wrong en route to NBA title
View
Date:2025-04-14 22:27:40
BOSTON — Jayson Tatum and Jaylen Brown are not a dynamic duo. That would imply that one is Batman and one is Robin, that one is the hero and the other is the sidekick.
Rather, as Brown put it, the two are “partners in crime.” They’ve always been great individually, but now they’ve proven they can be great together. Sure, their dynamic is unorthodox. But you have to admit it works.
Now, they have an NBA title to prove it. Despite Tatum’s supreme skills — few in the NBA can match his combined scoring prowess, offensive creativity and abilities on the defensive end — Brown feels like the engine that keeps the Celtics running. He makes the big shot when his team needs it. Emotionally, Boston goes as Brown goes.
For many of the seven seasons they’ve played together, onlookers have thought this could present a problem. After all, only one player can be “the guy,” right?
Wrong.
The Boston Celtics have proved the functionality of their team structure. They dominated teams all season. They cruised through the playoffs. And they finished it off with a definitive statement win over the Dallas Mavericks in Game 5 of the NBA Finals.
“This was a full team effort,” Brown said. “We came out and just performed on our home floor."
Tatum and Brown absolutely owned the floor on Monday night. Tatum had his best game of the Finals in Game 5, scoring 31 points to go along with 11 assists and eight rebounds. Brown wasn’t far behind, totaling 21 points, eight rebounds and six assists.
Tatum (22.2 points per game) and Brown (20.8) led the Celtics in NBA Finals scoring. Tatum, who also edged Brown slightly in both rebounds and assists, impacted the series in multiple ways while he struggled to consistently make shots. Brown, who was named Finals MVP, seemed to always come up with the timely buckets in the meantime.
"(The Finals MVP) could have gone to Jayson," Brown said. "I can’t talk enough about his selflessness and attitude. We did it together, and that was the most important thing.”
The pair played off one another in a way they hadn’t before this season. Perhaps that can be attributed to familiarity. Maybe maturity.
Whatever the case, it was a sight to behold — and a matchup to beware for the rest of the NBA.
“We’ve been through a lot,” Brown said of his relationship with Tatum. “The losses, the expectations, the media. People saying we can’t play together, we can’t win. We just blacked it out. He trusted me and I trusted him. And we did it together.”
The championship is a culmination for Tatum and Brown after years of external uncertainty that the two could coexist.
The duo fell short in the 2022 Finals to the Golden State Warriors. They failed to advance past the Miami Heat in last year’s Eastern Conference Final. On both occasions, they were eliminated at home.
Many in Boston wondered whether the Celtics would move on from Brown instead of signing him to a record, five-year supermax extension just 11 months ago.
“They get scturinized so much,” Jrue Holiday said of Tatum and Brown. “They get so much pressure put on them for not winning and not getting over that hump. People can finally see the relationship they have. From the beginning, they’ve always done it together. Hopefully (the championship) is a burden off of their shoulders.
“Another burden is doing it again.”
veryGood! (188)
Related
- Buckingham Palace staff under investigation for 'bar brawl'
- Ex-Marlins owner Jeffrey Loria: Derek Jeter 'destroyed' stadium by removing HR sculpture
- Chrisley Family Announces New Reality Show Amid Todd and Julie's Prison Sentences
- A landmark case: In first-of-its-kind Montana climate trial, judge rules for youth activists
- The Grammy nominee you need to hear: Esperanza Spalding
- Full transcript of Face the Nation, August 13, 2023
- Inmate dead after incarceration at Georgia jail under federal investigation
- Glover beats Cantlay in playoff in FedEx Cup opener for second straight win
- Angelina Jolie nearly fainted making Maria Callas movie: 'My body wasn’t strong enough'
- Drugs and prostitution in the office: 'Telemarketers' doc illuminates world you don't know
Ranking
- Israel lets Palestinians go back to northern Gaza for first time in over a year as cease
- 3 Maryland vacationers killed and 3 more hurt in house fire in North Carolina’s Outer Banks
- Another inmate dies in Fulton County Jail which is under federal investigation
- How — and when — is best to donate to those affected by the Maui wildfires?
- As Trump Enters Office, a Ripe Oil and Gas Target Appears: An Alabama National Forest
- 16 people injured after boat explodes at Lake of the Ozarks in Missouri
- Chicago mayor names the police department’s counterterrorism head as new police superintendent
- Michael Oher, Subject of Blind Side, Says Tuohy Family Earned Millions After Lying About Adoption
Recommendation
Bodycam footage shows high
James McBride's 'Heaven & Earth' is an all-American mix of prejudice and hope
Judge sides with young activists in first-of-its-kind climate change trial in Montana
Community with high medical debt questions its hospitals' charity spending
The company planning a successor to Concorde makes its first supersonic test
Man sentenced for abandoning baby after MLB pitcher Dennis Eckersley’s daughter gave birth in woods
Mother arrested after 10-year-old found dead in garbage can at Illinois home, officials say
More states expect schools to keep trans girls off girls teams as K-12 classes resume