All the quotes and media face time he’s been getting during the ASB can come back to haunt him if they at the very least don’t make the Finals.
Real Gs move in silence like lasagna.
langjie
INDIANAPOLIS — Every trip to the gas station is a scavenger hunt for Jayson Tatum. Sure, he’s there to fill up the Rolls, but the real trophy of all his success and accomplishments is in the snack aisle.
Sitting among all the snacks he used to have as a kid, there is a bag of chips with his face on them.
“If we’re at a gas station, I always still buy my bag of chips because I used to dream about moments like these,” Tatum said with a smile.
Basketball is normal for him, no matter the stage. The court is one place that has stayed the same. It’s everything else that comes with the job that has taken some getting used to.
“It was never about the money and the cars and being famous or that lifestyle,” said Tatum. “I truly love the game because I love basketball, not for all the things that come with it. There’s a lot of people that play the game and get caught up in the lifestyle and choose that over the game.”
But as Tatum turns 26 next month and starts to enter what should be his prime, he is starting to think big picture. He can sense his career mortality off in the distance. What will his basketball journey mean in the end?
“I’ve realized that more now, just because I blinked and I remember my first game like it was yesterday,” Tatum said. “So, now to be in year seven, and I still feel super young, I can see a time when this s— can come to an end. I’m just trying to maximize that window.”
While Tatum has spent almost every season of his career looking at the precipice of a championship, his closest call resulted in his biggest epiphany.
It was in the 2022 NBA Finals, when Draymond Green, Andrew Wiggins and the Warriors completely took him out of his game. Tatum had grown into a good enough playmaker to run the offense, but not to go all the way. He had to learn to get comfortable playing slower to manipulate the defense and dominate with his physicality.
It was a similar moment to his junior year of high school, when he lost in the Missouri state semifinals as the defense doubled him and took the ball out of his hands. A dejected Tatum was back in the gym the next day, instead of taking time off, as he worked toward winning the title the following season.
Some years later, he was facing a similar problem at the highest level. He didn’t know how to manipulate double teams to get his teammates consistently open so the Celtics offense wouldn’t shut down. Now that he had seen what winning a championship was like up close, he set out to spend the summer focused on becoming a new player.
Tatum had turned to golf as an escape from the work in the gym and the practice court, but decided to put his clubs away after the Finals. No distractions.
“The easiest way to say it is, I was devastated,” Tatum said. “I got so close and didn’t perform the way I wanted to, and we didn’t win. At that time, besides my family, nothing else mattered but getting better and getting back to that point.”
While Tatum led Boston to a Game 1 victory by racking up a career-high 13 assists, he couldn’t keep that going for an entire series. He had to learn how to really run an offense.
That summer taught Tatum to appreciate moving the ball as part of a big picture, rather than just a way to solve a defense possession-by-possession. With an overhauled roster designed to maximize his evolution as a game manager, the Celtics have been the best team in the NBA all season.
“As good we are, they’re still going to try to double-team me,” Tatum said. “It’s all about just getting that pick, I draw two on me, throw it over the top to Jrue (Holiday) or (Derrick) White, and they kick it to open shooters. If we do that four or five times in a row, they have to change what they’re doing.”
That was the key for Tatum, learning how to think the game as a 48-minute chess match rather than a point-for-point battle. As Tatum grew into a creator and the team finally moved on from pairing him with a star point guard, he had the ball in his hands more than ever.
The hard part was accepting that responsibility also meant giving it up.
“It’s just about trusting that it’s going to come back,” Tatum said. “I’m going to get my shots, get my points. It’s just about trusting the process. It’s tough when you’re younger, you just want everything to happen so fast and how you want it to happen, but it don’t work like that.”
Tatum’s maturation is happening in parallel to his teammate and fellow All-Star Jaylen Brown, who has likewise adapted to the demands of helping carry the franchise. When the keys to the franchise were first handed to the Jays, the debate over whether they could play together dominated the Celtics’ narrative.
But the oversimplification that they are both scoring wings missed two crucial factors. The first was that they were in the middle of the leap from off the ball to running the offense. The more important distinction is their tempo and rhythm.
Brown often explodes when the game starts, getting out into transition early on and bringing the pressure on defense. Tatum tends to work his way into the game as it goes on and prefers this dynamic.
“I think it’s just our personalities, right?” Tatum said. “JB, ever since I’ve been on the team, he’s always just come out and started the game really aggressive. That plays to his advantage; that’s the way he gets his juices flowing. I’m a naturally laid-back guy. I kind of see things out first; and then, I find a way to impact the game when I need to, and we’ve found that balance.”
Tatum essentially has a schedule for how he manages the game. He might not even take a shot for the first few minutes as Brown seizes control and Kristaps Porziņģis draws attention in the pick-and-roll.
There are a few of those step-back heat checks from Tatum in the opening stanza of the game. He rarely sizes up a defender in space and then tries to barrel his way through defenses.
He saves that for the bridge, those moments in the middle of each half where he’s facing second-unit defenders and knows he can make a few 3s to shift the flow of the game.
“I know JB and KP are usually gonna start off more hot in the first quarter,” Tatum said. “Not that I play decoy — but I just understand to let them do their thing to open up the game for me. I know I can essentially take over when I need to and I just didn’t think like that earlier in my career.”
Vast-Cheesecake7230
Love it. He gets it. He is ready for it. Let’s just hope the health gods are with us. He’s arrived.
JaylenBrownAllStar
They just need to be healthy but I trust them in the moment
They have won close games, bad nights shooting the ball, having to go to the FT line, using defense, or just straight up dominating the whole game
They have done it all in the regular season, now we wait for the first round and we will see how motivated they are and what they have truly learned
giono11
What does he have to do to become the face of the league. Feels like there’s so many guys ahead of him already one chip won’t be enough
RepeatDTD
Tatum SHOULD be the next in line for face of the league but I sadly don’t think he ever will be while guys like Giannis and Luka are playing. For the record I like Tatum’s two way game MUCH more than Giannis’s bullyball and Luka’s glorified old man YMCA style but JT just doesn’t get the love nationally that he should. Hell, r/nba voted SGA as a better overall player and that dude has a face made for a children’s cereal box.
JT is a handsome, wholesome dude who can fucking score on and lockdown your favorite player but the national Anti-Boston & aLwAyS-oN-a-sUpEr-TeAm sentiments will forever cloud the narrative around him.
Edit: Also…he’s gotta win a title.
Yichuanxi
Does he understand what NBA face means? I doubt it
Nsfwaccount123xd
One chip doesn’t make you the face. It’s about consistently being in the best in the world convo for several years.
iacceptjadensmith
I pray he stops entertaining this shit, if we dont win this year after all this rhetoric you’re going to end up as a bleacher report meme
Zizzlow
I love Tatum but realistically he just isn’t up there with Luka. This boy is so unique and special and not even in his prime yet. Hate to say it but as long as he’s around and healthy he’ll be the face of this league no doubt about it, he’s just too special.
11 Comments
All the quotes and media face time he’s been getting during the ASB can come back to haunt him if they at the very least don’t make the Finals.
Real Gs move in silence like lasagna.
INDIANAPOLIS — Every trip to the gas station is a scavenger hunt for Jayson Tatum. Sure, he’s there to fill up the Rolls, but the real trophy of all his success and accomplishments is in the snack aisle.
Sitting among all the snacks he used to have as a kid, there is a bag of chips with his face on them.
“If we’re at a gas station, I always still buy my bag of chips because I used to dream about moments like these,” Tatum said with a smile.
Basketball is normal for him, no matter the stage. The court is one place that has stayed the same. It’s everything else that comes with the job that has taken some getting used to.
“It was never about the money and the cars and being famous or that lifestyle,” said Tatum. “I truly love the game because I love basketball, not for all the things that come with it. There’s a lot of people that play the game and get caught up in the lifestyle and choose that over the game.”
But as Tatum turns 26 next month and starts to enter what should be his prime, he is starting to think big picture. He can sense his career mortality off in the distance. What will his basketball journey mean in the end?
“I’ve realized that more now, just because I blinked and I remember my first game like it was yesterday,” Tatum said. “So, now to be in year seven, and I still feel super young, I can see a time when this s— can come to an end. I’m just trying to maximize that window.”
While Tatum has spent almost every season of his career looking at the precipice of a championship, his closest call resulted in his biggest epiphany.
It was in the 2022 NBA Finals, when Draymond Green, Andrew Wiggins and the Warriors completely took him out of his game. Tatum had grown into a good enough playmaker to run the offense, but not to go all the way. He had to learn to get comfortable playing slower to manipulate the defense and dominate with his physicality.
It was a similar moment to his junior year of high school, when he lost in the Missouri state semifinals as the defense doubled him and took the ball out of his hands. A dejected Tatum was back in the gym the next day, instead of taking time off, as he worked toward winning the title the following season.
Some years later, he was facing a similar problem at the highest level. He didn’t know how to manipulate double teams to get his teammates consistently open so the Celtics offense wouldn’t shut down. Now that he had seen what winning a championship was like up close, he set out to spend the summer focused on becoming a new player.
Tatum had turned to golf as an escape from the work in the gym and the practice court, but decided to put his clubs away after the Finals. No distractions.
“The easiest way to say it is, I was devastated,” Tatum said. “I got so close and didn’t perform the way I wanted to, and we didn’t win. At that time, besides my family, nothing else mattered but getting better and getting back to that point.”
While Tatum led Boston to a Game 1 victory by racking up a career-high 13 assists, he couldn’t keep that going for an entire series. He had to learn how to really run an offense.
That summer taught Tatum to appreciate moving the ball as part of a big picture, rather than just a way to solve a defense possession-by-possession. With an overhauled roster designed to maximize his evolution as a game manager, the Celtics have been the best team in the NBA all season.
“As good we are, they’re still going to try to double-team me,” Tatum said. “It’s all about just getting that pick, I draw two on me, throw it over the top to Jrue (Holiday) or (Derrick) White, and they kick it to open shooters. If we do that four or five times in a row, they have to change what they’re doing.”
That was the key for Tatum, learning how to think the game as a 48-minute chess match rather than a point-for-point battle. As Tatum grew into a creator and the team finally moved on from pairing him with a star point guard, he had the ball in his hands more than ever.
The hard part was accepting that responsibility also meant giving it up.
“It’s just about trusting that it’s going to come back,” Tatum said. “I’m going to get my shots, get my points. It’s just about trusting the process. It’s tough when you’re younger, you just want everything to happen so fast and how you want it to happen, but it don’t work like that.”
Tatum’s maturation is happening in parallel to his teammate and fellow All-Star Jaylen Brown, who has likewise adapted to the demands of helping carry the franchise. When the keys to the franchise were first handed to the Jays, the debate over whether they could play together dominated the Celtics’ narrative.
But the oversimplification that they are both scoring wings missed two crucial factors. The first was that they were in the middle of the leap from off the ball to running the offense. The more important distinction is their tempo and rhythm.
Brown often explodes when the game starts, getting out into transition early on and bringing the pressure on defense. Tatum tends to work his way into the game as it goes on and prefers this dynamic.
“I think it’s just our personalities, right?” Tatum said. “JB, ever since I’ve been on the team, he’s always just come out and started the game really aggressive. That plays to his advantage; that’s the way he gets his juices flowing. I’m a naturally laid-back guy. I kind of see things out first; and then, I find a way to impact the game when I need to, and we’ve found that balance.”
Tatum essentially has a schedule for how he manages the game. He might not even take a shot for the first few minutes as Brown seizes control and Kristaps Porziņģis draws attention in the pick-and-roll.
There are a few of those step-back heat checks from Tatum in the opening stanza of the game. He rarely sizes up a defender in space and then tries to barrel his way through defenses.
He saves that for the bridge, those moments in the middle of each half where he’s facing second-unit defenders and knows he can make a few 3s to shift the flow of the game.
“I know JB and KP are usually gonna start off more hot in the first quarter,” Tatum said. “Not that I play decoy — but I just understand to let them do their thing to open up the game for me. I know I can essentially take over when I need to and I just didn’t think like that earlier in my career.”
Love it. He gets it. He is ready for it. Let’s just hope the health gods are with us. He’s arrived.
They just need to be healthy but I trust them in the moment
They have won close games, bad nights shooting the ball, having to go to the FT line, using defense, or just straight up dominating the whole game
They have done it all in the regular season, now we wait for the first round and we will see how motivated they are and what they have truly learned
What does he have to do to become the face of the league. Feels like there’s so many guys ahead of him already one chip won’t be enough
Tatum SHOULD be the next in line for face of the league but I sadly don’t think he ever will be while guys like Giannis and Luka are playing. For the record I like Tatum’s two way game MUCH more than Giannis’s bullyball and Luka’s glorified old man YMCA style but JT just doesn’t get the love nationally that he should. Hell, r/nba voted SGA as a better overall player and that dude has a face made for a children’s cereal box.
JT is a handsome, wholesome dude who can fucking score on and lockdown your favorite player but the national Anti-Boston & aLwAyS-oN-a-sUpEr-TeAm sentiments will forever cloud the narrative around him.
Edit: Also…he’s gotta win a title.
Does he understand what NBA face means? I doubt it
One chip doesn’t make you the face. It’s about consistently being in the best in the world convo for several years.
I pray he stops entertaining this shit, if we dont win this year after all this rhetoric you’re going to end up as a bleacher report meme
I love Tatum but realistically he just isn’t up there with Luka. This boy is so unique and special and not even in his prime yet. Hate to say it but as long as he’s around and healthy he’ll be the face of this league no doubt about it, he’s just too special.
He has the popular vote