Celtics training camp is different this year — how Joe Mazzulla, Jaylen Brown are setting the tone

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BOSTON, Mass. Joe Mazzulla understands that things are going to look different this season.

There’s no Al Horford nor Luke Kornet, both of whom served as fixtures of his Celtics’ tenure. No Jrue Holiday nor Kristaps Porzingis, veteran voices of the Banner 18 team who were traded away in an offseason overhaul.

And Jayson Tatum, out for most, if not all, of the season as he recovers from an Achilles rupture, is sidelined (though in the building, tirelessly focused on his rehab).

But, despite the absences, the Auerbach Center — the Celtics’ home base and practice facility — doesn’t feel empty.

It feels full.

Training camp is teeming with an influx of younger talent, from Anfernee Simons — the Portland Trail Blazers’ leading scorer for the past two seasons — to more unproven players like Luka Garza and Josh Minott, who have shown plenty of promise in their early days. Longtime Toronto Raptors big man Chris Boucher and rookie Hugo Gonzalez round out the new additions.

“This is a different vibe of training camp with a lot younger guys than before, so we got after it,” said Xavier Tillman, who is entering his third season with the Celtics. “[We’re] running around a lot, coaches screaming, you’re kind of just turning your head getting to the next spot. But it was fun. It was good.”

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Sam Cassell, the Celtics’ top assistant coach, said on 98.5 Sports Hub that he’s never seen a training camp quite like this one.

“I’ve been in this business 34 years,” Cassell said. “And this is the hardest training camp [I’ve seen] right now.”

With so much talent out the door, the Celtics recognize the importance of being the hardest-playing, most connected team. That process started 12 weeks ago.

Camp is the culmination of a summer of tireless work


This summer, most Celtics players have been in the building for months. That wasn’t the case last offseason, when the team was fresh off a championship and three players played for the Olympic basketball team.

Tatum and Brown both rehabbed their respective offseason surgeries in Boston. Payton Pritchard spent some time in Cape Cod, Spain, and Oregon, but he’s been working out daily in the Auerbach Center since August.

Derrick White was in Colorado for much of the offseason, but returned last month as well. Neemias Queta was in Portugal — and then Latvia, for EuroBasket — but shot back to Beantown upon the tournament’s conclusion.

And, the younger guys — Baylor Scheierman, Jordan Walsh, Hugo Gonzalez — have since become fixtures of the facility since Summer League concluded in Las Vegas.

“We’ve been here all summer,” Scheierman said, explaining that workouts have brought everyone closer. “All of the guys really have become super comfortable with what the coaches are preaching to us.”

As such, new duos and social dynamics are forming. For example, Xavier Tillman and Luka Garza — once college rivals playing for Michigan State and Iowa, respectively — typically shoot together for 20 to 40 minutes a day.

“Sam [Hauser] calls us the buffaloes,” Tillman said with a smile, explaining he got up a “tireless” amount of three-point shots in the summer after a disappointing 2024-25 season.

Players have been honing in on individual weaknesses ahead of a season where the margin of error will be noticeably thinner. For weeks now, Anfernee Simons has been methodically working on defensive playmaking drills focused on getting in passing lanes, improving defensive positioning, and racking up deflections.

“Those things are things I never really worked on or been taught,” Simons said. “And so I was happy that that was the focus.”

I asked Anfernee Simons about the technique side of improving his defense as he’s spent the last month doing defensive playmaking drills with the coaching staff:

“Those things are things I never really worked on or been taught – and so I was happy that that was the focus.” https://t.co/YLAVtE2TNj pic.twitter.com/ZsKyAPguqv

— Noa Dalzell 🏀 (@NoaDalzell) October 1, 2025

Still, as intense as summer workouts have been to date, things reached another level when camp officially tipped off on Monday.

For one, it’s the first time that the entire roster is present, all at once. And, the intensity and pace immediately picks up. There’s also the collective understanding that real games are inching closer; the Celtics’ preseason officially tips off next Wednesday in Memphis.

“You should have a foundation based on what you’ve been able to do,” Mazzulla said. “So, you’re able to move at a faster pace, you’re able to teach a little bit more. But, really it’s just the intensity and the mindset — this is preseason training camp.”

In the background, Exhibit 10 and two-way players anchor camp​


Alongside the 14 Celtics players who are on standard contracts (five of them brand-new), three training camp attendees are on two-way contracts and four are on training camp (Exhibit 10) deals. The Exhibit 10 players — Kendall Brown, Jalen Bridges, Wendell Moore, and Ron Harper Jr. — are fighting for a more certain NBA opportunity and will join the Maine Celtics at the conclusion of camp. (Brown and Bridges also played on the Celtics’ Summer League team in July).

The two-way players — Max Shulga, Amari Williams, and RJ Luis — are also likely to spend most of the season in Maine. In the meantime, they’re deepening their relationship with Phil Pressey, the first-time head coach of the Celtics’ G-League affiliate, who is at training camp every day.

That means that exactly onethird of training camp participants arrive with the understanding that their days with the parent club are numbered. But, for the weeks that they’re with the team for preseason, they’re just as much a part of the program as anyone else; for example, at the Celtics’ opening day spikeball tournament, Derrick White was paired up with training camp returnee Ron Harper Jr., as the team captured on TikTok. (It’s Harper Jr’s second consecutive year attending Celtics training camp).


At camp, Mazzulla expects the non-rostered players to learn the system and push one another the same as the more high-profile guys on the team.

“It’s the same standard as everyone else,” he said. “Any way they can help us get better — they do that.”

“Everyone’s got to know what they do really matters, and whether it’s the first guy or the 15th guy. If they don’t feel like they’re empowered, [that] they can impact winning, then we just can’t have the balance, and the depth, and the culture that we need.”

Joe Mazzulla, Jaylen Brown prioritize off-court connections​


As he leads training camp, Mazzulla rejects being called ‘coach’ by his players.

“I can’t even explain the relationship,” Simons said. “It’s, like, almost as a mentor.”

That translates to an expedited level of buy-in, Simons explained: “It makes you want to go out there and play for him even more when you have that connection off the court. And he’s really invested in the off-court life.”

Simons said Mazzulla often asks about everyone’s kids. He’s dropped things off at Simons’ new home, making sure that his acclimation to Boston is smooth. He’s learning what makes the new guys tick.

“He takes a lot of time to personalize his relationships with people,” Josh Minott said. “He doesn’t talk to any two people the same way.”

Last month, Mazzulla and several members of the coaching staff attended Chris Boucher’s baptism, a gesture that made the 32-year-old feel like he was officially a part of the “brotherhood.”

“It’s not easy to move and start over again,” Boucher said of his relocation from Toronto. “But Joe really helped me with that. Brad, too. It’s been a really, really, really warm welcome.”

And as such, in separate interviews, both Garza and Minott — former Minnesota Timberwolves teammates — have offered that they’d “run through a brick wall” for Mazzulla.

“He just has that effect on people,” Minott said.

“Every time he says something, it’s incredibly impactful,” Garza said.

Asked Luka Garza about his early Joe Mazzulla impressions:

“Every time he says something, it’s just incredibly impactful… He has that fire that makes you want to run through a brick wall for him.” pic.twitter.com/uYJwEtFPAb

— Noa Dalzell 🏀 (@NoaDalzell) September 30, 2025

But, it’s not just the Celtics’ head coach who recognizes the importance of cultivating deep off-court bonds.

Jaylen Brown, the team’s most veteran player, has made a concerted effort to bring players together off the court — whether that’s by facilitating team bonding events (a portion of the team together attended an NBA YoungBoy concert on Sunday) or by having players over at his home.

“JB has always been a leader for us,” Scheierman said.

“We’ve got a whole new team, and people think that all the pieces are supposed to fit together,” Brown said on NBC Sports Boston on Monday. “It doesn’t work like that.”

Last year at training camp, there were few new faces, with the entire Banner 18 roster, save for Svi Mykhailiuk and Oshae Brissett, returning for another shot at a title. This year, that’s not the case.

“We’ve got to make up for lost time to make sure that the product when we get to the first game of the season is there,” Brown said. “We got to spend some more time with each other and really try to chemistry-build as much as possible, from now until the end of the season. It takes work.”

Brown and six of his new Celtics teammates attended a Patriots game last weekend.

Jaylen Brown and the Celtics rookies are on the sidelines for the Patriots game.
@CLNSMedia pic.twitter.com/cDsZlM5sLd

— Celtics on CLNS (@CelticsCLNS) September 28, 2025

“[It’s] dinners, concerts, events, inviting guys to the crib, the house — all that type of stuff,” Brown said.

The Auerbach Center feels different. The absence of Horford, Holiday, and other veteran voices means that new guys are finding their voices and unique leadership styles.

At the same time, despite the losses, there’s an undeniable sense of energy and connection surrounding camp. With Opening Night just a few weeks away, there’s plenty of new schemes and terminology for everyone to learn.

But, the laughter, personal connections, and team bondings matter too.

“We’re trying to build a family with the new guys,” Jordan Walsh said. “That’s important.”

Source: https://www.celticsblog.com/articles/122025/celtics-training-camp-joe-mazzulla-jaylen-brown
 
Boston Celtics Daily Links 10/4/25

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Jaylen Brown sets aside gruff reputation to lead Celtics into new chapter as mentor to young teammates

For those not named Joe Mazzulla, it’s been an intense start to Celtics training camp

Celtics .com Celtics Camp Word of the Week: ‘Fast’

NESN Jaylen Brown Ranked Ahead Of LeBron James On Top 100 List

Mass Live Boston Celtics rookie explains challenges from 1st NBA training camp

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Celtics Wire Jaylen Brown 2025-26 Celtics training camp highlights

Celtics jersey history No. 37 – Matt Ryan (2022)

Today in Boston Celtics history: Si Green passes; Doug Smith signs

What’s real, hopeful, and unlikely of what we heard from the Boston Celtics at Media Day and camp?

Derrick White on how Josh Minott defends in Celtics training camp

Are we watching a historic recovery with Celtics star Jayson Tatum?

Neemias Queta details significant transformation ahead of his golden opportunity

NBA insider shares new intel on Jayson Tatum’s potential timeline to return

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CLNS Media/YouTube Joe Mazzulla Reveals which Celtic player had his BEST DAY of practice yet | Practice Interview

Hugo Gonzalez: Celtics teammates ‘try’ to speak Spanish | Practice Interview

Payton Pritchard left BLEEDING after Celtics Practice | Practice Interview

How Joe Mazzulla is getting BUY IN at camp | Garden Report Practice Update

Did Celtics Just REVEAL Their Starting Lineup? | Garden Report Practice Update

Is it Derrick White’s Time to Shine for Celtics? | Big 3 NBA Podcast

Sportskeeda Jayson Tatum Injury Return Timeline: Jaylen Brown stuns with unexpected comeback window for $315 million Celtics star

Fadeaway World New Return Date For Jayson Tatum Could Put Celtics Back In Championship Picture

NBA Trade Idea: Celtics Acquire Walker Kessler In Risky Proposal That Could Pay Off

Sporting News Charles Barkley has hot take on Celtics’ bold summer trades

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Jaylen Brown Speaks On Jayson Tatum’s Return Timeline Amid Prediction on His New Role

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Dallas Hoops Journal Boston Celtics’ Jayson Tatum Could Return In March

Source: https://www.celticsblog.com/boston-celtics-daily-links/122194/boston-celtics-daily-links-10-4-25
 
Setting Expectations for Anfernee Simons’ Defense

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There’s been discussion aplenty about one of the newest Boston Celtics, Anfernee Simons. He’s certainly a cause for confusion; the average NBA fan is unsure if he’s 22 years old or 30. Simons has seemingly been around forever, but is still young. And for a 26-year-old averaging 19.9 points and 4.5 assists per game on 50% from two, 38% from three, and 90% from the line over the past four seasons, he was treated as salary matching instead of a legitimate asset. Many are confused as to why a player like Anfernee was treated as a throw-in.

So, why is the league so down on Simons? Defense, defense, defense.

If there’s one thing people in NBA circles agree on, it’s that he is a rough defender. But one key person isn’t down on Simons’ defense: Boston Celtics head coach Joe Mazzulla. Hear from Simons himself about what his new coach is telling him.

Anfernee Simons on his defense:

“It’s just a matter of if I want to do it or not. It's really that simple. Coming into a culture like this, you have to be able to adapt… And [Joe Mazzulla] always says that [I’m] not as bad as people think [I am]. So that's good to hear.” pic.twitter.com/wLhn38LjJa

— Justin Turpin (@JustinmTurpin) September 29, 2025

According to Simons, he and Mazzulla have been tied at the hip all offseason, and it shows. Only someone spending an excessive amount of time with Boston’s coach-philosopher says that their defense is entirely up to how badly they want it. But Simons is going to have to do a lot more than simply want it. When you break down the defensive film from last year in Portland, things are ugly.

Looking under the hood​


He’s got measurements you’d want from a point-of-attack defender at 6’3” with a +4 wingspan. His athleticism is fine by NBA standards, and you’d think he could make an impact. But it’s the technical aspects that do him in as a point-of-attack defender; taking bad angles on screens, being unable to work over screens, and struggling to contest shots are frequent problems.

There's a reason you don't see Anfernee Simons as an on-ball defender very often. Bad screen navigator, takes poor angles on screens, doesn't have the length to bother ballhandlers even when he sticks to them pic.twitter.com/2T3LvVEjgY

— r/GogaBitadze moderator (@klaytheist11) October 2, 2025

Portland had few defensive weak links last year, and could afford to hide Simons off the ball. But things weren’t much better there. A serial ball-watcher, Simons was often late to make his rotations and closeouts. Switches were a significant problem. And he often ran around like a chicken without a head when the rotations got long and complicated.

Litany of problems for Anfernee Simons as an off-ball defender last year. Poor rotation communication, late closeouts, bad off-ball screen recognition, rough switching, the list goes on pic.twitter.com/mfInH5mbAu

— r/GogaBitadze moderator (@klaytheist11) October 2, 2025

It was typical to see Simons being hunted, even when off the ball, with pin-down screens, curls, flares, and all sorts of actions to free shooters. Sometimes it was just as simple as a dribble handoff to see if he’d confuse the switch, or a basic backdoor cut. It’s the reason why his defensive numbers look so rough.

Despite having most of his 70 starts this year come alongside Toumani Camara and Deni Avdija, two superb defenders, Portland’s defense was much worse with Simons on the floor than off. According to Cleaning the Glass, the Blazers’ defense was 2.5 points per 100 possessions worse with Anfernee on the court; that’s a 28th percentile mark. It’s actually an improvement from his previous season, where they were 5.3 points per 100 worse.

Individual numbers don’t paint a favorable picture either. Simons’ 0.2% block rate in 2024/25 was the lowest amongst players to play at least 2,000 minutes. For steal rate, only Bub Carrington, Keyonte George, and Devin Booker played 2,000 minutes at the guard spots and had worse marks. His bad on/offs and lack of stat impact culminated in a -1.3 defensive estimated plus-minus, per Dunks and Threes. That was 12th percentile amongst all defenders. Somehow this was an improvement on last season, where Simons’ -2.8 D-EPM was the worst mark in the league.

Setting expectations​


There are factors to consider here. When Simons was drafted, Neil Olshey was the GM and Terry Stotts was the head coach. Now Chauncey Billups is at the helm, looking to instill a defense-first ethos, and Joe Cronin makes the front office calls. It’s not crazy to assume that Simons may have seen the writing on the wall, and his effort suffered as a result — difficult to perform well in a job when you know you’re going to be fired.

Simons is also heading into a contract year, hoping to hit free agency next year at 27 on the heels of an excellent all-around season. Once again surrounded by good defenders, his assignment difficulty will be low. An uptick in focus and defensive technique could produce passable results that justify his presence on the floor.

Perhaps Joe Mazzulla’s philosophy has rubbed off on Simons this offseason, and he’s ready to compete defensively. But it’s unheard of to see a player jump from a bottom-tier defender to a good one, let alone average. When judging Simons’ defense this season, make sure you go into your judgments with the proper expectations. That way, you’ll never be disappointed.

Source: https://www.celticsblog.com/articles/122137/setting-expectations-for-anfernee-simons-defense
 
Boston Celtics Daily Links 10/5/25

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Boston Herald Celtics notebook: Inside Hugo Gonzalez’s jump from Real Madrid to Boston

Payton Pritchard’s battle scar hints at big change for Celtics defense

Globe Celtics using training camp as preparation to be a faster, more physical team this season

CelticsBlog The Celtics’ oldest player feels right at home after trip with Joe Mazzulla

Method to the madness: Mazzulla, Pritchard preview Celtics new look defense

CLNS Media Tatum Return will Spark Celtics Playoff Run | Celtics Beat

Celtics .com Hugo Gonzalez Adapts to American Basketball and Culture

NESN Former Celtics Guard Issues Payton Pritchard Truth Bomb

Mass Live Payton Pritchard calls Boston Celtics practices ‘war’ of physicality

Celtics Wire Celtics coach downplays role in ‘Mazzulla Ball’ in favor of optimization

Payton Pritchard approves of faster, more aggressive Celtics play style

Joe Mazzulla rejects take that Boston Celtics training camp especially tough this season

Hugo Gonzalez facing language barrier as he learns NBA ropes with Boston Celtics

Celtics jersey history No. 38 – Vitor Faverani (2013-14)

Boston two way big man Amari Williams on breakfast and perspective

Celtics history: Cousy taken in dispersal draft; Bagley trade; O’Connell dies

Jaylen Brown on decisions his knee injury forced him to face in ’24-25

Boston Sports Journal NBA Notebook: Celtics preparing for more physicality in the league this year

Hardwood Houdini Celtics’ recent draft pick is earning rave reviews with the Rockets

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CLNS Media/YouTube Celtics reveal COMPLETELY NEW play style | Garden Report Practice Update

SI .com Celtics Coach Attended Baptism of Team’s Free Agent Addition

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Celtics Star Suffers Bloody Injury in ‘War’-Like Practice

Hoops Rumors Celtics Notes: Brown, Mazzulla, Gonzalez, Horford

Athlon Sports Iconic Actor Mark Wahlberg Names Greatest NBA Player of All-Time

Sportskeeda “They tryna send bro to Valhalla” – NBA fans horrified after Payton Pritchard suffers scary neck injury in Celtics training camp

NBA Free Agency Rumors: Russell Westbrook linked to $6 billion franchise amid concern over lack of suitors after Nuggets exit

Essentially Sports Concerning Visuals Emerge From Celtics Training Camp as Joe Mazzulla’s Plan to Test NBA Officials Revealed

Basketball Network “I can’t worry about it” – Ray Allen was unbothered by Kevin Garnett’s reaction to him leaving the Boston Celtics for the Miami Heat

“We’re a better club when I don’t have to score a lot of points” – An injured Larry Bird needed help in the 1985 Playoffs

Hoops Wire East Notes: Celtics, Jaylen Brown, Pistons, Hornets, Brandon Miller

Celtics’ Joe Mazzulla pushes back on ‘Mazzulla Ball’ label

Fadeaway World NBA Players Who Came Back Strong After An Achilles Injury

M Sports Jayson Tatum’s early return ignites Celtics playoff hopes as Mazzulla bonds at new player’s baptism

NBA Analysis Payton Pritchard suggests OKC Thunder ‘got away with’ fouls and physicality in NBA playoffs

Dunking with Wolves Two former Timberwolves have a golden opportunity to rejuvenate their careers

Heavy Celtics’ Xavier Tillman Stunned by What He Saw Jayson Tatum Doing in Rehab

Basket News Celtics rookie struggles with language barrier in NBA

TalkBasket Payton Pritchard reveals tough Celtics practice: “A war”

Sam Cassell: Jayson Tatum healing fast, plan unclear

Source: https://www.celticsblog.com/boston-celtics-daily-links/122205/boston-celtics-daily-links-10-5-25
 
The Celtics’ oldest player feels right at home after trip with Joe Mazzulla

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BOSTONChris Boucher has it all figured out.

That’s how it appears from the outside, at least.

Fresh off a season mired by inconsistent playing time in Toronto, Boucher has quickly found a home in Boston, where he’s been pleasantly surprised by a plethora of great steak restaurants and Haitian food — two of his favorites.

I sat with Boucher for a lengthy conversation after the Boston Celtics’ third official day of training camp. He just finished getting up his post-practice three-pointers as assistant coaches DaSean Butler, Amile Jefferson, and Tyler Lashbrook rebounded, and preseason action was just a few days away.

For the last seven years, Boucher has lived in Toronto, a few hours west of his hometown of Montreal. With the Raptors, there have been some undeniable highs: a G League MVP and NBA championship in 2019, stretches where he became a core contributor in 2021 and 2022, and multiple seasons of sustained winning.

But for the last two years, Boucher saw an inconsistent role on a rebuilding Raptors team, only appearing in 50 of 82 games each season. When he played, he typically performed, last year averaging 10 points and 4.5 rebounds in 17.2 minutes per night, while shooting 36.3% from beyond the arc (the second-best mark of his career).

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But, though he embraced a leadership role with the Raptors, on-court opportunities were erratic. This offseason, the priority was to identify a team where he could contribute to winning.

“I wanted to be somewhere where they wanted me,” Boucher said, explaining that he recognized that he saw a chance to immediately contribute in Boston. “It’s a lot easier when you come on a team like this — where they’re like, ‘Okay, we know we need you.’”

Boucher doesn’t know exactly what his on-court role will entail this season. But he recognizes that with players like Jayson Tatum sidelined, and Kristaps Porzingis and Al Horford donning new jerseys, there’s plenty that the Celtics will be missing on the court this season.

“I got a couple of their skills — if you put them all together,” Boucher said with a smile. “I got a couple of their skills.”

Boucher also knows that regardless of the minutes he plays or shots he takes, he’ll bring with him the same indefatigable energy he carried when he starred at the University of Oregon alongside now-Celtic teammate Payton Pritchard.

“I do remember one thing from college,” Pritchard told CelticsBlog last month. “He never gets tired.”

Asked Payton Pritchard what his former Oregon teammate Chris Boucher brings to the Celtics:

“He’s a high-energy guy. The plays he’ll be able to make are unbelievable at times. I do remember one thing from college – he never gets tired."

“I think he’ll fit wonderfully." pic.twitter.com/xozhXLHCHJ

— Noa Dalzell 🏀 (@NoaDalzell) August 25, 2025

Boucher laughed when I asked him about that notion. He admitted that his resting heart rate is a striking 36 beats per minute, an astonishly-low number. (For reference, the resting heart rate for an average adult is between 60 and 100 beats).

Some of that is just genetics. But, over the past decade, he’s learned to push his workout to new bounds, conditioning his body each day to go harder than the one before.

“I’m always thinking about, like, ‘Okay, if I’m tired now, and I push through, that means the next time I get to that level, I won’t be tired,” Boucher said. “So I’m always pushing myself. When I work out, I try to not drink water, because I’m like, ‘Okay, well, if I could go through without water, then with water it’d be a lot easier. You can’t just go call a timeout to go get water.“

It’s that mindset that has propelled Boucher from an undrafted forward who missed his first year in the league recovering from an ACL tear, to a highly-effective rotation player who has been in the NBA nearly a decade.

In August, Boucher officially signed with the Celtics on a one-year, $3.3 million deal. Since then, he’s been locked in at the Auerbach Center, taking on difficult defensive assignments and getting up extra shots. Boston is a brand-new city, but preparing hard for an incoming NBA season is a familiar feeling.

“I’ve been doing this my whole career,” Boucher said.

But before training camp began, Boucher had an experience that made him feel even more confident he was in the right place.

Inside a special trip to Montreal with Joe Mazzulla​


In September, Chris Boucher decided he wanted to get baptized before the season started.

“I’ve been thinking about it the whole year — I was supposed to do it last year, but it’s something that you have to be mentally ready for,” Boucher said. “So when I knew I was coming here and everything was going to change a little bit for me, it was like, ‘Okay, well, let me start the year the right way, get closer to God.’”

When Boucher shared with Joe Mazzulla that he was considering returning to his hometown in Montreal for the baptism, the Celtics’ head coach reacted viscerally.

“His eyes lit up,” Boucher recalled. “He was like, ‘Yeah, I want to come to that.’”

So, Mazzulla and assistant coach Amile Jefferson made the trip to Montreal in honor of Boucher’s special day, a gesture that meant a considerable amount. A few weeks later, he’s still processing its significance.

“I’ve been in the league for a long time, and to see a coach that wants to be there for certain events like that is really special,” Boucher said.

“I’ve been in this league for a long time,” he repeated. “It’s rare to see that.”


In practice, Mazzulla has often been hard on Boucher, as he is with most of the players. But, for a number of reasons, Boucher is receptive to criticism.

For one, the pair’s newly-formed off-court connection makes basketball critiques resonate even more deeply:

“When you’re on the court and he talks to you, and tells you stuff, it makes you see it as — you know what? He’s there for me,” Boucher said. “He wants me to get better.”

Boucher also noted that he’s been in the NBA for 8 seasons, and understands that when coaches are hard on players, it’s a sign of respect.

“The day that he’s gonna stop saying stuff to me, I’m gonna realize that, ‘Okay, I might be out of this place,’” Boucher said. “Coaches are pretty smart. If they don’t say nothing to you, then that means you’re probably out of there. They start talking to you, telling you stuff, then that means that, yes — they’re giving you shit. But they still need you.”

Boucher has been finding his footing at training camp​


When Chris Boucher first signed with the Celtics in August, many presumed that he’d play more of a big-man role given the team’s dearth in the frontcourt. But, Boucher said that he views himself as a forward, and as such, he’s taken more wing responsibilities at training camp thus far.

“I’m guarding JB [Jaylen Brown], I’m guarding Derrick White, which is something that I always told myself I was able to do,” Boucher said. “I’ve never wanted to be labeled as a big man.”

At times, Boucher has been categorized as a center. But, at 6’9, he’s found that to be a bit limiting: “I feel like that kind of restricted me a little bit, just in the world of basketball, where they’re like, ‘Okay, well, he’s not big enough to be a center, but I’m like, ‘Yeah, but I’m fast enough to be playing a lot of different positions.”

As he acclimates to the Celtics, Mazzulla’s mentorship has been critical. Boucher said he’s used to a heavy focus on defense, having played under Nick Nurse in Toronto, but that there’s been an increased emphasis on shooting and racking up deflections in Boston.

“Joe is really helping me out,” Boucher said. “He’s giving me a lot of hints, but also giving me a lot of structure on what he wants me to do and play smart and make calculated gambles and all. And I think that’s something that the Celtics have been good at.”

Day 3 of training camp and Chris Boucher is here getting post-practice threes: pic.twitter.com/fp14Lj6oma

— Noa Dalzell 🏀 (@NoaDalzell) October 3, 2025

Whether or not Boucher will sometimes find himself in starting lineup remains to be seen. He’s not too worried about contributing from the bench, something that he’s done for the vast majority of his NBA career.

“If I tell myself I’m gonna be the best bench player of the game, if they start me, then that’s great news,” Boucher said. “But knowing that you’re going to be the best at [coming off the bench] helps you not get discouraged.”

Boucher has witnessed lots of teammates get overly fixated on a prospective starting lineup role: “I’m not trying to be one of those persons. And it’s always worked out for me.”

As practice winds down, Mazzulla jokes around Boucher like an old friend. He’s one of a myriad of new faces at the Auerbach Center.

But, he seems right at home.

Source: https://www.celticsblog.com/articles/122187/celtics-chris-boucher-training-camp-joe-mazzulla
 
Method to the madness: Mazzulla, Pritchard preview Celtics new look defense

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During training camp, a team can feel siloed from everything outside its small circle of players and coaches. All the outside noise of media expectations and fan criticisms are blocked out. However, that doesn’t mean that the Celtics haven’t had their eyes on the rest of the league.

Even before their repeat title chances were quashed in May, Boston has been keeping track of league trends. After being trailblazers of the three-ball revolution, the NBA course corrected and allowed a more physical style of play that carried over well into the playoffs.

“Halfway through last year, the league made a little bit of a change where the game became much more physical and I think it’s what’s best for the league,” head coach Joe Mazzulla said after Saturday’s practice. “We just have to adapt to that…the game is in a great place, how it’s being played and how it’s being officiated.”

Since Media Day on Monday, any Celtic coach or player that’s been on a mic has talked about how the team has ramped up activity and pace. That’s presumably been on the offensive end, but they’ve also applied a more aggressive approach on defense.

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“Before, we would play more of a safe defense, switching, live with contested shots, don’t foul, don’t put people to the free throw line…but that’s kinda changed,” Payton Pritchard said, sporting a bloody neck after getting scraped during Friday’s session. “The NBA evolves every year, so you gotta change your game with it. It worked for us when we won the championship, didn’t work for us so much last year, so we gotta evolve.”

The point guard has embraced the more physical play and calls being considered a “two-way player…definitely huge.” He’s brought that fire along with his teammates. They’re playing up higher on D, pressuring ballhandlers and getting into their covers.

“You see OKC who won the championship — they get away with a lot of hands, fouls, physicality, stuff like that,” Pritchard noted. “The NBA in the playoffs is allowing a lot more physicality to happen. You gotta learn to play through it and be more physical. We’re emphasizing it and it’s been good.“

On offense, their approach is more of a mystery and we’ll have to wait and see until their first preseason game on Wednesday in Memphis. Ideally though, a faster paced Celtics would mimic the Warriors or Pacers. Earlier in the week, I wrote:

The Pacers went ten-deep in their rotation and more importantly, they played a frenetic and unpredictable brand of basketball. They had their core offensive principles, but for the most part, they embraced Tyrese Haliburton’s freestyling attitude and integrated it from top to bottom.

The teams were #1 and #2 in passes and touches per game with Indiana using their whirling dervish style towards a trip to The Finals. However, the big difference between the Pacers last year and the Celtics this year is that they had veteran talent littered in their frontcourt with Myles Turner, Pascal Siakam, and even Obi Toppin. For Boston, they’re going from a center room with Kristaps Porzingis, Al Horford, and Luke Kornet to Neemias Queta, Luka Garza, Chris Boucher, and Xavier Tillman Sr.

Here’s a comparison:

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Disregard Olympic gold medalist Usain Bolt in TD Garden for a minute. You know when Lucky or really any NBA arena trampoline crew set up a train of jumpers that hit the tramp, do a flip, pass the ball to the person behind them and so on and so forth? Now take away the trampoline. That could be the framework of the offense.

So, don’t be surprised if the Celtics look a lot like the Bulls last season. Chicago ranked second in pace last season at 103.61 possessions per game, just a shade behind Memphis (103.69). With a guard-heavy roster featuring ballhandlers Lonzo Ball, Zach LaVine, Coby White, Ayo Donsumu, and Josh Giddey, they leaned into their strengths and drove the fourth most times in the regular season. For comparison, they went to the rack 4,294 times; Boston was second to last at 3,020.

You could see the same approach with Payton Pritchard, Derrick White, Anfernee Simons, and Jaylen Brown as the main engines of the offense. High picks set just passed halfcourt. Before the ten seconds are off the shot clock, they could already be into their weak side options.

“It’s playing fast and playing smart at the same time and seeing the actions,” Garza said after the team’s first official practice on Tuesday. “It’s not just chuck it and shoot it with twenty seconds on the shot clock. It’s trying to get into the actions early so you can get looks earlier and if it’s not there, then you go into the second action and third action. Everything you do is at a fast pace.”

Picture the ideal possession. Garza sets a high screen for Pritchard crossing midcourt. The strong side help defender comes off of Brown to prevent the drive. Garza gets the ball in the short roll and hits JB cutting back door. Another help defender gets compromised and Josh Minott goes hard into the paint for a dunk.

That’s the new Mazzulla Ball.

Source: https://www.celticsblog.com/articles/122065/what-could-the-celtics-playing-fast-look-like
 
Boston Celtics Daily Links 10/7/25

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Herald Jayson Tatum hired by Duke as chief basketball officer

Lenny Kravitz to star in NBC’s ‘Sunday Night Basketball’ opening

Globe Jayson Tatum named as Duke’s first ‘Chief Basketball Officer’

Celtics’ roster reshuffle should provide more opportunities for Jordan Walsh in his third NBA season

It’s back to school for Jayson Tatum after he is named Duke’s chief basketball officer

Celtics training camp has been a crash course in Developing Chemistry 101

CelticsBlog Calm before the storm: Jaylen Brown sets the tone in training camp, previews first preseason game

The duality of Jaylen Brown

ESPN Alum Jayson Tatum takes on role as Duke’s ‘chief basketball officer’

Celtics .com Jaylen Brown: ‘I Want Us to Be the Smartest Team Out There’

NBC Sports Boston Centers of attention: Four storylines to watch in Celtics’ preseason

NESN Bombshell Report Reveals Celtics Rival Pursued Blockbuster Trade For NBA Superstar

Mass Live No, LeBron James’ ‘decision of all decisions’ is not retirement

Mavericks sign former Celtics guard to compete for roster spot

Ex-Celtics big man turns heads with Victor Wembanyama in Spurs debut

Giannis Antetokounmpo open to trade to Boston Celtics rival (report)

Jaylen Brown calls Celtics practices ‘my hardest preseason’ on 2 fronts

Celtics Wire Joe Mazzulla on the expectations for the Celtics this season

Jaylen Brown on how timing is the key to the new-look Celtics

Boston Celtics jersey history No. 40 – Carlos Clark (1983-85)

Celtics history: Willie Naulls born; Jimmy Oliver signed

Joe Mazzulla on why (and when) Celtics more physical on defense

Payton Pritchard on how he works on his defense with the Celtics

Should the Celtics trade for New York Knicks wing Pacome Dadiet?

Joe Mazzulla on the expectations for the Boston Celtics this season

Boston Sports Journal Josh Minott understands this might be his last chance in the NBA: ‘Desperation is a perfect word for it’

The Athletic Duke names Celtics star Jayson Tatum as inaugural chief basketball officer

Projecting all 30 teams’ depth charts: 2025 NBA team position rankings

For Celtics, preseason should reveal significant change in style on both ends

Hardwood Houdini The Celtics’ training camp desire made crystal clear by Jaylen Brown’s message

Jaylen Brown ready to tackle biggest gap in new Celtics problems

Grizzlies star won’t play in preseason opener vs. Celtics

Jordan Walsh finally learned key to success if Mazzulla statement is true

Celtics fans will love what Joe Mazzulla is demanding from Josh Minott

The Athletic For Celtics, preseason should reveal significant change in style on both ends

SI .com Celtics Insider Reveals How Boston Could Have Kept Al Horford

Celtics Rookie Already Facing Major Barrier in Adjusting to NBA

Ex-NBA Star Has Key Insight on Jayson Tatum’s Comeback Process

Celtics Coach Sends Message on Jayson Tatum Comeback

Celtics’ Trade Deadline Revolves Around One Player, Says Insider

Sporting News Celtics could reunite with 6-foot-4 guard, cut ties with 42% sharpshooter

Sportskeeda Joe Mazzulla ‘out of his mind’ with brutal training methods as he looks to transform new-look Celtics

M Sports Boston Celtics in turmoil: Jayson Tatum’s injury and potential trade chaos rock team stability

Kings explode trade rumors, target Celtics star Jaylen Brown in shocking NBA championship push

Athlon Sports Trade Idea Sends Celtics’ Sam Hauser to West Contender for Young Forward

Proposed Trade Sends Thunder’s Young Forward to Celtics for 3-Point Sharpshooter

Delaware North TD Garden’s golden birthday: 30 years of community, celebration and giving

Boston Celtics/YouTube Celtics All-Access: Jaylen Brown & Speed, Jayson Tatum visits Patriots, Joe Mazzulla UFC workouts

Blue Man Hoop Warriors have absolutely screwed the Celtics with perfect Al Horford signing

Basketball Insiders Al Horford Has 15% Trade Kicker in Warriors Contract

The Sports Rush Jaylen Brown’s Raw Take On Marcus Smart Being With Celtics’ Rival Lakers

Locked on Celtics Boston Celtics BIGGEST PROBLEM revealed | Can they FIGURE IT OUT in time?

Hardwood Heroics Jaylen Brown Sends Strong Message to Doubters Counting Boston Celtics Out – ‘I Have More Playoff Wins Than 15 or 16 Teams’

Heavy Celtics Urged To Take Action On Lakers’ Prized Trade Target

Celtics’ Joe Mazzulla Sends Message to Anfernee Simons: ‘It’s a Balance’

Barstool Sports Jayson Tatum Was Just Named Duke’s “Chief Basketball Officer” And Will Be Offering Career Guidance And Mentorship To Duke Players

Cold Wire Celtics Veteran Could Be Poised For ‘Monster’ Season

Jaylen Brown Makes A Big Statement About Celtics’ Playoff Hopes

Celtics Chronicle Are the Celtics being rebuilt in Joe Mazzulla’s image

Bleacher Report 1 Ambitious Trade Target for Every Team During 2025-26 NBA Season

NESN/YouTube Can These 3 Moves Turn the Celtics Into Champions?

The Lead Celtics Are Counting on Pritchard, Simons’ Defense

Basketball Network Jaylen Brown says the Celtics have been spoiled with talent in recent seasons: “This year is a little different”

Source: https://www.celticsblog.com/boston-celtics-daily-links/122242/boston-celtics-daily-links-10-7-25
 
A dozen spinning plates: what could the Celtics rotation could look like tonight

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Trying to predict the Celtics rotation heading into their first preseason game tonight will admittedly read like fan fiction. With as much turnover as the roster has weathered over the summer and the little that we know from their media availability after practice and whatever we can glean from social media videos, it’s anybody guess outside of the walls of the Auerbach Center.

But hey, let’s have some fun.

Here are a few assumptions:

Expect to see two ballhandlers on the floor at all times. That means two of Payton Pritchard, Derrick White, Anfernee Simons, Jaylen Brown, and Baylor Scheierman. In the preseason, let’s throw rookie Hugo Gonzalez into that mix, too. The team has been talking about playing fast since even before training camp opened up. This will not be a floor general style offense. It’ll be multiple reads over multiple actions. We’re going to see the ball move from strong side and weak side back to strong side in just one possession. Joe Mazzulla is going to want to have multiple guys on the floor that can break down defenses and play off the dribble.

Defensively, Boston will lean heavily on guys that can defend space. Chris Boucher told CelticsBlog’s Noa Dalzell that he’s been playing a lot of power forward — not at center as many had suspected — and defending former college teammate Pritchard and Brown on the perimeter a lot. That’s a small hint that they’ll be either switching some or at least playing up on screens this season. Thankfully, Boston is chockful of rangy defenders like Jordan Walsh and Neemias Queta.

Finally, I love this from CelticsBlog’s Bobby Manning: Josh Minott starting at small forward:

Will the Celtics unveil a surprise starter vs the Grizzlies on Wednesday?🤔

"I think Minott might start at the 3 next to White, Pritchard, Queta, and Brown."
@RealBobManning | @NoaDalzell pic.twitter.com/9AKHlVUUoQ

— Celtics on CLNS (@CelticsCLNS) October 7, 2025

Bobby could be right. If there’s a player that has embodied Boston’s transformation this fall, it’s Minott. On Monday, he proclaimed, “I feel like I might be the fastest on the team.” If Boston is going to succeed in this March Madness, motion all-the-time, full effort pedal-to-the-metal style, they need complete buy-in not just from the starters, but role players like Minott.

So, here’s a stab at tomorrow’s starters and possible rotation:

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Not exactly the hockey line substitutions that Walsh suggested, but there are some intriguing pairings and trios that we could see tonight.

Some things of note:

  • If Pritchard is starting, Simons could flourish as a scorer off the bench. Having Sam Hauser in the second unit and pairing most of his time with Boucher, too, creates space on the floor.
  • Can Minott and Queta survive so many minutes playing together? Defensively, having two pogo sticks around the rim is a terrifying proposition for opposing team, but pogo sticks can’t shoot, so they might be limited on the other end.
  • Like many over at NBC Sports Boston, my attention will be on Scheierman. At worst, he slots in as another shooter on the floor, but I’m wondering if he could also be a first action point forward and a pesky point-of-attack defender.
  • Last season, the Celtics arguably had the deepest center rotation in the league with Kristaps Porzingis, Al Horford, and Luke Kornet, but I wonder if there will be enough room for Queta, Luka Garza, and Xavier Tillman Sr. to all see substantial minutes if everybody is healthy. I predict that Mazzulla will throttle between shooting and defense at the 3 and 4 and with Minott and Boucher getting playing time there, I don’t see a lot of double big configurations.

Celtics kick off their preseason at 5 pm against the Memphis Grizzlies.

Source: https://www.celticsblog.com/boston-celtics-discussion-topics/122278/celtics-rotation-predictions
 
Celtics outwork Grizzlies in first preseason game, win 121-103

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The Boston Celtics traveled to Memphis to take on the Grizzlies in Game #1 of the 2025-26 NBA preseason. With a cast of new faces, Boston’s new era started out strong, as they outworked and outplayed the hometown Grizz to prevail 121-101. Jaylen Brown had 21 points in just 20 minutes on the night and sat the entire second half, Derrick White had 16 points and 10 assists in the starting point guard position.

The new look Celtics opened the game with a starting five of Brown, White, Hauser, Boucher, and Tillman. Neemias Queta was not available for the clash in Memphis, following his national team commitments for Portugal at the EuroCup tournament. Pritchard and Simons would also be rested for this preseason opener. Memphis would start the game with Small, Wells, Aldama, rookie Coward, and big man Lovering. Ja Morant, Jaren Jackson Jr., Zach Edey, Jock Landale, and Brandon Clarke would not be available for the home team due to various ailments.

Derrick White scored the first points of the game for Boston and immediately picked up the defensive assignment with full-court pressure on the ball. Brown took on Wells and converted on his first field goal attempt, before back-to-back triples from White and Hauser as Boston took an early 10-9 lead. Brown hit on a long-range three as Wells sagged off, Boston shooting the ball well early on, going 3-4 from three.

Garza and Walsh would be the first Celtics off the bench for Coach Mazzulla as Boucher and Tillman got an early rest. Garza wasted no time getting in on the action, chasing down a long rebound and dishing to White, who then skipped a pass to Hauser for his second three-pointer of the game. Brown was cooking early with 11 first-quarter points after just six minutes, as Boston’s pace was very fast to start the game.

Jordan Walsh scored a quick break dunk on his initial shot attempt, extending Boston’s first quarter lead to 9 points, 27-18. Minott and Scheierman entered the game late in the first quarter, and Minott had an instant impact as he soared from the wing to dunk in his first points as a Celtic, timing a corner crash perfectly on a three-point shot attempt. A few plays later, Josh Minott drove and connected on a nifty layup as Boston went up 35-22. Boston ended the quarter shooting a blistering 55% from the field at the FedEx Forum.

Scheierman got going to start the second quarter, nailing a very deep three-pointer on his first shot attempt. Spanish rookie Hugo Gonzalez started the second quarter for Boston and had a nasty block on fellow rookie Coward. In what was a very entertaining stretch, Minott, Gonzalez, Scheierman, Boucher, and White lifted the pace, managing to turn over the Grizz and get multiple stops and go up by 20 points.

Jaylen Brown returned to the game at the seven-minute mark of the quarter and immediately hit on a mid-range jumper. Hugo Gonzalez drained his first three-pointer of the night after Sam Hauser drove and dished to the rook. Sammy Hauser swished his third three of the night, a quick catch and shoot, as Derrick White inbounded for his seventh assist of the night. White’s eighth assist on the night came as he found Minott, who was wide open under the basket for a reverse dunk.

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Boston was rolling to end the second quarter, as Minott and Tillman combined for a slick alley-oop play, the former Grizzlie skied for a one-handed dunk. Jaylen Brown headed to the change rooms at the half with 21 points, and Hauser and White had 9 points each, as Boston took at 68-45 lead.

Minott continued his good hustle play to start the third quarter, nabbing a fourth offensive board on the night, showing fans some good early signs. Chris Boucher picked up his play in the second half and converted on consecutive field goals for Boston. Memphis was pretty rusty on the night and registered back-to-back offensive fouls in the act of setting screens. Derrick White would be subbed out at the six-minute mark of the second, an early night for Boston, sitting with 16 points and 10 assists, joining Jaylen Brown on the bench for the remainder of the game.

At the five-minute mark of the third, Hugo Gonzalez stole the ball at half court and drove and dunked home an emphatic one-handed jam. The remaining minutes of the third quarter were all Boston, as the Celtics’ new run-and-gun style was on full display. Ron Harper Jr. saw some time from the bench in the third as he was part of a lineup that included Gonzalez, Boucher, Scheierman, and Garza. Ron Harper Jr. hit his first three-pointer of the night as the third quarter expired, with Boston up 99-72 heading into the fourth.

Eleven players scored for Boston after three quarters as the Celtics coaching staff got extended looks at different lineups. Gonzalez had a beautiful chase down block on Javon Small to start the fourth quarter, but the rookie is still adjusting to the pace of the NBA, as he also recorded his third turnover of the game.

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With around 8 minutes to go in the game, Coach Mazzulla had both Bridges and Harper Jr. in the game. Rookie Amari Williams and Kendall Brown also saw the final 5 minutes of action on the road for Boston. Memphis did go on a small scoring run to reduce the Boston lead, but this game wasn’t close all night. Boston’s final pick in the 2025 draft, guard Max Shulga also entered the game with two minutes remaining, he joined RJ Luiz Jr. in the lineup to close things out.

Boston next face the Toronto Raptors on the road on Friday night before heading home for a two-game home stand. Boston’s first regular season game is on October 22nd against the Philadelphia 76ers.

Source: https://www.celticsblog.com/celtics...grizzlies-in-first-preseason-game-win-120-103
 
Boston Celtics Daily Links 10/9/25

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Herald Celtics rookie Hugo Gonzalez flashes potential in impressive debut

Six takeaways from Celtics’ preseason-opening win over Grizzlies

Globe Jaylen Brown, new-look Celtics blow out Grizzlies in preseason opener: 8 takeaways

Jaylen Brown’s 21-point first half leads Celtics past Grizzlies in preseason opener

Celtics Green Comments from the Other Side – Grizzlies 10/8/25

CelticsBlog 10 takeaways from Celtics preseason opening win vs. Grizzlies

Xavier Tillman and Luka Garza’s efforts go a long way in Celtics’ preseason opener

Why Joe Mazzulla, Hugo Gonzalez constantly talked through rookie’s debut

Joe Mazzulla on Josh Minott: ‘he has a knack for the ball and just being in the mix’

Jaylen Brown thrives in driver’s seat in Celtics’ preseason opener

Celtics outwork Grizzlies in first preseason game, win 121-103

CLNS Media Why Al Horford Left the Celtics and the Legacy He Leaves in Boston

Celtics Unleash Pace Attack and Depth on Grizzlies to Start Preseason

Celtics .com Keys to the Game

NBC Sports Boston Celtics-Grizzlies recap: Jaylen Brown paces offense in preseason-opening win

How Hugo Gonzalez’s historically big hands give him an edge on defense

NESN Zach Lowe Pours Cold Water On Celtics Fans’ Optimism

Celtics Assistant Coach Makes Bold Claim About Intense Training Camp

Celtics’ 2025-26 NBA Season Win Projections May Shock Fans

CBS Boston Hugo Gonzalez shines in Celtics preseason debut thanks to his aggressive defense

Mass Live NBA general mangers survey shows muted expectations for Boston Celtics

New Celtics free agent addition flashes intriguing potential in Grizzlies win

Boston Celtics rookie pops off for multiple highlights in Grizzlies win

Jaylen Brown is Celtics ‘Name to Know’ Player of the Game in preseason win over the Grizzlies

4 takeaways as Celtics rookie shines in blowout win over Grizzlies in preseason opener

Celtics Wire Celtics take a step back in 2025-26 NBA GM Survey

What did we learn from the Celtics win vs. the Memphis Grizzlies?

What can we expect from the Boston Celtics this season?

Boston Celtics jersey history No. 40 – Travis Knight (1997-99)

Celtics history: Walker, Risen, Andersons born; Rollins passes

The Celtics dominated the Grizzlies from start to finish in Memphis

Neemias Queta’s point of view on the season ahead for the Celtics

What did we learn about the Celtics in this season’s training camp?

Preseason bingo: what fans of the Celtics should be watching for

The Athletic Six things that caught my eye from this season’s NBA GM survey

Jaylen Brown sets tone, Josh Minott and young wings impress in Celtics’ preseason win

Boston Sports Journal BSJ Game Report: Celtics 121 , Grizzlies 103 – Impressive showing in first preseason game

Final: Celtics 121 , Grizzlies 103 – Brown & White in mid-season form

Hardwood Houdini Celtics-Grizzlies game just uncapped new layer to biggest team change

Celtics’ reinvigorated center reinforces recent declarations in preseason opener

Celtics’ new center showcases a needed skill in Boston’s preseason opening win

Celtics wing impresses in first half vs. Grizzlies, but his night likely ends abruptly

It only took Jaylen Brown 24 minutes to put the NBA on notice

Celtics preseason lineup surprise doesn’t actually mean anything (right?)

Celtics’ new offensive style doesn’t mean end of the three-ball

CLNS Media/YouTube LIVE Garden Report: Celtics vs Grizzlies Preseason Postgame Show

Joe Mazzulla LIKES Coaching Hugo Gonzalez, Reacts to His Celtics Debut | Postgame 10-8

Josh Minott Happy to be in Boston: “I love the environment.” | Postgame Interview 10-8

Hugo Gonzalez: Celtics Will Be DANGEROUS Team If We Play with Pace | Postgame Interview 10-8

Joe Mazzulla Shuts Down Starting Lineup Question Before Celtics Preseason Opener | 10-8

Sam Hauser: “This is probably the hardest training camp I’ve ever been apart of.”

Xavier Tillman Hoping to Set ‘Career Highs’ This Year w/ Celtics | Pregame Interview 10-8

Basketball Network “We don’t have players with heart sometimes” — Larry Bird’s brutal postgame message that saved Boston’s 1984 championship run

Clutch Points Jaylen Brown shoves Vince Williams Jr. in heated moment vs. Grizzlies

Commercial Appeal Here are our best photos of the Boston Celtics, Memphis Grizzlies preseason game

Barstool Sports After A Summer From He**, Celtics Basketball Has Finally Returned To Our Lives And There Are Plenty Of Reasons To Be Excited

The Sports Rush Payton Pritchard Says Sabrina Ionescu Changed Oregon Women’s Culture, Even Cafeteria Ladies Roasted the Men’s Team

NBA Analysis New Boston Celtics star reflects on preseason plays that earned pat on the back from Joe Mazzulla

Air Alamo Spurs have Celtics to thank for their home run free agent signing

The Score NBA offseason grades: Eastern Conference

Dunking with Wolves It’s only preseason but two former Timberwolves seem to have found a perfect home

SI .com Coach Tuomas Iisalo Points Out Key Lesson in Preseason Loss Grizzlies-Celtics

AS The Spanish rookie who stunned Celtics with first NBA performance: meet Hugo González

Fadeaway World “I Never Won A Game” – Payton Pritchard Says He Played 1 On 1 Against Steve Blake Every Day During His High School

ESPN The Celtics and Pacers’ approach to a season marred by injury

Sources: Spoelstra to succeed Kerr as Team USA head coach

The Sporting News Celtics’ Luka Garza shows off move he taught to Anthony Edwards

Xavier Tillman making early case for spot in Boston’s rotation

Celtics’ Sam Hauser outdoes Larry Bird in this historic NBA stat

White’s preseason performance hints at expanded role for 2025-26

White Noise Podcast/YouTube Payton Pritchard talks Blake Griffin, Sabrina Ionescu at Oregon, Draft Night Stories & More!

Boston Celtics/YouTube Extended Highlights: Boston Celtics defeat Memphis Grizzlies 121-103

Audacy Celtics check a lot of boxes in first preseason game

Bleacher Report These 5 Players Could Have the Worst Contracts In the NBA This Season

1 Trade Every Team Would Make If the Deadline Was Before 2025-26 NBA Season

TalkBasket Jaylen Brown powers Celtics past Grizzlies

Basketball Insiders NBA Partners with Alibaba as League Returns to China

NBA Sports Boston/YouTube Elastic hands?! Celtics’ rookie Hugo Gonzalez has 2nd biggest hands in NBA combine history

Sportskeeda “Only gonna play like 30 games this year”: Lakers fans frustrated as Marcus Smart suffers another blow and misses practice a day after returning

Medical Marketing Recovering from injury, Boston Celtics star Jayson Tatum laces up for Vertex campaign

Source: https://www.celticsblog.com/boston-celtics-daily-links/122354/boston-celtics-daily-links-10-9-25
 
Jayson Tatum wants to play this season

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Jayson Tatum wants to play this season — that isn’t news. When ESPN’s Shams Charania goes on Pat McAfee’s show and says that very thing, no one should be surprised.

"The Celtics haven't ruled out Jayson Tatum for the season and they're cautiously optimistic..

He has a goal in mind that he wants to play this season and we'll see if he gets there" @ShamsCharania #PMSLive pic.twitter.com/nfVq9tHOaB

— Pat McAfee (@PatMcAfeeShow) October 9, 2025

The Celtics haven’t ruled Tatum out for the year either. Charania didn’t break any news with this report. However, I do think it is notable that he mentioned that Damian Lillard and Tyrese Haliburton have already been ruled out for the season.

This isn’t a shot at those guys. Haliburton tore his Achilles six weeks after Tatum did and Lillard is 35. However, this is another example to praise Jayson Tatum for his, as Jaylen Brown put it, ‘superhuman comeback.’

As Brown said on his Twitch stream, “I’ve never seen anyone recover so fast from an Achilles injury, from any injury to that level. JT been going crazy.”

Jaylen Brown just described Jayson Tatum’s recovery as “superhuman” on his Twitch stream:

“JT’s been going crazy.” pic.twitter.com/FWn7xQxMvf

— Noa Dalzell 🏀 (@NoaDalzell) October 6, 2025

Nothing in Jayson Tatum’s past should tell us otherwise, he has always been someone who has worked incredibly hard on his game. When Jayson Tatum went on the Today Show’s Jenna and Friends last month, he said that he has a goal in his mind on a date that he wants to return.

@jennaandfriends_ Could we be seeing Jayson Tatum on the court this season? 👀 The NBA player hasn't ruled out the possibility, but he says making a full recovery and not rushing it is the most important thing. #JennaandFriends ♬ original sound – TODAY with Jenna & Friends

“What I will say is, I am not working out, rehabbing six days a week for no reason,” Tatum said. He has indicated at every turn that not only does he want to play but that he seems to expect to play.

I’m not saying that should be your expectation because it shouldn’t. Do I think Tatum will play this season? Yes, I do, everything in recent weeks has pointed to it. Am I going to hold him to it and be mad if he doesn’t? No, certainly not because as Tatum has also said, the most important thing is being 100%, is being the Jayson Tatum we saw last season again.


Charania also talked about if the Celtics aren’t a contender would Tatum return? “Let’s say he’s in March and he’s feeling 100% but the team’s not really competing for anything, do you really throw him out there? There’s gonna be a lot of questions.”

There is no guarantee that Jayson Tatum is going to suit up for the Boston Celtics this season. However, what was once an outside shot has become much more realistic. One thing is for certain, Jayson Tatum is going to do everything in his power to get back to being Jayson Tatum again.

Source: https://www.celticsblog.com/article...eltics-joe-mazzulla-brad-stevens-jaylen-brown
 
Celtics drop the ball late, lose to Raptors 107-105

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Chris Boucher returned to Ontario to face his former team as Boston traveled to the Scotiabank Arena in Toronto Friday night for game #2 of the NBA preseason. The run-and-gun Celtics dominated most of the night, but the scrappy third stringers of the Toronto Raptors hung around late and stole the game from Boston 107-105.

After resting three players in their previous game in Memphis, the Celtics continued this trend against the Raptors by resting Jaylen Brown, Derrick White, and Sam Hauser. Jordan Walsh was also out with a minor hip injury. Joe Mazzulla and the Celtics coaching staff handed Payton Pritchard, Anfernee Simons, Josh Minott, Chris Boucher, and Neemias Queta starting duties.

Grady Dick opened the scoring for Toronto with a triple before Boucher struck back against his old team, hitting a tough turnaround jumper over Murray-Boyles. Boston struggled shooting the ball early, hitting on just 3 of 12 from the field and a woeful 0-6 from downtown. A Minott dribble drive got the Celtics back level with the Raps, as the score was tied at 9-9 at the first timeout of the contest.

Luka Garza, Hugo Gonzalez, and Baylor Scheierman were the first players off the bench for Boston, as Pritchard finally hit on Boston’s first triple at the midway mark of the first quarter. Gonzalez missed on consecutive defensive rebounding assignments and was immediately pulled from the court by Mazzulla.

Pritchard found the bottom of the net on a running drive, followed by Minott and PP hitting back-to-back three-pointers to give Boston an early lead, 20-18. The Raptors dominated the offensive glass in the first quarter, which led to several early substitutions, as Mazzulla tried to send a message to his team. Pritchard was a bright spot for Boston, as he had 10 first quarter points, including a sweet dime to his former college teammate Boucher, who cut baseline for an uncontested dunk.

Mazzulla finally settled on a lineup of Scheierman, Pritchard, Tillman, Boucher, and Minott to close the quarter, and they extended the lead to 8 points after one, 27-19.

Anfernee Simons struggled early with his shot and the pace of the game, as he had 3 fouls, 1 turnover, and went 0-2 from the field. He came back into the lineup to start the second quarter in place of Pritchard and finally hit his first shot in green with a dribble handoffand outstretched layup.

Boucher showed his length on a gorgeous tip-in, his ninth point of the night. Gonzalez scored his first points of the night hustling to put back a Minott miss. Toronto went on a 7-0 run midway through the second quarter as they got back into the game. Neemias Queta got pulled out by Mazzulla again, as the Portuguese center only played 6 minutes of action before getting pulled out of the game for a second time.

The Luka Garza and Xavier Tillman tandem proved fruitful for Boston late in the first half as Boston held a 46-39 lead with 3 minutes to go. Chris Boucher hit back-to-back three-pointers in a one-minute stretch, going for 17 points in the first half.

Joe Mazzulla drew up an awesome sideline play, with Scheierman lofting a deft QB pass over the top of Grady Dick to Josh Minott, who skied for the two-handed alley-oop dunk, extending Boston’s lead to 14 points. Pritchard led Boston with 18 points as the Celtics cruised into the half up big, 63-42.

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Pritchard rattled in jumper at the elbow to start the third quarter, as Boston was on a 24-3 scoring run. Minott swatted away a Jac’Kobe Walter dunk attempt resulting in a wide open Queta layup, Boston up, 74-51 early in the third.

Toronto was without its starters Scottie Barnes, R.J. Barrett, Jakob Poeltl, Brandon Ingram and Immanuel Quickly for their third preseason game, and it’s second stringers just couldn’t match Boston’s intensity. Grady Dick providing the lone bright spot for Raptor fans after three quarters.

The Celtics got consistent effort and good performances across the board as five Boston players registered double figures in scoring during the third. Simons poured in 10 points alone as Boston kept a lead of 10 points at the end of the third. Boston up 87-77 to end the third as Toronto’s third stringers managed to keep it within striking distance.

Boston saw its lead whittled down to 7 points at the start of the fourth, before Mazzulla went back to Luka Garza and Tillman to try and steady things. Queta had a shocking game overall registering his 5th turnover and 3rd foul in 16 minutes of play. Rookie Hugo Gonzalez also didn’t have the greatest of games as he went to the bench early and made way for Kendall Brown. Boston had Scheierman, Brown, Amari Williams, Harper Jr., and Bridges in the game looking to secure the win on the road.

Harper Jr. hit a step back three-pointer and Kendall Brown cut through the lane for his first score of the night, Boston up 10, 96-86. Scheierman was directing the team offensively and assisted to Bridges who hit on his first three-pointer of the game. Amari Williams hit 4 consecutive free throw attempts for Boston as the deep bench looked to close out the game on the road.

Boston then recorded 3 awful turnovers with 2 minutes remaining in the game which spurred the Toronto fans to get rowdy, as the Raptors got within 6 points. Undrafted Rookie Chucky Hepburn was all over the place in the forth quarter and hit a three-pointer to cap an 11-0 run. Scheierman fouled out of the game and Max Shulga came into the game in a very high pressure environment.

Boston completely capitulated on the road as the scores were tied up at 105 points with 4 seconds remaining. Mogbo laid up the winning points with 1 second to go, they win the game 107-105. Boston recorded 29 turnovers on the night and now return to TD Garden for a 2-game home stretch and next face the Cleveland Cavaliers on Sunday night.

Source: https://www.celticsblog.com/celtics...cs-drop-the-ball-late-lose-to-raptors-105-103
 
Celtics offseason surprisingly well-received in latest NBA GM Survey

Boston’s financial reset wasn’t seen as a total offseason dud


Facing the music was the theme this past offseason for the Celtics. The organization wasn’t in a position to keep the cast of its 2024 championship together, so President of Basketball Operations Brad Stevens commissioned a complete roster demolition.

It was a significantly different approach from the one Stevens took two offseasons ago after then-majority owner Wyc Grousbeck directed the front office head honcho to do anything to get Boston over the top. Stevens had no problem garnering flowers at his doorstep when taking home the NBA’s Executive of the Year award months after uniting Kristaps Porzingis and Jrue Holiday alongside Tatum and Jaylen Brown to create an immediate title contender. And although this time the organization has accepted its fate created by financial limitations, Stevens isn’t being perceived all that differently this go-around by his fellow colleagues.

In the latest 2025-26 NBA GM Survey which was released Thursday, the Celtics received 3% of votes from executives across the league for the best overall moves made this offseason. That placed Boston in fifth place behind the Hawks (53%), Rockets (27%), Nuggets (10%), and Magic (7%) after Stevens offloaded Porzingis and Holiday’s contracts to reduce the team’s payroll from $540 million to $280 million.

The financial burden of maintaining a stacked lineup quickly caught up to Boston, leaving Stevens with little room to maneuver. The objective was to relieve the financial pressure weighing on the organization’s shoulders as ownership undergoes its transition from Grousbeck to Bill Chisholm, all while Tatum — the franchise superstar — works to return from his ruptured Achilles tendon injury. In the eyes of general managers in positions like Stevens, easing that payroll burden in itself is a victory worth recognizing, regardless of the depleted hype surrounding the new-look team and its chances of competing for a title.

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Last week, the Warriors signed Al Horford to a two-year contract to officially bring the future Hall of Famer’s second run in Boston to an end. Horford was the de facto locker room captain, respected by all within the team, and further highlighted the dropoff in talent and depth the Celtics are assigned in working with heading into their most challenging (and interesting) season under the Tatum-Brown era.

Still, even with a depth chart consisting of a slew of inexperienced newcomers with plenty to prove, the Celtics themselves aren’t ready to throw in the towel and look ahead to 2026-27. From Mazzulla’s point of view, the expectations haven’t shifted much from those in place a year ago.

“Playing Celtic basketball, playing connected basketball and having an understanding of where we want to be great defensively and offensively,” Mazzulla said during Monday’s practice. “And having an understanding of what those details are. How can we be a well-balanced team on both ends of the floor? How can we have an understanding of what gives us a chance to win every single night, and how can we try to execute that? But I think the players do a great job of having an understanding of what that is and setting that tone by how they play.”

Making the most of an uncomfortable situation isn’t foreign to the Celtics, especially not to Brown. But that doesn’t make the mission of keeping Boston’s train from derailing any less challenging with new faces, including several rookies, working to find their footing in a Celtics uniform this preseason, and once Opening Night arrives in less than two weeks.

Source: https://www.celticsblog.com/article...isingly-well-received-in-latest-nba-gm-survey
 
Xavier Tillman and Luka Garza’s efforts go a long way in Celtics’ preseason opener

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Arguably the most important blow to Boston’s frontcourt this offseason was the loss of the connective tissue that players like Luke Kornet and Al Horford provide to an offense that created open looks at an elite level.

It’s often the thing that can go unnoticed on a live viewing, but the Celtics had a trustworthy bullpen of bigs that could score in their own respective ways but also create for others, regardless of if it showed up as an assist in the box score.

A well-set screen, a pass out of the short roll to force rotations, a quick outlet for players to pass and relocate when they’ve picked up their dribble — it all plays its part in the process toward a clean look.

The Celtics lost known contributors in those departments, but this preseason should answer who might step into those roles this season. In their preseason opener at Memphis on Wednesday night, they got a promising first look at what Luka Garza and Xavier Tillman can provide in those departments.

Memphis didn’t exactly bring an Opening Night starting lineup to the game, predominantly playing with a collection of rookies, NBA hopefuls and rotation guys, but what matters at this moment is how the process looks rather than what it’s up against.

Tillman, in a 23-minute start with Neemias Queta off for the night, posted a serviceable 7 points, 5 rebounds and 2 assists on the box score – highlighted by an unexpectedly altitudinous alley-oop – but it’s the unnoticed glue guy tendencies and constant movement that really spoke the loudest in his performance.

Tillman’s screen-setting was particularly great. He was in a constant help state, always looking to put a body on a defender and change an angle to give the best possible leverage to the ballhandler. The following cut-up shows three straight first quarter possessions that end in made baskets. The first two won’t show up as a counting stat for Tillman, as he sets screen after screen to help Jaylen Brown get downhill and later gets in the way of two defenders to help Derrick White dribble into a pull-up three.

He takes on a more active role in the third possession, working into a two-man game with White as he helps him relocate with a dribble handoff into a slip screen, where he gets the ball in the restricted area and makes an immediate kickout to an open Sam Hauser in the corner.

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When he checked in at the 5:16 mark of the second quarter, Tillman continued to play his part in keeping the pace fast without sacrificing shot quality.

This sequence featured his alley-oop and an athletic steal with a layup at the other end, but let’s focus on three plays that created shots for others. Checking into the game with the inbounds under his own hoop, Tillman immediately makes an impact with a screen for Hauser to fly around for a corner three. While his screen doesn’t make contact with John Konchar, it does force him to make a slight decelerating move to bend around Tillman, putting him a step behind Hauser as he fires off the catch.

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Later on in his second quarter appearance, he showcased his short-roll passing, taking the pass from Hauser, using his vision to force the help off to the corner where Jaylen Brown is, and making the easier pass to White, who in turn swings it to Brown with no one there to contest. It’s ultimately an empty possession, but it’s a great look nonetheless.

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And for the final play we’ll highlight from this stretch, Tillman sets a wide pindown for Brown where he makes full contact with Cam Spencer, who is completely taken out of the play as Brown drills an open 3-pointer.

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Garza, who finished the game with a double-double of 10 points and 10 rebounds in 16 minutes, checked in at the 7:49 mark of the first quarter and immediately found ways to contribute.

Within a minute of his first appearance in green, he immediately delivers a pindown that’d lead to a Brown triple, then crashes the glass to beat two Grizzlies to the ball on a missed Hauser three, saving a possession and moving the rock as it eventually finds Hauser again for a shot that would go down.

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A few minutes later, you see him again set a pindown, this time reaping the rewards of Hauser’s gravity as he rolls into open space and takes a pass from Hauser, which leads to an and-one opportunity.

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In the second quarter, we see another great screening possession from Garza, who acts as a blockade for Jaylen Wells to go around as he defends Brown. Getting space for Brown to receive the pass but not quite setting a screen just yet, Garza actually changes the angle right as the ball’s about to hit Brown’s hands, which forces Wells to take a longer path back to Brown while Garza quickly rolls to the hoop, taking the drop big with him as Brown pulls up into an elbow jumper.

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The Celtics of today don’t lack for scoring options, but they desperately need to find out who among their unproven players can make life easier for those top scoring threats. Garza and Tillman, for this game at least, capably played their part, and that shouldn’t go unnoticed.

Source: https://www.celticsblog.com/article...rts-go-a-long-way-in-celtics-preseason-opener
 
Josh Minott has never experienced this before

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BOSTON — In his Celtics debut at TD Garden, Josh Minott slammed home a windmill dunk and got fouled on a three-point attempt.

All in about 30 seconds.

In turn, Minott finished his first home game as a Celtic with 16 points, 6 rebounds, an assist, and a block, impacting the game in a variety of ways in his 23 minutes of action.

And, he did it all in front of a home crowd that he proclaimed was the best preseason crowd he’s ever played in front of.

“It was surreal,” Minott told CelticsBlog after the 138-107 win over the Cleveland Cavaliers.

The Celtics’ preseason home opener came on the heels of a two-game road trip that included stops in Memphis and Toronto; Memphis’s FedEx Forum was strikingly empty, while the ScotiaBank Arena in Toronto was undoubtedly rowdier, particularly as the Raptors mounted a comeback.

But, neither arena rivaled TD Garden’s — nor did Minott’s previous preseason stops through his three-year NBA tenure.

“I feel like all across the league, fans aren’t really at these games, or putting any importance on them,” Minott said. “It’s usually just scattered around people, die-hard fans. But here it’s just like, man. The whole city, it just seems like everybody’s a die-hard fan.”

Josh Minott has been a standout through preseason so far​


On Sunday, the 22-year-old continued his strong preseason play, hitting 5 of 9 field goal attempts off the bench.

After his fourth quarter and-one three-pointer, Minott shot back to his feet and immediately struck a celebratory pose, drawing a chuckle from Baylor Scheierman, who found him on the wing for the shot.

Josh Minott is on a hell of a run here

Hits the pose after the and-one three pic.twitter.com/9YfLWZrGYJ

— Noa Dalzell 🏀 (@NoaDalzell) October 13, 2025

“The crowd might have to chill out,” Minott said. “Because I was feeling invincible.”

Throughout training camp, Minott — who signed a two-year, minimum contract with the Celtics — earned praise from his teammates.

“He definitely comes in with that excitement, that joy — and he’s one of those guys that is just excited for his opportunity,” said Derrick White. “And he can do a lot of different things out there on court, and guards multiple positions, and just kind of be a pest out there. And so he’s been great for us this whole preseason. He’s just always listening, learning, wants to just keep getting better and show what he can do.”

Minott has put together three strong performances through the preseason so far.

But on Sunday, there was an extra pep in his step.

It might have had something to do with Boston’s special basketball environment.

“I was just feeding off the energy,” he said. “Just to have that home atmosphere here, it’s just real welcoming. There’s nothing like it.”

Source: https://www.celticsblog.com/articles/122649/josh-minott-has-never-experienced-this-before
 
Ten takeaways: fast and furious Celtics debut at TD Garden

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The Celtics crushed the Cavaliers 138-107 on Sunday night and are looking more and more like the team they said they would be on Media Day. Here are ten takeaways from Boston’s blowout:

Mazzulla Ball is alive and well

For three seasons (pun intended), the Celtics could consistently rely on the three-point margin to win games. After three preseason games, it doesn’t look like that will necessarily change. After shooting 53 threes in Memphis and 38 more against the Raptors, Boston went 18-of-45 from behind the arc in their home opener against the Cavaliers. That’s 45.3 per game, a shade under their 48.2 pace that led the league last year.

Did we just see the Opening Night starting lineup?

Ultra small starting 5 with Payton Pritchard, Derrick White, Jaylen Brown, Sam Hauser, and Chris Boucher, but it’s arguably the quickest fivesome Joe Mazzulla can field and the closest facsimile to how they played last year with shooting at all five positions.

Admittedly, he’s stressed not to read into any of his lineups in training camp, but we’ve seen a bit of everything from Mazzulla so far. He’s also gone with two bigs in Boucher and Xavier Tillman Sr. against the Grizzlies and Neemias Queta in Toronto.

Start up that “Payton Pritchard to the All-Star Game” campaign

That early five-out spacing allowed for the Celtics’ best one-on-one player, Payton Pritchard — yes, Payton Pritchard — to go to work. He treated his defenders like the friends he pays to defend him in summer workouts.

Nasty work 🤧 pic.twitter.com/k0G6UOp3SI

— Boston Celtics (@celtics) October 12, 2025

Pritchard finished the first quarter with 12 points (5-of-6 from the field) and the game with 14 (2-of-5 from 3). Nothing is official just yet, but it certainly looks like he’ll be in the starting five on October 22nd when the team hosts the 76ers in the season opener.

Practice what you preach

So far, Boston has leaned into playing faster on both sides of the ball. Heading into their matchup against the Eastern Conference contender, the Celtics were averaging 103 possessions per game; that’s up from 96.59 last year. That may not be a good measure of the team’s new identity though.

“Playing fast doesn’t mean playing reckless. It doesn’t mean not being structured or unorganized,” Mazzulla said pre-game. “It means getting to your spacing fast, bringing the ball up the floor fast, reading the defense fast, driving the ball fast…it’s all about playing to the identity that we’re trying to create as a team.”

Before the game, Mazzulla talked about getting into their spacing and actions early. Late in the first quarter, the Celtics generated two three-pointers — one off a made basket — by starting their offense with only a few ticks off the shot clock. pic.twitter.com/aMApKrLsPy

— Bill Sy (@deliberatepix) October 13, 2025

Mazzulla has stressed that basketball is just all about creating 2-on-1s and 3-on-2s. After years finding favorable mismatches as killer whales, this version of the Celtics acts more like a school of piranhas, churning defensive waters with quick decisions and constant movement and letting everybody eat.

Rebounding remains an issue

Last season, Boston was one of the best defensive rebounding teams in the league and were just about league average in offensive rebounding. However, flipping that script could be a point of emphasis in 2025-2026. In their first two preseason games, the Celtics gave up 34 second chance points to opponents. The good news is, they’ve scored 44 crashing the offensive glass.

The Cavaliers didn’t have Evan Mobley or Jarrett Allen last night, so their 23 points off offensive rebounds can be taken with a grain of preseason salt.

Defense to offense

Last season, the Thunder fueled their championship run with an aggressive, albeit handsy defense that led the NBA in points off turnovers at 21.8 a night. After scoring 53 points of TOs against the Grizzlies and Thunder, the Celtics had a whopping 39 on Sunday.

“We definitely want to take more risk and be more aggressive defensively,” Pritchard said before the tip. “This is the preseason to learn that and trying to build those habits of when’s the right time and when’s the wrong time.”

Defense ➡️ Offense pic.twitter.com/HfoOcCRz9A

— Boston Celtics (@celtics) October 12, 2025
Jaylen Brown steal.
Jaylen Brown slam.

Showing off his two-way impact on ESPN 👀 pic.twitter.com/c3WqjJLE0W

— NBA (@NBA) October 13, 2025

Tommy would be so proud.

Anfernee Simons off the ball

“A great scorer, can really score it, can really shoot it, definitely a very explosive athlete. He’ll definitely help us a lot,” Pritchard said of his new teammate, Anfernee Simons.

In his debut on Friday, Simons admitted that he was a little nervous and still feeling out the game as he gets acclimated with a new system and teammates. As a primary scorer in Portland, Simons shot nearly a career-low 42.6% from the field. He’ll get some similar opportunities with the ball in his hands to start offensive possessions, especially if he’s coming off the bench as a sixth man with the second unit.

But throughout training camp, he’s talked about the privilege of playing off Pritchard, Brown, and White and getting some easier looks.

Simons showing the 3pt versatility tonight. 3/3 with the first two being off the dribble step backs. Now is able to play off of JB and knocks one down off the catch pic.twitter.com/jTeK07rKbg

— NikNBA🏀 (@NIKNBAYT) October 12, 2025

His first two buckets came off crafty sidestep threes, but his next four baskets were all assisted as he worked on the perimeter as a release valve.

Centers

Before the game, Tillman Sr. said that he and the other centers don’t really see it as a competition for playing time and through three games, there doesn’t seem to be any distinction between Boston’s big men. They’re all fairly good screeners. Tillman and Garza have taken threes with X making one, but even their willingness to shoot them hasn’t separated one from the other. Queta, the pre-preseason favorite to gobble up those minutes, has played the fewest so far and in that limited playing time, he’s looked uncertain at best with nearly as many turnovers as rebounds.

This parking space is reserved for Josh Minott

Josh might permanently need a space carved out in our 10 Takeaways called “What Did Josh Minott Do Today?” Every game so far, he does something eye-opening.

Josh Minott my lord pic.twitter.com/43L5ZMHoq8

— NikNBA🏀 (@NIKNBAYT) October 13, 2025

He finished the game with 16 points and six rebounds and has been a +29 so far.

Wendell. Moore. Jr.

Here’s the cherry on your Sunday night.

OH MY WENDELL MOORE JR. 🤯 pic.twitter.com/AQS55PddKj

— Boston Celtics (@celtics) October 13, 2025

Moore signed an Exhibit 10 contract with the Celtics to finalize their training camp roster after spending last year with the Charlotte Hornets’ G League affiliate. Before that, he was with Minott and Garza in Minnesota. Loud dunks in the preseason will quickly fade out, but hopefully he can make some noise in Maine.

Source: https://www.celticsblog.com/articles/122584/ten-takeaways-celtics-cavaliers
 
Parquet plays: how Anfernee Simons was utilized perfectly vs. Cleveland

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In just two games with the Celtics, Anfernee Simons has already showcased the scoring prowess that has many of his new teammates calling him simply “a bucket.”

While that may be true, these two games revealed slightly different versions of Simons as a scorer, and personally, I hope the Celtics continue to lean into the way he was utilized against Cleveland, rather than the approach taken in the Toronto game.

In Toronto, Simons put together a solid outing with 16 points on 6-of-13 shooting, including 2-of-7 from three. However, he struggled as the primary ball-handler under consistent defensive pressure. His three turnovers were directly caused by tight on-ball defense, and there were two additional plays where he lost control due to that same pressure. While I will give grace to first-game jitters, what unfolded in the Cleveland game offered a promising counter, one that both eases the pressure on him and accelerates his adjustment to the Celtics’ system.

In Toronto, Simons had a 27% usage rate. Although usage rate doesn’t always equate to these things, this outing saw him dribbling the ball up the court more against pressure and standing at or near the logo waiting for things to happen. This led to turnovers, but also many late clock situations while he was out there essentially slowing the pace down (Simons had a 94.7 pace rating this game).

While Simons clearly has the talent to score in stagnant possessions with minimal movement, his performance last night suggested that his efficiency can be enhanced. He scored 21 points with a lower usage rate (21%) on 6/12 from the field with all of his makes coming from three (6/9). He had one turnover opposed to three, and his pace rating jumped 13.1 to 107.8.

This is not a cry to take the ball completely out of Simons’ hands (because that would be foolish), but just an angel on the shoulder breaking down the actions and plays where he was able to get catch-and-shoot opportunities and or take less time/dribbles to score.

Vs. Toronto​


Even in his first game, there were a few encouraging plays that hinted at how effective Simons could be in more of an off-ball role.

The first play of his Celtics career (video explanation below) was “Ram Miami.” To begin the play, you see Josh Minott set an off ball for Neemias Queta to set a ball screen for Payton Pritchard. That part is the “Ram” action. Ram = an off ball screen for someone to go set a ball screen. Pritchard uses the ball screen from Queta to initiate a DHO with Simons. Miami = dribble hand off followed by a ball screen. Even though he doesn’t make it, he gets an open look.

Next play sees Simons touch the ball quite a few times, but he only takes two dribbles. Chris Boucher receives a series of staggered screens and uses them to cut to the paint. Celtics were able to get good movement between Simons and Xavier Tillman through handoffs, which I noted were a large part of their offense vs. Memphis. On the last handoff, Simons is able to take one dribble and get right to the cup.

Here is just a smart play by Queta freeing Simons up with a simple “Flare” screen.

Vs. Cleveland​


Simons got more looks off the catch. Four of his six made threes were of that variety.

The first play encapsulates what I hope Jaylen Brown can do consistently this year. A simple drive from him will draw the defense’s attention more often than not. Simons is able to play off him and hit a catch-and-shoot three. He shot 38% from behind the arc in these situations last season.

Next play is good work again by Queta. He catches the defender only looking at the ball and sets another good screen for Simons to spring free. He shot 42% on open threes last season.

Here, he’s able to get one by doing something the Celtics have always viewed as a winning play: corner crash.

Jaylen Brown pushes the pace once again, and his drive forces three Cavaliers to the paint. This leaves Simons and Sam Hauser wide open, and Simons hits another one.

Lastly, Minott does a good job finding Simons trailing the play. No one gets up on Simons, and he has the range to knock this down.

At Media Day, Simons was asked about the potential shot quality change he would see playing with the Celtics. He responded, “when I found out I was coming here, I was like I can finally get some wide open shots on a consistent basis.” And while his tough shot making will always be valuable, I believe an emphasis on getting him the best looks majority of the time will maximize him. The 3-6 or 7+ dribble three point attempts he’s capable of hitting should be the cherry on top, not the main course.

Source: https://www.celticsblog.com/celtics...ee-simons-was-utilized-perfectly-vs-cleveland
 
I lost to Joe Mazzulla and the Celtics coaches by 53 points — and it was the time of my life

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AUERBACH CENTER — At the conclusion of Tuesday’s Celtics practice, Joe Mazzulla was asked about a media pickup basketball game that was scheduled for later in the day at the Auerbach Center.

“I don’t know how to break it to you,” Mazzulla told us reporters. “But you’re not playing against each other — you’re playing against the coaches.”

We were supposed to have a media pickup game at the Celtics practice facility today, but we just got some news from Joe Mazzulla:

“You’re not playing against each other — you’re playing against the coaches.” pic.twitter.com/v7a8HtXuYA

— Noa Dalzell 🏀 (@NoaDalzell) October 14, 2025

And, true to his word, Mazzulla laced up after Celtics practice concluded — alongside six extremely talented assistant coaches — ready for a Celtics Media vs Celtics Coaches full-court basketball game that was sponsored by the Junior Celtics Academy and New Balance.

Those coaches?

Former NBA players Phil Pressey and DaSean Butler, as well as four former college basketball stars: Fairmont State University’s God Shammgod Jr., Duke University’s Amile Jefferson, Richmond’s Tony Dobbins, and Bucknell’s DJ MacLeay.

The final score?

57-4.

I think you can guess who came out on top.

Phil Pressey extends the lead to 47!

Joe Mazzulla is HYPED RIGHT NOW as Jaylen Brown and Jayson Tatum watch from above 😂
@CLNSMedia pic.twitter.com/DFeYOZyW2l

— Celtics on CLNS (@CelticsCLNS) October 14, 2025

All the while, Celtics stars watched from up above, a grin plastered across Jaylen Brown’s face as the game progressed. Celtics center Luke Garza hardly looked away from the demolition taking place on the parquet.

“Anyone want to do media?” Brown belted down at the reporters after the final buzzer sounded. (I will note, Brown did cheer on the media throughout the scrimmage. Thank you, Jaylen.)

How Joe Mazzulla and the Celtics coaches destroyed the media​


It’s hard to even describe what went down in the game. To describe it as a disaster for us reporters would be an understatement. The sheer gap in athleticism — speed, size, instincts, you name it — felt so insurmountable that I can hardly pinpoint what even went down. I’d love to take a look at a box score, but the amount of live-ball turnovers we accrued would probably make me sick.

What I do know for certain is that the Celtics media conglomerate was so thoroughly outplayed that just getting the ball past halfcourt felt like a victory.

A rebound (I got one!) felt like a touchdown.

Hitting the rim on a shot attempt? Practically a cause for celebration.

Joe Mazzulla locking up @RealBobManning 🔒
@CLNSMedia pic.twitter.com/djTb6HI2L5

— Celtics on CLNS (@CelticsCLNS) October 14, 2025

It felt like the coaches rarely missed, but special shoutout to player development coach God Shammgod Jr, who was absolutely lights out.

The game served as an (unneeded) reminder of the ridiculous disparity between us regular people and elite athletes. (Believe it or not, there were multiple former college basketball players among us.)

And, it was especially humbling to remember that, as massive as the gap was between the coaching staff and the media, the Celtics players themselves are in a whole other stratosphere.

Team Media scored four points — shoutout to Forbes’ Bobby Krivitisky and Boston.com’s Khari Thompson for finishing their layups — and honestly, if we played that game over 100 times, the final score would round out to about 57-4 every time.

And, as frustrating as it was to not be able to dribble or convert simple passes, I couldn’t fight the immense feeling of gratitude and joy I felt throughout the blood bath.

Here we were at the Auerbach Center, home of the Boston Celtics. Each and every time I contested a shot or hit the deck diving for a loose ball, I reminded myself where I was and who I was playing against. A couple of times, I picked up Mazzulla himself, just for the hell of it.

Because why wouldn’t you want to guard the Celtics’ head coach?

I fell in love with the game of basketball when I was 11 years old. I always sucked at sports — tennis, volleyball, dodgeball, track, you name it. During gym class, I usually read a book on a mat in the corner, gossiped with friends, or tried to convince my gym teachers to let me go to the library.

True story, I swear. It wasn’t even because I disliked sports; it’s just no fun being absolutely terrible at anything.

But everything changed the first day I saw a basketball go through the net. It took everything, and I mean everything, to get to the point where I got good enough at one sport that I made the high school basketball team.

Making the varsity basketball team was the result of hours on hours of three-point attempts every night (shoutout to my dad for the late-night assists), coupled with an obsessive passion for the sport that I truly believe very few people have ever felt.

My incredibly mediocre high school basketball career remains my most prized accomplishment, no matter what I accomplish in the future. In my senior year, I was on somewhat of a heater for about two months. That stretch of basketball still means everything to me, almost a decade later.

Sometimes, I replay my best-ever game — an 8 three-pointer night against our rival school, Newton North — just because I still can’t fathom how cool a feeling it was for the basket to truly feel as big as the ocean.

I wish I were good enough to play basketball as a job, like the players I cover. I wasn’t even good enough to play in college, a reality that became difficult to reckon with as I neared the end of my senior season (and cried after every game).

But covering the Celtics and the WNBA is not a bad consolation prize. Every day, I pinch myself on my way to “work” because I still can’t fathom that “work” means watching basketball, talking about basketball, and writing about basketball. I’m confident that the gratitude will never fade.

Celtics Coaches vs Celtics Media was probably the most lopsided game of basketball I’ll ever partake in.

It was also the time of my life. I can only hope we do it again.

Source: https://www.celticsblog.com/articles/122754/joe-mazzulla-celtics-coaches-media-game-53-points
 
Boston Celtics Daily Links 10/14/25

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Herald Celtics notebook: Why Joe Mazzulla hates preseason games, loves fighting

New Celtic check-in: How Boston’s five newcomers have fared this preseason

Globe Al Horford explained why he decided to leave the Celtics

Jaylen Brown proclaims ‘we got enough’ on 2025-26 Celtics roster

How Joe Mazzulla must adjust his coaching style now that he’s leading NBA unknowns instead of NBA stars

CelticsBlog Parquet plays: how Anfernee Simons was utilized perfectly vs. Cleveland

Jayson Tatum makes 1 thing crystal clear at sneaker launch

Josh Minott has never experienced this before

The world according to Joe Mazzulla

CLNS Media How New Celtics Have Handled Joe Mazzulla’s Coaching Style

Celtic .com Josh Minott in Full Mow-tion for the Green

NBC Sports Boston Horford’s reasoning for leaving Celtics is a perfect motivator for Boston

Scalabrine: Josh Minott is fitting the bill of what Celtics will need

NESN Al Horford Reveals Why He Made ‘Tough Decision’ To Leave Celtics

NBA Season Simulation Has Celtics Sort Of Winning Championship

Celtics’ Joe Mazzulla Ranked Among ‘Elite’ NBA Head Coaches

Mass Live Boston Celtics coach wants more practices: ‘I hate preseason games’

Former Boston Celtics center confirms key reason for departure

Former Boston Celtics guard nearing Lakers debut after injury

New Boston Celtics wing has been an early winner of preseason

Celtics Wire Celtics jersey history No. 40 – Michael Finley (2010)

Celtics history: Siegfried inked; Brown, Schintzius, Williams born

Payton Pritchard on why the Boston Celtics are playing faster this season

Joe Mazzulla on whether he needs to adjust his coaching style with the Boston Celtics

Anfernee Simons on making an impact for the Celtics as a bench player

Derrick White on how the Celtics defend, rebound with new -look roster

The Athletic Al Horford: Celtics didn’t offer championship ‘opportunity’ that Warriors do

Boston Sports Journal The Celtics are on a quest to find structure in the chaos, but they’re nowhere close yet

Hardwood Houdini Celtics ready to change huge part of their style this season

What Joe Mazzulla’s doing off the court to get the most out of the Celtics on it

Jaylen Brown is eager to take on brand new Celtics challenge this year

Teams are too afraid to play real lineups against the Celtics and it’s annoying

Payton Pritchard and Anfernee Simons will be crucial Celtics duo

Chowder and Champions New Celtics Addition Already Filling the Luke Kornet Void

CLNS Media/YouTube Chris Boucher on whether he’ll START for Celtics | Practice Interview

Xavier Tillman on Neemias Queta’s Growth | Practice Interview

Joe Mazzulla: I wish Celtics played NO preseason games | Practice Interview

Why Did Joe Mazzulla GO OFF After Celtics Preseason Win? | Garden Report Practice Update

ESPN 2025-26 NBA season simulation: Predictions, playoffs, Finals

This Week in Worcester Old Grumbly Fan’s Boston Celtics Season Preview

Pro Football Network Celtics Star Reveals Joe Mazzulla’s New Approach With Boston’s Younger Players

Jaylen Brown Makes Feelings Clear on Being Celtics’ Leader Amid Jayson Tatum’s Absence

NikNBA/YouTube Give Josh Minott All the Minutes : Film Session

Rip City Project Ex-Blazers star is making them regret shipping him out of town

SI .com Two Midseason Replacements for Rockets’ Fred VanVleet

What Every NBA Team Needs From Their 2025 First-Round Pick: Atlantic Divison

Top takeaways From Cleveland Cavaliers’ preseason loss to Boston Celtics

Al Horford Gave Two Simple Reasons Why He Left Celtics for Warriors

Celtics’ Anfernee Simons Gets Honest on Adjusting to Bench Role

Celtics’ Xavier Tillman Doesn’t Hold Back on Outside Criticism

Hardwood Heroics “We Feel Like We Can Beat Anybody”: Jaylen Brown Fires Up Celtics with Strong Belief in Roster

NBA Analysis Jaylen Brown says Boston Celtics have signed a player they could have used over the past few seasons

Jaylen Brown seems to take dig at ‘seal’ Luka Doncic discussing 2024 NBA Finals win, ‘the weak link…’

NBC 10 Boston Scalabrine: Josh Minott is fitting the bill of what Celtics will need

Heavy Al Horford Drops Retirement News, Reason For Joining Warriors

Mock Trade Sees Celtics Land 2-Time MVP

Basketball Network “I have more playoff wins than 15 or 16 teams” – Jaylen Brown embraces leadership role as Celtics enter new era without Jayson Tatum

“Nobody could’ve handled Russell the way Red did” – Jerry Krause explained why Red Auerbach was the perfect coach for the Boston Celtics

How Larry Bird welcomed Bill Walton to the Boston Celtics: “You wanna stay on this team, you throw the ball to me every time”

Indy Star Gordon Hayward returns to Butler basketball as executive basketball advisor

Deadspin Without Jayson Tatum, the Boston Celtics’ Championship Window Closed

Athlon Sports Jaylen Brown Admits He Loves Playing With New Celtic Josh Minott

Sportsdunia Top 10 Best Shooting Guards in NBA 2K26: Ratings, Stats & Full Breakdown

Total Pro Sports Jaylen Brown Reflects On Leadership Role After Being Called One Of The Celtics’ “Old Heads”

Did Kevin Durant Really Almost Join The Boston Celtics Instead Of The Warriors In 2016?

Locked on Celtics Mazzulla DEMANDS Rebounding Improvement | How GOOD to Celtics need to be?

Open Court When Paul Pierce Was Stabbed 11 Times And Almost Killed But Didn’t Miss A Single Game

Bleacher Report Al Horford Eyed Warriors Contract Because Celtics Couldn’t Offer NBA Title Opportunity

Blazers Edge Jrue Holiday and the Blazers are a Happy Fit

Fun 107 Mark Wahlberg Brings Movie Magic to TD Garden

Essentially Sports Al Horford Confirms Jayson Tatum’s Role in Celtics Exit as Details of Private Stephen Curry Conversation Surface

Clutch Points Celtics’ Joe Mazzulla claims he ‘hates’ the NBA preseason

Source: https://www.celticsblog.com/boston-celtics-daily-links/122726/boston-celtics-daily-links-10-14-25
 
Celtics close out preseason with a 110-108 win over the Raptors

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The Celtics preseason finale was a fun one. After taking a big lead late, the Celtics let the game slip away before Xavier Tillman Sr. saved the day with a game winning floater over the Raptors. Boston beat Toronto, 110-108.

BOSTON WINS IT ‼️

Xavier Tillman hits the GAME-WINNING floater with 0.8 seconds left 🤯 https://t.co/RKWPV7pvHZ pic.twitter.com/8Hzz9lNmS2

— NBA (@NBA) October 16, 2025

It was the first time we got to see the Celtics take the floor against a team’s starting lineup. The Raptors started their projected starting five of Immanuel Quickley, RJ Barrett, Brandon Ingram, Scottie Barnes and Jakob Poeltl. For the Celtics, it was Payton Pritchard, Derrick White, Jaylen Brown, Chris Boucher (in his 2nd revenge game) and Neemias Queta. Sam Hauser did not play.

The Celtics opened up the scoring with an 11-point lead, led by 5 points from Jaylen Brown and 4 points from Derrick White.

Anfernee Simons, Luka Garza and Josh Minott were the first three guys off of the bench for the Celtics. Hugo Gonzalez checked in a little later and had a nice spinning layup.


The Celtics jumped off to a 30-19 lead, but a 6-0 Toronto run cut the lead to 5. Derrick White led the team in scoring with 12, while Gonzalez had 5 off of the bench.

Meanwhile, Jaylen Brown departed the game during the first quarter with left hamstring tightness and did not return after being listed as doubtful.

Payton Prichard was passing the ball well during the first half with 8 assists, including one dime on a nice backdoor cut from Jordan Walsh with Raptors big man Jonathan Mogbo was caught ball watching.

Neemias Queta had a great half: 6 points, 8 rebounds and 4 blocks. The Celtics took a 52-50 lead into the locker room.

Welcome to Neemias Queta's block party 💪

4 rejections… in 1 half. pic.twitter.com/u9DRcfZobw

— NBA (@NBA) October 16, 2025

Baylor Scheierman replaced Brown in the 2nd half starting lineup.

Queta’s strong play continued into the third quarter. Defensive rebounding is the key for him this season; if he can consistently be in the correct position and rebound well, Boston will be much better off for it.

Chris Boucher had an awesome block mid way through the quarter, capping off really strong preseason.

Boucher is fun pic.twitter.com/ykX35jygzm

— Pull up shoot (@NElGHT_) October 16, 2025

At the end of the third quarter, the Celtics led the Raptors, 79-75. Derrick White was the only Celtic in double figures at that point in the game with 25 points, 9 rebounds and 5 assists.

White has a chance to flirt with triple-doubles all season long and I thought he was the best player on the court Wednesday night. White was all over the court all night, blocking shots, running the offense, making shots. He looks ready to have a huge year this season and certainly flirt with being an All-Star.

Derrick White block.
Derrick White triple.

He's up to 30p/9r/5a/4b for the C's on NBA TV 👀 pic.twitter.com/wX0G9tX0IR

— NBA (@NBA) October 16, 2025

White finished the game with 33 points, 9 rebounds and 6 assists.

It was looking like we would have a really fun preseason finish, but then Darko Rajaković pulled his starters with 5 minutes left in the game, in a very lame move.

Meanwhile, Mazzulla ran a 12-man rotation, all of the players that are on the active roster that were in uniform played in the game. It will be interesting to see if that carries over to the regular season or not.

A late Celtics collapse let the Raptors back in the game, created by the Celtics inability to break a press, but it all led to a Xaiver Tillman game winning floater. It was Tillman’s 2nd Celtics game winner.

The Celtics shot 39% from the field and 29% from three while the Raptors shot 40% from the field and 30% from three. The Celtics open up the regular season next Wednesday, October 22nd, at 7:30 EST against the Philadelphia 76ers at TD Garden.

Source: https://www.celticsblog.com/celtics...e-payton-pritchard-jaylen-brown-neemias-queta
 
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