Celtics cut down Nets, 113-99

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The Boston Celtics visited the struggling Brooklyn Nets Tuesday night in the first of four meetings between the two teams. In a game that was close for the first three quarters, Derrick White turned in a classic performance for the road team in the fourth quarter as Boston moves to 8-7 on the season with a 113-99 victory. Jaylen Brown had 29 points to lead the team in scoring, Payton Pritchard had 22 points, but it was Derrick White who stuffed the stat sheet with 15 points, 5 rebounds, 4 assists, 2 steals and 2 blocks.

Boston started the same five as the past few games with Jordan Walsh alongside Pritchard, Neemias Queta, White and Brown. Jaylen Brown hit a pair of jumpers to start the game as he continues to be exceptional in the mid-range this season. Nic Claxton and Queta got tangled under the basket early and then Noah Clowney levelled Queta on a screen outside the three-point area. Clowney hit back-to-back triples as the Nets went up 10-4 at the 9-minute mark, forcing Joe Mazzulla to call a quick timeout.

Nets rookie point guard Egor Demin hit on his first three from the corner out of the timeout after Pritchard missed a heat check wide by two feet. The Nets came out of the locker rooms fired up to start and were the more forceful of the two teams early in the first quarter. Drake Powell was first off the bench for the home team, whilst Simons and Hauser saw early minutes for the Celtics in the green road uniforms.

Payton Pritchard converted on a deep triple with the shot clock expiring to get the Nets lead back to 7 points, 21-14. Last year’s Sixth Man of the Year hit his third three-pointer to pace Boston with 9 points after one quarter. Hauser who misfired early with his shot, hit his first three-pointer after missing his first two attempts. Boston ended the quarter on a 7-0 run to tie the ball game 29-29.

Baylor Scheierman got the nod to start the second and made an instant impact assisting to Minott for his first score of the night. Scheierman drilled a triple in front of the C’s bench as they went up 37-34. Jaylen Brown returned to the court and immediately drove to the basket after just playing 6 minutes to start the contest. Brown came into the game ranked 12th in the league in scoring, with 27.4 ppg on an efficient 50.5% from the field.

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Derrick White finally got on the scoreboard at the 5 and a half minute mark of the second quarter as Boston kept a narrow lead 46-43. Pritchard kept things rolling for the road team hitting his fourth triple in rhythm. The Nets got some good minutes Porter Jr. and Clowney as both teams traded baskets to round out the first half. Pritchard was red hot in the first half scoring 17 points with five three-pointers as Boston led the game 62-61 at the half.

Brooklyn opened the scoring to start the second half and retook the lead as Boston registered their 13th turnover of the game after a sloppy start. Jordan Walsh picked up his fourth foul and immediately was subbed out for former TWolve Josh Minott. A few plays later, Queta also logged his fourth personal as Joe Mazzulla turned to Luka Garza earlier than normal.

Derrick White was everywhere to start the second as he had 2 crafty steals and a floating 2 pointer spearheading a 10-2 Boston run. Jaylen Brown scored his first three-pointer of the night, his twelfth point in 14 minutes of action as the C’s went by 10 points, 75-65. With Queta in foul trouble Xavier Tillman saw his first minutes since the Utah game on November 3rd. Boston was keeping the door ajar for Brooklyn as they had 16 turnovers in the game with four minutes to go in the third quarter.

Boston struggled to convert anything for 2 and a half minutes as Brooklyn cut into the Celtics lead, 80-75. JB converted six straight free throws on multiple drives as the quarter expired. Brown had an exceptional quarter with 17 points in the third quarter as Boston held a slim margin 89-85 at the end of three.

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Both teams went scoreless for the first 2 minutes of the fourth quarter before Scheierman fouled Zaire Williams on a jumper. The Celtics were ice cold to start the fourth quarter, subjecting Celtic fans to a 4-minute scoring drought stretch, as Brooklyn retook the lead at the 8-minute mark 90-89. A Neemias Queta drive and dunk in the lane got Boston going as they reeled of 8 straight points of their own to race back into the lead 97-90.

Derrick White went into takeover mode to finish the fourth quarter, drawing fouls, blocking shots and draining corner triples as the Celtics would do enough to hang on in Brooklyn. Boston next face these same Nets at home in the NBA CUP on Friday.

Source: https://www.celticsblog.com/celtics-scores-results/125099/celtics-cut-down-nets-113-99
 
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High IQ plays of Week 4

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We’re back, and we’ve played some good basketball as of late! Welcome to the five highest-IQ plays of the week!

Sure, we love the high-flying dunks and the deep, off-the-dribble step-back threes, but this is a place for the under-the-radar plays that might not get the credit they deserve. The plays that get the basketball psychos and nerds out of their chairs. The plays that even YOU could make in your weekly rec league game.

Each week, the plays will be ranked from five to one—one being the smartest—and will only be taken from games that occurred within the past week. In this week’s case, games from November 12th to November 19th are considered.

5. Modern NBA movement

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The NBA is always changing, and it’s important to not get left behind. One of this year’s innovations seems to be the increased movement we’re seeing from off-ball players on drives. Memphis started their “wheel” concept last season, and Miami has taken it to a new level this year. Now, everybody is stealing it. In the play above, Anfernee Simons does a good job executing this modern spacing concept. On Pritchard’s drive, he moves in the SAME direction as the drive, forcing his defender to lose sight of him and make a longer closeout. Then, without thinking, he attacks the closeout and kicks out to a relocating Pritchard. It’s so simple, but these little off-ball movements can make the difference between an open look and a contested one.

4. End of clock double-team

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In the first week of high IQ plays, I wrote about an ill-advised late-clock double team from Anfernee Simons that resulted in a wide open three. Simons needs to take notes from White, because THIS is how you execute what he was trying to do just three weeks back. White doesn’t double right as Harden begins his move to the hoop, because he knows an overhelp could result in an easy Dunn three or Collins dunk. But once Harden makes his patented step-back move, White knows there isn’t enough time for him to also kick the rock to Dunn for a buzzer-beater – so he doubles aggressively, resulting in a terrible look. Beautiful stuff from Derrick.

3. The Kornet special

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Queta must’ve learned a little something from Luke Kornet. The super niche skill of getting out screens early was something the Green Kornet excelled at, and Neemias seems to be understanding it, too. On this play, he notices that Pritchard’s defender is aggressively trailing the play; so even though the initial call is for him to dribble hand-off and make contact with the defender, he realizes he doesn’t have to because Pritchard has a free lane without his assistance. Once PP gets the ball, Queta is already behind Jaren Jackson Jr. and puts Memphis in an impossible position from a coverage standpoint. Easy lob.

2. Playing the numbers

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This play might seem super simple, but it’s a perfect example of the strategic decisions that NBA players are consistently making at a rapid pace. Garza slips out of the screen and makes a really nice short roll pass. It’s great stuff, but it’s not what I’m most impressed with on this play. Instead, I love everything he does AFTER he gives the ball up. Luka knows two things; one, that three-point misses are usually going to bounce outside the restricted area, and two, that corner misses most often fall to the opposite side of the rim. As a result, Garza boxes out the defensive player (who said boxing out can only happen defensively, anyway?) in the optimal position to receive the offensive board. And the numbers pan out for him in this specific scenario. Excellent rebounding positioning.

1. Starting Walsh

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Starting Jordan Walsh has brought a meaningful jolt to the Celtics’ first five – mostly on the defensive end. He brings unique versatility in that he can defend both guards and forwards, which makes him a feasible option to defend virtually any team’s best player (unless it’s a center like Jokic).

This play is a good example of his ability to guard forwards, but I’m more so using it as a placeholder to shout out Joe for his continued trust and belief in Walshy. Many coaches could’ve given up on Jordan after his underwhelming first few seasons, but Mazzulla is clearly using this year’s roster unknowns as a way to give Walsh a real shot. And it looks to be working out quite well. Walsh knows his role and sticks to it.

Source: https://www.celticsblog.com/celtics-videos/125187/high-iq-plays-of-week-4
 
Celtics overcome season-high in turnovers to secure third-straight win in Brooklyn




Since the beginning of the season, Joe Mazzulla has been preaching the importance of winning the turnover battle every game. It’s been an integral part of their identity this season given the difference in talent from the previous years, the margin for error becoming that much slimmer.

The logic is simple: by limiting their own turnovers and forcing their opponents into turning the ball over, they can reduce the effectiveness of their opponents’ possessions, and generate better looks for themselves. Well, the Celtics royally failed in that department when they faced off against the Brooklyn Nets for the first time this season. Yet, they still managed to come away with their third-straight win.

The game was close throughout. Brooklyn jumped out to an early lead, going up by as much as 10 in the first quarter. The Celtics managed to claw back, getting out to a 5-point lead of their own in the second quarter, but they weren’t able to create any significant separation until about halfway through the third, even losing the lead at one point in-between. Boston was up by as much as 11 in the third, but again, Brooklyn took the lead back in the fourth, until the Celtics finally got it together, and broke through for a game-high 16-point lead.

It may be easy to assume the game was close because the Nets were just shooting better than the Celtics – except they weren’t. At the end of the first half, Boston only led by 1 despite shooting 61.1% from the floor, Brooklyn shooting 47.7%. Even from three-point range, Boston shot 52.4% while the Nets were at 50%. It’s not until you see that the Nets put up 8 more shot attempts in the half that the numbers start to make sense, 36 FGA for Boston, 44 for Brooklyn, with the Celtics only maintaining a 1 attempt advantage on threes.

Once you direct your attention over to the turnover battle, the picture becomes even clearer. In the first half alone, Boston turned the ball over a whopping 12 times, already exceeding their season average for a full game. 8 of those turnovers were steals by Brooklyn, meaning they were live ball turnovers that led to easy buckets. Brooklyn generated 17 points off Celtics turnovers compared to Boston’s 4 points off of 4 Nets turnovers.

Steal and a fast break dun for the Nets#NetsWorld pic.twitter.com/6plESeueGz

— Everything Team USA/NY (@EverythingUSANY) November 19, 2025

The Celtics turned the ball over 7 more times in the second half, but managed to increase their defensive intensity to recover, limiting the Nets to only 4 points off of those. Thanks to that increase in intensity, Boston also managed to force more Brooklyn turnovers, generating 9 of them while converting them into 11 points.

To put it plainly, the Celtics were just sloppy with the ball. A combination of bad passes, miscommunication, and loose dribbles killed their offensive momentum while providing the Nets with a spark. It’s a formula that won’t be maintainable against 90% of the league. Even in the second half, Boston continued to turn the ball over, and if it weren’t for a strong flurry from Derrick White, Jaylen Brown, and Sam Hauser in the fourth quarter, the game could have easily slipped out of their hands.

On the season, the Celtics have been doing well in implementing Coach Mazzulla’s philosophy. Before the Brooklyn game, Boston was averaging 11 turnovers per game, now that number jumping up to 11.6. Still, that’s good for the best in the league, the Oklahoma City Thunder comfortably behind them at 12.8 per game. Boston also has the top ranking for opponent points off turnovers, limiting them to just 13.7 per game, though they’re 11th in turnovers forced (15.5 per game) and 13th in generating points off of turnovers themselves (19.7 per game).

These are the margins that the coaching staff wants the team to focus on. Extra possessions go a long way in the NBA, especially for teams who may not have as much talent on their roster. It’s one of the biggest reasons that Boston has remained competitive this season, and they’ll be looking to improve on these margins as the season goes on.

Source: https://www.celticsblog.com/article...igh-in-turnovers-to-secure-third-straight-win
 
The Celtics are (seemingly) solving their biggest issue

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BOSTON — For a moment, it looked like the Boston Celtics’ season would be totally inhibited by rebounding.

Standing at his locker in Detroit in late October, Jaylen Brown shook his head when discussing the team’s mounting rebounding woes. In their previous two games — both losses — they were outrebounded by a combined 33 rebounds.

[In their first road game of the season, a 10-point loss to the New York Knicks, the Celtics were outrebounded by 16. Two days later, they were outrebounded by the Detroit Pistons by 17.]

“A lot of our issues, we could solve just on the defensive glass,” said Jaylen Brown after that loss, which dropped the team to 0-3 on the year. “I got to get more involved. I got to get some more rebounds.”

That was three weeks ago.

Now, the Celtics are 8-7, with a winning record for the first time this season. They’ve won 3 straight games and 8 of their last 12, and spirits are much higher than they were in that Detroit locker room.

A lot has improved since October 26th: Payton Pritchard is finding an offensive groove. The young guys — Jordan Walsh, Josh Minott — have demonstrated they can positively impact winning. Brown continues to score the ball at a torrid pace And, Neemias Queta is finding his footing as the team’s starting center.

Perhaps most underrated is the reality that the Celtics are a middle-of-the-pack rebounding team. They rank 12th in the NBA in rebounds per game, averaging 45 rebounds a night. They grab the 8th-most offensive rebounds (13.5 boards per game) and 20th-most defensive rebounds (31.5).

“We got a long way to go,” said Derrick White. “But, beginning of the year, it seemed like we had a longer way to go than we do now.”

Queta, the Celtics’ leading rebounder with 8.5 boards a night, said that after a tough start to the season on the glass, players took ownership of their own individual mistakes and committed to improving on the glass.

“We watched a lot of film on where we can get better,” Queta said. “At a lot of times, rebounding is all about effort — hitting first, making sure your guy doesn’t get it, go get it with two hands.”

What the film showed is that it wasn’t one player who was responsible for the Celtics’ struggles — if every player in the rotation missed a boxout once or twice a night, that added up. It wasn’t necessarily that players weren’t trying; it’s that the margin of error was slim.

“You lose one or two possessions of each game, individually, and then somebody else loses one too, and then you add up, and it makes a big difference,” Queta said. “So, everybody looked in the mirror and just thought about making themselves better. And collectively, we’re all on the same page for that.”

Individual players have demonstrated progress. In his last 6 games, Jaylen Brown is averaging 5.7 rebounds per game. That came after he averaged 4.4 boards in the first 9, and routinely stressed that he needed to be better on the glass.

Jordan Walsh, Josh Minott have been impactful rebounders​


Another part of the improvement on the glass seems potentially correlated with the emergence of two young, athletic forwards: Jordan Walsh or Josh Minott.

The 21-year-old Walsh has started the last three games for the Celtics, and has grabbed 16.8% of available rebounds when he’s been on the floor (the second-best mark on the team among players who have played more than 80 minutes this season). Minott, who started the previous 9 games for Boston, has grabbed 14.7% of boards during his time on the court, the third-best mark on the team.

After Queta, who leads the team with an 18.6 defensive rebounding percentage, those two guys have been two of the team’s most consistent rebounders, and Mazzulla has increasingly relied on both as the year has progressed.

The rebounding problems aren’t fixed. Joe Mazzulla would tell you that nothing is ever fixed and that rebounding is something that the Celtics will need to emphasize and commit to every single game.

And, the numbers demonstrate that rebounding is far from a strength. Celtics still have the fourth-worst defensive rebounding percentage in the NBA — they’re grabbing just 56.2% of available defensive rebounds (the Denver Nuggets, in contrast, lead the league with a 65.2% defensive rebounding percentage). And notably, two of their seven losses came as a result of failing to end a defensive possession with a rebound (Jusuf Nurkic scored the game-winner for the Utah Jazz over Neemias Queta after the Celtics’ center didn’t box him out, Kelly Oubre did the same a few weeks later for the Philadelphia 76ers over Jaylen Brown).

But, for a moment there, it seemed like no matter how good the Celtics’ defense was — and it’s been strong since Day 1 — rebounding would be the bane of the team’s existence.

It’s still early, but that no longer appears to be the case.

Source: https://www.celticsblog.com/article...nding-neemias-queta-jaylen-brown-jordan-walsh
 
Three things to look for as the suddenly surging Celtics try to secure their fourth straight win

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Don’t look now, but the Celtics have quietly won three straight, are above .500 for the first time and are firmly in the Eastern Conference playoff picture.

It’s a long season, and one that will inevitably feature many ebbs and flows, but this version of the Celtics (8-7) appears to be one that’s fully capable of doing some damage.

They’ll try to keep it rolling against the sputtering Nets (2-12), this Friday at 7:30 p.m. at TD Garden. Boston defeated Brooklyn, 113-99, on Tuesday, and has now beaten the Grizzlies, Clippers and Nets in a span of a week.

Here are three things to look for in tonight’s NBA Cup game:

Can Payton Pritchard keep it rolling?​

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It’s no secret that the Celtics are a different team when Payton Pritchard is cooking. He can take this particular roster from slightly above average to firmly above average when he’s feeling it.

After a somewhat inconsistent start, by his standards, Pritchard has turned a corner and appears to be figuring it out. In his last three games, he’s averaged 25.3 points, 6.3 rebounds and 5.3 assists per game, while shooting 51.1 percent from the floor, 51.4 percent from 3-point range and 90.9 percent from the line.

Pritchard puts a lot of pressure on himself, but the reality is, this team often goes as he goes.

Payton Pritchard over the last three games:

25.3 PPG
6.3 RPG
5.3 APG
51.1% FG
51.4% 3P
90.9% FT
32.9 MPG https://t.co/ypfUHoeMm1 pic.twitter.com/dtekg3lvQb

— Hoop Central (@TheHoopCentral) November 19, 2025

In wins this season, Pritchard is averaging 17.8 points and 6.1 assists, while shooting 35.2 percent from 3-point range and 88.2 percent from the line. In losses? 15.6 points, 3.7 assists, 30 percent from distance and 78.3 percent from the line.

The assist number there is the most telling. Hitting shots is great, obviously, but Pritchard is at his best when he’s a true dual threat as a scorer and facilitator. Being “aggressive” doesn’t always equate to taking tons of shots.

Can they get the assists up?​


That assist mentality is true for the whole team. Somewhat surprisingly, the Celtics are 26th in the NBA in assists as of Thursday afternoon (24.3 per game). It feels like they’re moving the ball pretty well overall eye-test-wise, but stats-wise, those extra passes aren’t necessarily resulting in assists.

During their mini win streak, however, that number has increased. They had 34 against the Grizzlies (including nine from Pritchard and seven from Anfernee Simons), 26 against the Clippers (nine for Derrick White) and 25 against the Nets.

Oh my Jordan Walsh 🤩 pic.twitter.com/krfjSnv2u7

— Boston Celtics (@celtics) November 10, 2025

One unique attribute of this team is that there isn’t a clear-cut No. 1 distributor, as White, Pritchard and Jaylen Brown share those duties. The positive is that everyone is a threat to pass. The negative is that each facilitator also naturally plays off the ball and is wired to score as well.

It doesn’t matter where they come from, but generally speaking, the Celtics’ odds of winning increase significantly when they rack up the assists.

Can they keep Michael Porter Jr. in check?​


In case you missed it, Michael Porter Jr. is now on the Nets. He got his ring as the third or fourth option on the Nuggets, and now he’s amid a career year with a bad Brooklyn team (24.2 PPG, 7.7 RPG, 3.2 APG). When he’s not making controversial statements on podcasts, he can often be found playing excellent basketball.

Jayson Tatum is significantly better and more versatile, but in my opinion, he’s the closest to Tatum in the league from a skill set, physique and stylistic standpoint.

Michael Porter Jr is tied as the fastest player in Nets history to reach 300+ PTS & 100+ REB. pic.twitter.com/wILgarrbti

— Real Sports (@realapp) November 19, 2025

Porter Jr. dropped 34 against the Wizards on Sunday and 25 against the Celtics on Tuesday. He’s playing with confidence, freedom and a total green light.

He’s going to score, but keeping him relatively in check could go a long way in helping the Celtics earn their fourth consecutive win.

Source: https://www.celticsblog.com/boston-...ltics-try-to-secure-their-fourth-straight-win
 
Anfernee Simons and Mazzulla Ball

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Anfernee Simons’ usage and minutes in the 2025–26 NBA season have been inconsistent. For a player making $25 million who averaged 32.9 minutes per game over the past four years and is still only 26, it’s unusual for his role to fluctuate this much. But the reason for that inconsistency isn’t complicated: to earn minutes on a Joe Mazzulla team, you need to do more than shoot the ball effectively.

If Anfernee Simons wants to play more, the formula is simple: rebound better and play slightly better defense. The Celtics’ offense has exceeded expectations, but they are building a defensive identity—flying around, gang-rebounding, forcing turnovers, guarding their yard, and scrapping on every possession. Simons hasn’t fit that mold.

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A common basketball trope you will hear is, “Defense is mostly effort.” I disagree. Effort matters, yes, but defense is also a skill. Playing hard is a skill. Derrick White didn’t become one of the best shot-blocking guards in the league by accident—he honed that craft. Based solely on their physical dimensions, Simons should be able to replicate a portion of White’s defensive impact. Both are six-foot-four, athletic guards; Simons may even be the better athlete, as evidenced by his dunk contest showing. The tape says otherwise.

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Screen navigation is hard. Celtics fans have been blessed with watching some of the best screen navigation in the league for close to a decade between Marcus Smart, Jrue Holiday, and Derrick White. Simons ends up behind the play, doesn’t impact the ball handler, or make an attempt to impact the pass to Nic Claxton. To be fair to Simons, Garza isn’t making Simons’ life any easier.

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I don’t think this is a lack of effort. Simons tries to impact Michael Porter Jr’s shot, which he misses, but then Simons proceeds to completely lose Terance Mann and give up an easy dunk.

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Simons gets swallowed by a Brook Lopez screen at halfcourt and doesn’t make a great effort to get back into the play. Joe Mazzulla seems very happy as he calls a timeout.

On some NBA teams, elite scoring alone earns you as many minutes as you want. In Boston, everyone is expected to contribute on the margins. Jaylen Brown and Jayson Tatum have set that standard. Being an elite scorer doesn’t excuse you from impacting the game in other ways.

If Simons wants more playing time, he could start by matching Payton Pritchard’s effort on the glass. Simons has an offensive rebounding percentage of just 1.2%. Pritchard, who is five inches shorter and far less explosive, sits at 2.8%. A big part of Boston’s offensive success this season has come from the offensive glass; they rank 8th in offensive rebounding. Aside from Simons, no Celtic players have an offensive rebounding percentage of less than 2.4%.

Joe Mazzulla cannot have two sets of rules. One can’t say: Max out your effort, chase loose balls, fight for every rebound, sell out on the offensive glass, or someone else will play…then turn around and give Simons different standards because he averaged 20 points per game on a bad Portland team.

Boston is top-10 in both offense and defense and sits 3rd in net rating in the Eastern Conference. They are two games out of the second seed. I’ve been wrong about this team—they’ve exceeded my expectations, especially defensively. What Mazzulla is doing is working. There’s no reason to force an Anfernee-Simons-shaped peg into a Mazzulla-ball-shaped hole.

He is clearly an elite shooter, especially on catch-and-shoot threes—he’s hitting a blistering 47.4%. But the effectiveness ends there. His pull-up shooting has been subpar (31% from three), and his ability to generate shots inside the arc has been underwhelming. Simons has never been great at getting to the rim. His career high in rim frequency came in 2023–24, when he took 22% of his shots at the rim (47th percentile) and hit just 58% of them (33rd percentile). In Boston, both numbers have cratered: career lows in frequency (9th percentile) and accuracy (14th percentile). It’s possible he’s still adjusting and an offensive breakout is coming. I’m dubious.

Some might argue that Mazzulla’s fluctuating usage is hurting Simons’ rhythm, so the question becomes: Should Mazzulla be trying to maximize Simons? With the Celtics lacking the offensive firepower of recent seasons, it’s a reasonable thought. Unlocking Simons could give the offense a needed jolt and increase his trade value.

But in reality, Simons is getting plenty of opportunity. He’s fourth on the team in minutes at 24.6 per game.

Zooming out, the 2025-2026 Boston Celtics should be prioritising the future. Prioritizing minutes for Jordan Walsh, Hugo Gonzalez, Josh Minott, and Payton Pritchard makes more sense than trying to rehabilitate the value of a player who doesn’t fit the mold of a modern winning player.

Source: https://www.celticsblog.com/articles/125226/anfernee-simons-and-mazzulla-ball
 
Ten takeaways: Celtics fall to the Nets in NBA Cup matchup

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The Celtics had chances to take control in Brooklyn, but never found the consistency needed to steal the game from the Nets. Boston flashed moments of good process and stretches of tough defense, yet the middle quarters — and a late Michael Porter Jr. surge — proved too much to overcome. Still, there were plenty of notable performances and trends worth digging into from an NBA Cup game that they couldn’t figure out. Here are 10 takeaways from the loss.

Losing The Middle Quarters

There’s no shying away from it, this one stings for Boston. They had their chances, and momentum swung their way at times, but it felt like they were playing on their heels the whole night.

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After scoring just 12 points with 4 minutes left in the 1st quarter, they found some answers and outscored the Nets 16-3 the rest of the way. They followed this up by losing the 2nd and 3rd quarter by a combined total of 70-49.

They’re gearing up for a difficult stretch into the start of December, so dropping a game to the two-win Nets is discouraging. Boston pulled away at the end of the first matchup, but it wasn’t exactly the most convincing game either.

Queta’s Big Impact

Of the bright spots in this one, Queta may have been the loudest. He struggled with Claxton at times, but Boston needed everything he could give them offensively to hang around.

His screening ability and timing when slipping toward the rim were a helpful counter against Brooklyn’s bigs defending at the level of the screen. His decision-making in these scenarios was exceptional as well.

So impressed by Queta this year pic.twitter.com/bZF7NNuPVF

— Pull up shoot (@NElGHT_) November 22, 2025

With Claxton up high to hedge the pick and roll, Queta maintains his screen long enough for Simons to hold Claxton’s attention. He rolls into open space and identifies a 4-on-3 advantage in their favor. You could argue that the layup and the pass are both good decisions, but it’s the decisiveness that makes this work. Any hesitation from Queta and the advantage dries up quickly.

Thought Queta’s timing and decision-making was great as a screener pic.twitter.com/O6Ur4I9Jkx

— Pull up shoot (@NElGHT_) November 22, 2025

Against an aggressive defense, sometimes the best option is to ghost a screen, as Queta does here. He catches Claxton off guard, rolls where Simons can find him and sprays it out to the corner.

This type of awareness has marked a more subtle improvement that is fueling Queta’s ascension.

Brown’s Foul Trouble

Jaylen played the entire 1st quarter, only picking up a single foul. He grabbed two more in the 2nd quarter, and wound up with his 5th at the six minute mark of the 3rd. The Celtics challenged the call, and had what felt like a solid case. However, the refs deemed Terance Mann made marginal contact prior to Brown hitting him with his off arm.

This was a significant call as Brown was up to nine points in the quarter, helping to cut the Nets lead down to five. Brooklyn closed the quarter on a 21-9 run to grab a 15 point lead after Brown went to the bench.

Jaylen getting to his spot pic.twitter.com/Fs5jYZkz6s

— Pull up shoot (@NElGHT_) November 22, 2025

A Quiet Night From Derrick White

In a game where Boston was starved for scoring, they needed Derrick White to be ready to answer the call. He’s been in a much better rhythm lately, but he simply didn’t have it tonight.

White finished with six points, his second lowest total of the season. He shot 2/13 from the field, including 1/7 from 3PT range. His off night was punctuated in the last 5 minutes with a missed point blank layup, and a corner three the caught the top corner of the backboard.

Pritchard Faded After The First

Payton came on strong in this one, giving Boston life in the 1st quarter with three 3-pointers. It looked like he was set up for another big game, but his scoring wasn’t there the rest of the way. He managed just four points in quarters 2, 3 and 4.

The biggest issues stemmed from Brooklyn’s size, mobility and gap help. Their lineups didn’t feature a single player shorter than 6’5, and their bigs are agile. This allowed for very few clean driving lanes, and limited open looks with bigs up high to restrict pull-up threes.

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Pritchard simply couldn’t create against all that length.

Simon’s Picking Up The Scoring

When Brown sat due to foul trouble, Simons understood that they’d need him to step up. He scored 13 of his 23 points during the final two quarters. He managed to consistently beat his man off the dribble to get to the paint — something that the rest of the team struggled with due to the Nets size and length.

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This resulted in Simons playing 33 minutes, the most of his Celtics tenure so far. He’s shot the ball effectively from three, but it’d be a nice boost if Simons could continue to take his drives deeper into the paint. He’s averaging just 4.8 drives per game, which is considerably lower than each of his previous four years in Portland.

He still looks like he’s trying to find his place in the offense, and his minutes have dipped lately as a result. This could be a step in the right direction, as Mazzulla has rewarded players for performing when called on.

A Hugo Gonzalez Sighting

Boston is taking a slower approach with the rookie than most hoped for after his exciting start. He’s played under 10 minutes per game for a few weeks now, and was a DNP-CD during the last two.

Against Brooklyn, he started the 4th quarter, and finished as a +12 in just five minutes. It wasn’t the most impactful minutes — he got beat off the dribble a couple times — but you can still see the motor he plays with, and the pride he has on the defensive end.

great defensive possession from Hugo pic.twitter.com/bbRg7qlILY

— Pull up shoot (@NElGHT_) November 22, 2025

It’s not going to be perfect all the time for the 19-year-old, but it’s possessions like this that show what he’s capable of. It’s noteworthy as well that Mazzulla called on him as the team was searching for energy and answers.

Michael Porter Jr. Caught Fire

Porter Jr. is having a very nice year in Brooklyn. He’s quickly emerged as their top scoring option, but he’s unique in the fact that he doesn’t need the ball long to do damage. Out of all players scoring 20+ points per game, Porter Jr. has the third lowest average seconds and dribbles per touch.

He turned it on in the 4th quarter, scoring 16 of his 33 points. He does a great job using screens to create openings, and if he gets his feet set, that shot is going up.

MPJ caught a rhythm early and never let it go — smooth jumpers all night. All of his highlights below. pic.twitter.com/Eo7syizBZS

— NBA Play DB 🎥 (@nbaplaydb) November 22, 2025

It becomes even more difficult if you fall behind on the screen because he’s capable of getting downhill, and has good chemistry with Claxton. It felt like every Celtics run ended with a heavily contested Porter jumper.

Speaking of Claxton

In combination with Michael Porter Jr., Nic Claxton was a problem all night for the Celtics.

Nic Claxton's First Career Triple Double:

18/11/12 in the win against the Celtics pic.twitter.com/HXNRs2p5y3

— Nets Film Room (@NetsFilm) November 22, 2025

He’s an extremely useful playmaker in dribble handoff actions, surveying the defense and making decisions on when to keep vs pass it. It pulls the Celtics bigs far from the paint and becomes quite hard to deal with when you’re accounting for his screening, passing, rolling and driving ability at once.

With Claxton in the game, Brooklyn had a 130 offensive rating and a 104.3 defensive rating. Porter Jr. finished the game, but Claxton got them off to a strong start and carried their energy throughout.

Jordan Walsh Keeps Building

Jordan Walsh continues to stack great performances. He’s rebounding, getting out in transition and finding ways to help on offense without the ball. It’s things that feel routine like setting timely off-ball screens, or relocating to open space, but he’s taking strides from even the start of this year.

Despite the scoring explosion from Michael Porter Jr., Walsh did pretty well with that matchup. He spent a lot of time face guarding him, and slithered around screens to deny easy looks.

JWalsh taking MPJ’s cookies pic.twitter.com/pSdm40jXKz

— Pull up shoot (@NElGHT_) November 22, 2025

It’s exciting that Walsh looks eager to take on the challenge of defending the other teams best scorers, and the team feels confident about it too. Aside from Hugo, Walsh was the only other Celtic to finish the loss with a positive +/-.

Source: https://www.celticsblog.com/article...s-celtics-fall-to-the-nets-in-nba-cup-matchup
 
Boston Celtics Daily Links 11/22/25

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Herald Jaylen Brown calls out Celtics teammates after loss to lowly Nets

Celtics can’t overcome Jaylen Brown’s foul trouble in uninspired loss to Nets

‘Everybody looked in the mirror’: Have Celtics solved biggest early-season problem?

Globe ‘Come ready to play or don’t come at all’: Jaylen Brown doesn’t mince words after Celtics’ loss to Nets

Michael Porter Jr., Nets beat Celtics as Jaylen Brown calls for more effort: 7 takeaways

Jaylen Brown opened up about ‘no left-hand jokes’, and the playoff loss that ‘shifted’ his mentality

Celtics head coach Joe Mazzulla gives an interesting definition for what he views as fun

Despite a career derailed by a hip injury, former Celtic Isaiah Thomas still yearns for NBA return

More frustration mounts, as Michael Porter Jr., lowly Nets come into Garden and power past Celtics

Celtics Green Comments from the Other Side – Nets 11/21/25

CelticsBlog Ten takeaways: Celtics fall to the Nets in NBA Cup matchup

Jaylen Brown calls out “lackluster” Celtics effort in NBA Cup loss to Nets: “I don’t understand it”

Maine Celtics guard just put together an all-time performance

Anfernee Simons and Mazzulla Ball

Celtics suffer frustrating 113-105 loss to Nets

CLNS Media Even Reaching .500 Demands Near Flawless Effort from these Celtics

Celtics .com Keys to the Game: Nets 113, Celtics 105

NBC Sports Boston Celtics-Nets recap: C’s chances of advancing in NBA Cup plummet after loss

NESN Celtics’ Two-Way Player Shines With Career-High In G League Win

Eye-Popping Stat Shows Derrick White’s Increased Role For The Celtics

Anfernee Simons Offers Blunt Assessment Of Celtics’ Loss

Jaylen Brown Sends Clear Message To Celtics Teammates After Brooklyn Loss

Celtics Writer Doesn’t Believe Former Star Will Return To Team Next Season

NBA Insider Provides Update On Former Celtics Star’s Sports Betting Case

Mass Live Joe Mazzulla must address glaring Celtics issue after alarming Nets loss

Boston Celtics’ loss to Nets breaks promise from before the season

Jaylen Brown criticizes Boston Celtics’ effort after Nets loss

Anfernee Simons is the Celtics ‘Name to Know’ Player of the Game in Friday’s loss vs. Nets

4 takeaways as Celtics lose to Nets in stunning NBA Cup upset

Why the Celtics are playing on green court Friday vs. Nets

Celtics Wire Come ready to play or don’t come at all: Jaylen Brown after Nets loss

In the NBA, it’s so easy to lose a game: Simons on what ails Celtics

The Boston Celtics may not rely on the 3 as much, but it still cost them vs. the Nets

Boston Celtics jersey history No. 43 – Javonte Green (2019-21)

Celtics history: Bradley debuts; Ford 1st 4-point play; Naulls passes

The Celtics can’t afford to mess around, even against the Nets

The Celtics’ NBA Cup dreams took a huge hit after losing to the Nets

The Celtics returned to blue collar roots, and Evan Turner loves it

Long before Celtics, a health scare threatened Luka Garza’s life

The Athletic Jaylen Brown rips Celtics’ effort after loss to Nets: ‘Come ready to play, or don’t play at all’

Boston Sports Journal BSJ Game Report: Nets 113, Celtics 105 – Michael Porter Jr. slams door on comeback after Jaylen Brown foul trouble

Hardwood Houdini Celtics just saw trade audition Brad Stevens might not be able to ignore

Celtics’ loss to Nets deals them a harsh lesson in a crucial journey

Anfernee Simons was only good thing Celtics saw on Friday night

3 Instant reactions from the Celtics’ NBA Cup loss to the Nets

Josh Minott’s growth captured by what’s easiest to miss

Chowder and Champions Buss Family’s Public Drama a Treat for Celtics Fans From Afar

CLNS Media/YouTube Garden Report Celtics vs Nets Postgame Show: C’s NO SHOW in NBA Cup Game

What went WRONG (and right) in Celtics’ loss to Nets | You Got Boston w/ Noa Dalzell

Anfernee Simons: We didn’t play the brand of basketball we wanted to play | Postgame Interview

Jaylen Brown on Loss: “Come ready to play or Don’t come at all” | Postgame Interview

Joe Mazzulla on Celtics LOSS to Nets | Postgame Interview

Barstool Sports Detroit Is Dominant And The Raps Are Real. NBA Brain Food – Eastern Conference

Basketball Network “A league-wide biomechanics assessment program” – Shams Charania reports on the latest plan of the NBA to reduce injuries

Fadeaway World “It Killed Me… Half The City Was Like Get The F**k Out”: Jaylen Brown Opens Up On ‘No Left Hand’ Criticism

Locked on Celtics Why DON’T Celtics play as FAST as promised? | MOVE Pritchard to bench? | Big man targets

TalkBasket Jaylen Brown calls out Celtics after NBA Cup loss to Nets

NBA Analysis Bill Simmons raves about ‘jaw-dropping’ Boston Celtics star who has proved his credentials

WMTW TV/YouTube Maine Celtics win third in a row

Bleacher Report Jaylen Brown Rips Celtics After Nets Loss, ‘Come Ready to Play or Don’t Play at All’

CBS Sports Nic Claxton has 1st NBA triple-double to help the Nets beat the Celtics 113-105

Boston Celtics/YouTube Miscommunication Mars Celtics’ NBA Cup Loss To Nets

Audacy How Celtics and Nets rookies are helping each other adjust to the NBA

The Sports Hub ‘Come ready to play or don’t come at all’: Jaylen Brown unsatisfied after loss to Nets

Foul trouble haunts Jaylen Brown, Celtics in embarrassing loss to Nets

NBA/YouTube NETS at CELTICS | EMIRATES NBA CUP 🏆 | FULL GAME HIGHLIGHTS | November 21, 2025

WEEI/YouTube Do the Celtics actually need to shoot MORE three point shots? | WEEI Afternoons

Hoops Rumors Atlantic Notes: Celtics, Maxey, Embiid, Bona, Demin, Rajakovic

SI .com Jaylen Brown Slams Celtics Teammates After Shocking Loss

Source: https://www.celticsblog.com/boston-celtics-daily-links/125323/boston-celtics-daily-links-11-22-25
 
Jaylen Brown calls out “lackluster” Celtics effort in NBA Cup loss to Nets: “I don’t understand it”

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Jaylen Brown wasted no time holding the Celtics’ feet to the fire on Friday night.

Boston and Brooklyn met for the second time in as many games, this time on TD Garden’s lucky green NBA Cup parquet. But luck wasn’t on the Celtics’ side. The Nets erupted in the second quarter, outscoring Boston 40-25, setting a dangerous tone for the second half. The Celtics, riding a three-game winning streak, desperately tried to hold off a lowly two-win Brooklyn team from pulling off its biggest upset of the season.

The plan, however, fell apart, and Brown’s patience wore thin in the aftermath of the 113-105 loss.

“What’s my initial takeaway? Come ready to play or don’t come at all,” Brown said. “That’s my whole thing. We gotta come ready to play. We just went through the motions today — like, I don’t understand it.”

Brown continued: “Overall, just a lackluster game from the Celtics.”

Michael Porter Jr. scored a game-high 32 points for Brooklyn, complemented by Nic Claxton’s first-career triple-double (18 points, 12 rebounds, 11 assists) and rookie Egor Dëmin’s efficient 12-point contribution. Boston lost control of the game once the Nets turned a 43-43 second-quarter deadlock into a swift 19-10 run, building a nine-point halftime advantage. From there, the Celtics repeatedly struggled to regain momentum and assert any form of control over Brooklyn.

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Quickly, that became Brooklyn’s theme: blue-collar runs fueled by exploiting Boston’s energy-depleted offense, keeping the Celtics in the rearview mirror.

“We didn’t find enough stops to be able to get out and run in the end of the second, end of the third — especially the second,” Brown recalled. “They had a 40-point quarter in the second quarter, and then the end of that third gave them the separation they needed in this game.”

Brown, limited to 32 minutes, was forced to the bench after picking up his fifth foul with 5:52 remaining in the third quarter. Sensing an opportunity with Boston’s alpha sidelined, the Nets capitalized with a 17-4 run, stretching a 71-68 lead to 88-72 in the final two minutes of the quarter. The Celtics repeatedly found themselves within striking distance, but they couldn’t muster enough grit to match Brooklyn’s determination, which carried the Nets from the opening tip to the final buzzer.

In Brown’s eyes, the issues that plagued the Celtics and led to their 1-2 tournament record were quite simple.

“We just gotta come out and play with great energy, great enthusiasm for the game — like, want to win,” Brown said. “It just didn’t seem like that was the case tonight.”

Deficiencies piled up for the Celtics throughout the night. They never held a lead greater than six points, struggled from deep — shooting just 11-of-34 (32%) from three — and Derrick White logged a 2-of-13 output in 33 minutes.

In the fourth quarter, the Celtics faced their final chance at redemption with the score at 96-94 and 5:16 remaining in favor of the Nets — and squandered it. Jordan Walsh slammed home a dunk to bring Boston within a basket of tying or taking the lead. But as Brooklyn sensed the momentum slipping, Dëmin responded on the next possession with a gut-punch 3-pointer, sparking a final 17-9 run to bury the Celtics.

Even though 25 of their 48 missed shots came from midrange or layup attempts, Celtics head coach Joe Mazzulla doesn’t see that as any sort of overarching theme.

“I don’t know that the story of this game is solely on our missed layups,” Mazzulla said. “I think a lot of it has to do with both — the Nets played really, really well, and we got off to a good start, but they played better than us throughout most of the game. I think that’s the bigger story: a little bit of our offensive breakdown, but our defensive lapses — our off-ball execution or our individual tendencies and game plan stuff there. So we just gotta continue to get better at that.”

Boston didn’t tally a single 30-plus-point quarter while allowing two to Brooklyn — a stark contrast to four days ago, when the Celtics held the Nets to an astounding 14 points in the fourth quarter.

“I thought they played better than they did the other night for sure — I have to give credit to them,” Mazzulla admitted. “And we didn’t play as well. I think it was that simple.”

Source: https://www.celticsblog.com/article...-in-nba-cup-loss-to-nets-i-dont-understand-it
 
Celtics hold off late comeback, beat Magic 138-129

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Coming off a 113-105 loss to the Brooklyn Nets in the NBA Cup on Friday, the Celtics (9-8) caught fire with 80 points in the first half and held off a late comeback on the way to a 138-129 win against the Orlando Magic (10-8) on Sunday night. It was the third matchup of the season between the two Eastern Conference foes.

The Celtics were led by Jaylen Brown with 35 points (14/26 FG) and eight assists, while the Magic had their top contributions come from Jett Howard with a career-high 30 points (11/23 FG). All 11 Celtics that made an appearance registered at least a point while Brown, Anfernee Simons (23 points), Payton Pritchard (19), Derrick White (16), Josh Minott (16) and Sam Hauser (14) all scored in double figures.

The Magic were shorthanded entering the contest, going without Wendell Carter, Paolo Banchero and Jalen Suggs on Sunday.

The Celtics got a quick six points from Neemias Queta in the first minutes of the game, each assisted by a different Celtic, but he left midway through the opening quarter after landing awkwardly on a contest at the rim. The Celtics went small with Chris Boucher, and the offense hit its first three triples of the game on three straight possessions, two coming from Sam Hauser and another from Anfernee Simons for a 22-15 lead with five minutes left.

Despite being without Queta due to a sprained ankle and Brown leaving with early foul trouble, the Celtics maintained their early advantage into the second quarter, leading 32-27 behind Simons’ eight early points. The Magic struggled from the field early, shooting 38%, though they got to the line for 13 attempts, converting on nine of them.

A Derrick White deceleration and-one opened the second quarter, and hinted at further rim attacking from the Celtics against a Magic defense with high pickup points at the 3-point line. Later, Simons continued his hot start, driving into his own 3-point play with a floater, and then racing down the floor off his own rebound and finishing a layup in transition.

Giving us the spark ⚡pic.twitter.com/kf4Bhbc9EN

— Boston Celtics (@celtics) November 23, 2025

Boston also got quality minutes from Josh Minott, who finished the first half with 12 points on a perfect 5/5 shooting, 5 rebounds and 1 block. Halfway through the second quarter, Minott had highlights on both ends, finishing one offensive possession with a double-pump baseline finish and later blocking a shot that led to a transition three from Simons.

Rise up ⬆️ pic.twitter.com/RWuIORlA39

— Boston Celtics (@celtics) November 24, 2025

The back half of the second quarter was all Boston. The Celtics ended the final five minutes outscoring Orlando 26-13 and shooting 18/23 (78%) from the field for the entire quarter, taking an 80-57 lead into the break. The Celtics had double-digit scorers in Simons (16), Brown (14), Pritchard (13) and Minott (12) entering halftime.

Coming out of halftime with a small ball frontcourt of Minott and Jordan Walsh, the Celtics kept their lead above 20 points for almost the entire third quarter, only dropping to 18 with 25 seconds left on a Noah Penda and-one. Hauser hit a catch-and-shoot three on the other end to immediately push it back to 21 before the end of quarter for a 110-89 lead.

Brown was dominant in the third quarter, consistently getting downhill to the tune of eight points to help Boston to a 21-point lead entering the fourth quarter. On two occasions, Brown fooled his defender with an up-fake step-through move to get to the basket, utilizing the threat of his mid-range jumper to get defenders off their feet.

Cleannnn 🧼 pic.twitter.com/ELswBOXoBv

— Boston Celtics (@celtics) November 24, 2025

The Magic stormed back in the fourth quarter with a scoring flurry from rookie Jase Richardson and forward Jett Howard, bringing Boston’s lead down to 11 with 6:24 left. Brown temporarily silenced the run with a pair of corner threes and a layup out of the timeout, but Richardson and Howard responded each time to keep Orlando’s comeback hopes alive with four minutes to play.

Orlando got the deficit under 10 with a Howard 3-point play, cutting it down to 129-121. Brown answered right back, driving down the middle of the lane to bring it back to a 10-point lead with three minutes remaining. Howard and Brown continued to handle the bulk of their team’s respective possessions, with Howard scoring 22 fourth quarter points and having a chance to make it a one-possession game in the final minute, but his step-back three didn’t fall, and the Celtics survived a Sunday night scare.

The Celtics will be back on their home floor on Wednesday, when they take on the scorching-hot Detroit Pistons on November 26 at 5 p.m. The East-leading Pistons won their first meeting of the season against the Celtics on October 26, 119-113.

Source: https://www.celticsblog.com/articles/125443/celtics-hold-off-late-comeback-beat-magic-138-129
 
10 takeaways as Celtics outlast Magic 138-129 behind 35 points from Jaylen Brown

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In his postgame press conference Friday night, Jaylen Brown said he believed the Celtics “went through the motions” in a loss to the Nets.

Sunday night against the Magic, the Celtics looked like a team that got the message. It got somewhat dicey at the end, as a 26-point lead suddenly shrunk to six, but Boston held on for a 138-129 win to move to 9-8 on the season.

Brown led the way with 35 points and eight assists, Anfernee Simons added 23 and the Celtics used an 80-point first half (yes, 80) to seize command. Jett Howard (30 points) and Jase Richardson nearly willed the Magic back, but Derrick White and Payton Pritchard provided the finishing touches.

Tonight is the 4th time in franchise history that the Celtics have logged at least 80 points in the first half while giving up fewer than 60.

11/23/25 vs ORL: 80-57
3/17/24 at WAS: 81-53
3/3/24 vs GSW: 82-38 🤯
10/20/62 vs NYK: 80-59 pic.twitter.com/B7Upyuxpu8

— Taylor Snow (@taylorcsnow) November 24, 2025

Here are 10 takeaways:

1) Proving a point​


The Celtics scored a season-high 138 points, shooting 60 percent from the floor and 45 percent from distance.

Forty-eight of those points came in the second quarter, marking their second-highest second quarter in franchise history. They shot 18 for 23 in the second and 65 percent from the floor in the half.

2) Turn that frown upside Brown​


Brown can drop 35 in his sleep, but his eight assists played a crucial role in this one. The Celtics are at their best when he’s in attack mode and a threat to both score and pass.

Look at this play. The defense has no choice but to worry about Brown, which leaves Josh Minott (16 points) wide open in the paint for an easy two.

Rise up ⬆️ pic.twitter.com/RWuIORlA39

— Boston Celtics (@celtics) November 24, 2025

3) Queta question​


Neemias Queta was off to a stellar start before leaving midway through the first quarter with an apparent ankle injury.

Luka Garza, who torched the Magic earlier this season, didn’t play. Xavier Tillman didn’t see the floor, either. That meant Boston had to go small with either Chris Boucher or Jordan Walsh at the 5.

It worked for the most part, until it didn’t…

4) Running on empty​


The Celtics appeared to be well on their way to a stress-free victory, then Howard and Richardson found their flow and made it a game.

Sometimes situations like that just happen in basketball, but this one was a bit concerning considering it involved the Magic reserves and the Celtics starters. Paolo Banchero, Jalen Suggs and Wendell Carter Jr. didn’t even play, and Franz Wagner and Desmond Bane were on the bench at that point.

Boston did enough to hang on, but it was far more difficult than it should have been. This team is very streaky by nature, but keeping the defensive intensity and execution high is imperative moving forward.

5) Simons says​


Simons appears to enjoy facing his hometown team. He caught fire en route to 25 points two weeks prior, then followed it up with another gem Sunday night.

This one wasn’t quite as much of a barrage as that one, but it was impressive in its own right, as he shot 8 for 11 from the floor and 4 of 7 from distance.

Here’s hoping that Jayson Tatum and Simons get to play together at some point, because it would be awfully fun to watch. The kid can flat out score the basketball.

Giving us the spark ⚡pic.twitter.com/kf4Bhbc9EN

— Boston Celtics (@celtics) November 23, 2025

6) Wowzer, Hauser​


Sam Hauser has been in an uncharacteristic slump. Before Sunday, he hadn’t scored in double figures since Oct. 29 against the Cavaliers.

This was his first game with five or more 3-pointers since that one, and he produced 14 points in total to highlight a strong all-around game. Hauser might be the player who misses Tatum the most.

He’s still more than capable of lighting it up, however, and this was a promising sign for a guy who desperately needed one. Hauser even added a rare dunk for good measure. That’s how you know he was feeling it.

Slam Hauser 😤 pic.twitter.com/RVwe7PLm1e

— Boston Celtics (@celtics) November 24, 2025

7) Heir Jordan​


Jordan Walsh’s stats may not have popped off the page in this one, and there are certainly a few plays he would like back, but he looked confident and in control overall.

He got the start, played hard and displayed his passing ability on a sweet, wrap-around dish to Brown in the corner. Walsh, like Minott and Hugo Gonzalez, is the type of player who doesn’t have to score to affect the game on both ends.

If he contributes 15 points, you’ll certainly take it, but he can still make his presence felt with his defensive activity, length and athleticism. He deserves credit in this one for battling down low and playing the 5 in spurts.

8) Free pass​


The Magic entered with the most free throws made and attempted in the league, while the Celtics ranked last in both categories.

Naturally, the Magic weren’t quite as lethal in that area with Banchero out, but the Celtics still deserve credit for only losing the free-throw battle by two (24-22). That may not seem like a huge deal, but in a game like this, it ended up making a big difference.

9) Unpredicta-ball​


If there’s one overarching takeaway around this team so far is that there’s no predicting what will happen on a given night. They can lose to the worst teams, beat the best teams and do anything in between.

That certainly spices things up and makes for an interesting viewing experience. We all knew this year would be different, but so far, I’ve been entertained more often than not.

10) Challenge awaits​


That Nets game, as frustrating as it was for Celtics fans, is in the past. Boston responded appropriately and has now won four of five.

Next up is a key NBA Cup clash with the red-hot Pistons, who have won 12 straight as of Sunday night, Wednesday at 5 p.m. at TD Garden.

Source: https://www.celticsblog.com/article...ic-138-129-behind-35-points-from-jaylen-brown
 
Boston Celtics Daily Links 11/24/25

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Herald ‘That’s what we need him to be’: Anfernee Simons settling into new role with Celtics

Celtics lose starter to injury, survive late comeback in win over Magic

Celtics’ Neemias Queta leaves game vs. Magic with ankle injury

Globe Game: Can you match these Boston athletes to their jersey numbers?

Jaylen Brown, Celtics hold off late push by short-handed Magic in win: 7 takeaways

Jaylen Brown’s 35 points lead Celtics in a 138-129 victory over the short-handed Magic

The message for Joe Mazzulla: It’s time to let Anfernee Simons cook up some Celtics buckets

Despite injury to Neemias Queta, Celtics explode in second quarter, then hold on to top Magic

Celtics Green Comments from the Other Side – Magic 11/23/25

CelticsBlog 10 takeaways as Celtics outlast Magic 138-129 behind 35 points from Jaylen Brown

Celtics bench trio shines against Clippers amid fluctuating minutes

Anfernee Simons is steadily rising — to the Celtics’ benefit and Joe Mazzulla’s satisfaction

Jaylen Brown’s leadership is lifting the Celtics as much as his play

Celtics hold off late comeback, beat Magic 138-129

CLNS Media Boston’s Bench Helps them get past Orlando | Celtics vs Magic Postgame Show

Celtics .com Celtics Go Small, Come Up Big in Best Offensive Game of Season vs. Magic

Keys to the Game: Celtics 138, Magic 129

Celtics Media Reflects on Heather Walker’s Legacy on Move4Heather Night

NBC Sports Boston Celtics survived Magic without Queta, but what if he misses more time?

Celtics-Magic recap: C’s fend off Orlando’s comeback, secure 138-129 win

NESN Jaylen Brown’s Recent Celtics Quote Doesn’t Bode Well For Baylor Scheierman

Celtics Soar Into Eastern Conference Top Five On One NBA Power Rankings

Jaylen Brown Thought About Leaving Celtics, But Tracy McGrady Advised Against It

Former Celtics Guard Receives $5 Million Update In Illegal Gambling Case

Paul Pierce Drops Truth Bomb On James Harden’s Recent Hot Streak

Ex-Celtics Championship Guard Gives Hilarious Silent Answer To Question

Mass Live Former Celtics star drawing trade interest while rehabbing injury (report)

Former Celtics center suffers concerning injury with new team

Celtics intriguing trade chip builds value in Magic win

Celtics star makes blunt admission after picking up third technical foul

Josh Minott embracing Celtics role after losing starting spot

Neemias Queta injury: Celtics must make adjustments if center misses time

Anfernee Simons is the Celtics ‘Name to Know’ Player of the Game in Sunday’s win vs. Magic

4 takeaways as Celtics beat Magic, key bench player stays hot

Celtics Wire Anfernee Simons on what sparked Celtics historic first half vs. Magic

Why the Maine Celtics haven’t played in Mexico City, Boston since 2015

Boston Celtics jersey history No. 44 – Paul Westphal (1972-75)

Today in Boston Celtics history: Wilt’s 55; Gorman, Hunter, Bing born

Jaylen Brown wants Boston to stay focused after near collapse vs. Orlando

Celtics escape late Orlando Magic push, win 138-129 (PHOTOS)

The Celtics used an impressive offensive showing to hold off the Magic

Is Joe Mazzulla the right head coach for this version of the Celtics?

We are going to learn a lot about the Celtics over the next 10 games

The Athletic NBA Power Rankings: From Nikola Jokić to Dillon Brooks, something to be thankful for

Celtics go small after Neemias Queta injury. Could that strategy stick?

Boston Sports Journal NBA Notebook: Steve Kerr sounds the alarm on NBA injuries due to pace increase

Karalis: Boston’s bench guys are growing as players, but the stars are also learning important lessons

BSJ Game Report: Celtics 138, Magic 129 – Brown’s 35 saves Celtics after blowing big lead

Hardwood Houdini Celtics’ turnaround reveals exactly what they need from Jaylen Brown

Milestone achievement goes under the radar in Celtics’ win vs. Magic

Celtics fans better not ignore what Sunday’s win just exposed

Josh Minott makes it clear why he quickly bounced back after losing starting job

Josh Minott just reminded everyone of what he can do for Celtics

Anfernee Simons is figuring out how to be his best self as Celtics’ sixth man

4 Instant reactions from Celtics’ near-disaster vs. Magic

Celtics’ balance and atonement makes for one of the greatest halves in team history

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CLNS Media/YouTube Garden Report: Celtics vs Magic Post Game Show on CLNS Media – C’s Bounce Back vs Orlando

Biggest takeaways from Celtics win over the Magic | You Got Boston w/ Noa Dalzell

Jaylen Brown on Celtics Win over Magic | Postgame Interview

Anfernee Simons joined by Special Guest in Celtics 138-129 win over Magic | Postgame Interview

Josh Minott on Going back to the BENCH | Postgame Interview

Joe Mazzulla on Celtics 138-129 Win over Magic | Postgame Interview

The Sports Hub Celtics topple undermanned Magic, win 138-129

5 takeaways: Celtics survive fourth quarter collapse

5 takeaways: Celtics survive fourth quarter collapse

SI .com
Magic youngsters spearhead late comeback in loss to Jaylen Brown, Celtics

Jett Howard scores career-high, but shorthanded Magic lose vs. Celtics

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Talkbasket Anfernee Simons: I don’t have that much time to ease into games

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NBA/YouTube MAGIC at CELTICS | FULL GAME HIGHLIGHTS | November 23, 2025

Sporting News Neemias Queta injury update: Celtics center exits game vs. Magic in 1st quarter

The Sports Rush Rajon Rondo Responds to Rick Pitino’s Take on the Dying Point Guard Position

Total Pro Sports NBA Rumors: Sacramento Kings Open To Moving Nearly Entire Roster Amid Disastrous Season Start

Mass Media Jaylen Brown should not be blamed for the Celtics’ problems

Sportscasting Joe Mazzulla Said Anfernee Simons Is ‘Playing His Role Really Well’ For Boston in 2025-26

NBA Analysis Josh Minott admits he is ‘used to’ Boston Celtics demotion after recent struggles

Source: https://www.celticsblog.com/boston-celtics-daily-links/125405/boston-celtics-daily-links-11-24-25
 
The shot the NBA forgot is changing everything for Jaylen Brown

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BOSTON – No NBA player has had more success with the midrange shot than Jaylen Brown has this season. Perhaps relatedly, the Boston Celtics – without Jayson Tatum and four top rotation players from last year’s team – have somehow managed to have the league’s sixth-best offense.

It’s still early, but Brown is in the midst of his best scoring season ever; he’s averaging 27.9 points per game on 50.6% shooting, both career-highs. Through the season’s first 17 games, he’s eclipsed 35 points four times – the same number of times he did through the entirety of last season.

And, a sizable chunk of the damage is coming from one of Brown’s favorite zones on the court: the midrange. The four-time All-Star is shooting a career-best 53.1% from the area between the paint and the three-point line, which the NBA officially considers the midrange.

No one else is doing it like him from there.

This season, 10 NBA players have attempted more than 50 midrange shots, a list that includes fellow midrange assassins Kevin Durant, Shai Gilgeous-Alexander, and Jamal Murray. From that exclusive group, Brown has been the most efficient, converting 53.1% of his 98 attempts.

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Brown hasn’t always had such a green light on these shots, and he hasn’t always been this efficient. Last year, he shot 40% on 2.5 midrange attempts per game. The year before that, he shot 43.5% on 2.6 attempts.

(Of note, prior to the last two seasons, he used to be more effective in the midrange; in his sole All-NBA season in 2022-23, he shot 47.1% on 3.1 attempts. In 2021-2022, he shot 45.9% on 2.8 attempts, and in 2020-21, he shot 50% on 2.7 attempts).

But this season, Brown has more than doubled his midrange attempts to 5.8 a night.

“This year, we got to take whatever shot we can get, right?” Brown said. “So, I think everybody’s encouraging me to more be myself. But in the past, those shots have been discouraged more.”

The dying art of the midrange shot


Brown’s experience of being dissuaded from an overreliance on the midrange shot is not unique. Basketball players at all levels are increasingly discouraged from shooting a lot of midrange jumpers, as analytics continue to point to their relative inefficacy.

Chicago Bulls forward Matas Buzelis shared on the Young Man and the Three Podcast that his “Welcome to the NBA” moment was not something that happened on the court – it was how Bulls head coach Billy Donovan reacted to a standard baseline midrange shot that Buzelis attempted against the Oklahoma City Thunder in his rookie season.

“The next day, I was on the film,” Buzelis recalled. “And Billy was like, ‘Matas, take that shit and throw it out in the trash.’ I’m like, ‘Damn, that’s my shot.’ Everyone’s in there. Your heart, like, drops – like ‘Dang, I’m not going to shoot that again.’”

Billy Donovan is far from alone when it comes to discouraging midrange shooting – and the league’s ever-changing shot profile reflects that.

In 1996-1997, the first year of available NBA tracking data, 89 players attempted more than 300 midrange shots on the season (Michael Jordan led the way with 1202 attempts). Ten years later, that number declined to 65 players. And ten years after that, the number of players to attempt more than 300 midrange shots dropped to 28.

Last season, only three NBA players attempted more than 300 shots from the midrange: Shai Gilgeous-Alexander, Devin Booker, and DeMar DeRozan. At the same time, three-point shot attempts have continued to skyrocket — because the numbers just make sense.

At face value, the decline in middies is simple: jump shots are worth two points, and three-point shots are worth three. As such, if a player shoots 33% from three and 50% from the midrange, those shot attempts are of equivalent value.

So, if that player shoots any better than 33% from three-point range – or worse than 50% from the midrange – then statistically, the three-point shot becomes a higher-value shot than the midrange. (For reference, Jayson Tatum shot 39.6% from the midrange last season, and 34.3% from three. So, from simply looking at the analytics, the three-point shot is the better option for the Celtics star).

Still, NBA analytics have undeniable limitations​


For one, some players maintain early midrange shot attempts help them get in a better offensive groove

“A lot of people look at the game analytically, and they look at the percentages or whatever, but for me, to get into a comfort zone on the floor helps make all the other shots so much easier,” Brown said. “Once you see one go in, once you see them go down, then the three-ball gets going.”

“It’s always been something that kind of can get me going. But the analytics won’t show the potential of somebody getting hot.”

Asked Jaylen Brown about his midrange efficiency this year, and his answer was pretty interesting:

“Over time, those shots have been discouraged. This year, we gotta take whatever shot we can get.”

“For me, getting to my comfort zone on the floor helps make all the other… https://t.co/vCQkXyUJyB pic.twitter.com/PJ1rjwf6vE

— Noa Dalzell 🏀 (@NoaDalzell) November 15, 2025

Joe Mazzulla agrees with the notion that players’ individual rhythm can help influence shot profile. After all, there’s a reason why so many players across the league continue to attempt midrange shots, despite it not being an inherently high-value shot.

“Jaylen – nobody knows his rhythm, and his mindset throughout a game the way he does,” Mazzulla said, adding that there are lots of factors besides location on the court that indicate whether a shot is a good shot.

“There’s a time when that shot should be taken because the comfort of the player matters, and there’s a time when the comfort of the team matters more. It’s just a balance of the communication, of understanding that, but that’s important. At the end of the day, they’re the ones that are out there shooting, so they have to be comfortable with it.”

If you look at the numbers, you’ll find that lots of players have routinely shot in the 30s percent range, while continuing to take the midrange shot at a relatively high volume. Last season, Zach LaVine, Scottie Barnes, Pascal Siakam, Anthony Edwards, Jalen Green, and Tatum all attempted more than 200 midrange shots on worse than 40% shooting.

Sometimes, settling for a midrange is just a bad shot.

But, in other cases, those shot attempts are the result of late shot clock situations — the same shot could be a bad shot with 20 seconds on the shot clock might be the best available one with 5 seconds left.

Othertimes, it’s just what’s available; the midrange shot has become one of the looks that most NBA defenses are most comfortable giving up.

Los Angeles Clippers head coach Ty Lue said that reality has led him to wonder whether his players should be working on it more.

“As a coach, [we’re] always talking with the analytic guys like – why don’t we master the shots that teams are giving up?” Lue said. “If they give up midrange jump shots, like, why are we not working on that instead of the threes?”

But, for Brown, midrange practice has continued to be a mainstay, and he frequently works on the middie with the Celtics assistant coaches after practice.

Jaylen Brown is getting in a bunch of midrange work with Sam Cassell here at shootaround, a pretty regular occurrence pic.twitter.com/YrLBiD9hqY

— Noa Dalzell 🏀 (@NoaDalzell) December 6, 2024

Orlando Magic coach Jamahl Mosley explained that he prioritizes rim attempts and three-pointers over midrange shots. But, sometimes a clean look from the midrange is too good to pass up, because elite NBA defenses rarely concede the kinds of shots the offense is hunting.

“You want to get to the rim first, that’s a high priority,” Mosley said. “And then if you can get to the free-throw line, that’s the next priority. Then if you’re wide open for a three, you knock it down. And then you have to take what the defense gave you, because the defenses are so good. You’ve got to be able to take what the game gives you — and sometimes that is the midrange.”

Brooklyn Nets coach Jordi Fernandez pointed out that not all midrange shots are created equal.

“I’m okay with a pull-up in-rhythm, with, like, no contest or space,” he said. “But what I’m not okay with is the dribble, dribble, dribble, body contest shot.”

At the same time, it all depends on who is attempting the shot: “I always [tell] the guys, if the shot goes in, it’s always a good shot.”

Mazzulla said it’s impossible to evaluate shot quality in a vacuum.

“No one shot is the same,” he said. “Every shot has a context to it of what the couple shots were like as a team before, or what the shots were like for the individual before.”

The outsized role of the midrange shot in the clutch​


There’s also the reality that midrange shots – albeit increasingly discouraged throughout a 48-minute basketball game – become especially pivotal in clutch time.

Like Mosley, Lue explained that typically, defenses are most willing to give up midrange shots because that’s what the math tells them to do: limit threes and layups first. So, in crunch time, when baskets are hardest to come by, the stars who can create exploit defenses’ weaknesses win games.

“I think it’s a lost art,” Lue said.

Brown and the Celtics have experienced the value of that art first-hand.

In Game 3 of the 2024 NBA Finals, the Celtics led the Mavericks by 2 points with just over a minute to play, when Brown got to his spot in the midrange and sank the biggest shot of his basketball career, rising over Tim Hardaway Jr. and hitting nothing but net.

Just like that, a nearly-blown 21-point Celtics fourth-quarter lead was salvaged in a critical Finals game.

Jaylen Brown knocks down the midrange to put Boston back up 4!

Under a minute to play in Game 3 on ABC pic.twitter.com/RqNqEzGYvr

— NBA (@NBA) June 13, 2024

“I hit a shot that kind of halted their momentum, that helped us carry out and get the win… it helped us ultimately win the championship,” Brown later reflected in a Hot Ones interview a few months after winning the title — and the Finals MVP.

More recently, in Game 1 of the 2025 NBA Finals with the Indiana Pacers trailing by 1 and the clock winding down, Tyrese Haliburton sank a midrange shot with 0.3 seconds left to secure the improbable victory.

HALIBURTON WINS GAME 1 FOR THE PACERS.

THEY TRAILED BY 15.

ANOTHER CRAZY INDIANA COMEBACK 🚨 https://t.co/heI0ELIivW pic.twitter.com/1Qr6XlDbA7

— NBA (@NBA) June 6, 2025

“If you watch all the game-winners, or all the big shots in the playoffs or whatever, they’re always midrange jump shots to kind of seal the game or win the game,” Lue said.

Jaylen Brown’s midrange prowess has been key for the Celtics this season​


This season, when Brown is on the floor, the Celtics’ offensive rating is 120.6. That would rank as the third-best offense in the NBA, trailing only the Houston Rockets and Denver Nuggets.

And, without Brown, the product on the floor has been completely different; the Celtics’ offensive rating drops to 110.5, which would make them the sixth-worst offense in the league.

It would be disingenuous to say that the success of the offense is mostly due to Brown’s midrange prowess. Brown himself has actually been most effective in the restricted area — he’s shot 72.2% from there this year. And, while he’s been the team’s most consistent source of offense, several other players have also been effective high-volume scorers this season (Anfernee Simons is averaging 14.4 points on 59.2% true shooting, for example, while Payton Pritchard is averaging 16.6 points on 56.9% TS).

Plus, offensive rebounding (the Celtics are 7th in the NBA) and taking care of the ball (no team averages fewer turnovers) has helped Boston create more possessions. That’s likely been the biggest factor for the Celtics’ offensive success.

But, to ignore the value of the midrange shot in the Celtics’ offense would also be disingenuous. Alongside Brown, Pritchard (45.5% on 33 attempts) and Derrick White (45.7% on 35 attempts) have both been effective from the midrange.

It’s impossible to assess what Brown’s offensive game would look like this season if his midrange shot hadn’t emerged as such a reliable weapon.

Would driving lanes be as open?

Would he have gotten to the line as much as he has? (Brown is averaging a career-best 6.4 free throw attempts per night)

Would he have been as well-positioned to score 12 straight 4th-quarter points for the Celtics in a win against the Magic on Sunday?


The analytics can try — but they’ll never fully answer those questions.

“The part that analytics doesn’t measure,” Brown said, “is the momentum of a game.”

Source: https://www.celticsblog.com/articles/125512/jaylen-brown-midrange-shot-celtics
 
Boston Celtics Daily Links 11/25/25

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Globe Neemias Queta injury: How the Celtics feel about going small

Jaylen Brown credits NBA Hall of Famer for convincing him to stay with Celtics

Celtics fans caught in the middle of dispute between Fubo streaming service and NBC

Chauncey Billups, Trail Blazers coach, pleads not guilty in rigged poker games case

CelticsBlog The shot the NBA forgot is changing everything for Jaylen Brown

Baylor Scheierman and the life of a showman

Neemias Queta injury update from Celtics practice

NBC Sports Boston Mazzulla gives curious update on Neemias Queta’s ankle injury

NESN Celtics Legend Paul Pierce Chimes In On Latest Draymond Green Beef

Celtics Fans Won’t Believe Where Neemias Queta’s Defensive Rating Ranks

Jaylen Brown Gives New Thoughts On Celtics Teammate Anfernee Simons

Mass Live Boston Celtics facing unknown territory with upcoming Pistons game

Former Celtics star drawing trade interest while rehabbing injury (report)

Celtics Wire Celtics jersey history No. 44 – Dave Bing (1977-78)

Celtics history: Waters, Webb debut; Strickland born

What should we think of the Celtics’ retooling season so far?

Boston Celtics honor former VP of PR Heather Walker for fight vs. cancer

Mazzulla sees Simons getting more comfortable with Celtics bench role

The Athletic The Bounce: Anybody else worth tanking for? Plus, who’s fattening up on soft schedules

What to watch in the NBA this week: Cup knockout scenarios take center stage

Hardwood Houdini Blazers about to get brutal Jrue Holiday reality check Celtics knew to avoid

Former Celtic just ran into another speed bump with new team

CLNS Media/YouTube Sam Hauser: “Hopefully” Jayson Tatum Can Return This Year | Celtics Practice

Derrick White: “I Just Gotta Play Better” | Celtics Practice

Joe Mazzulla Gives Neemias Queta INJURY UPDATE | Celtics Practice

Should Celtics Go Small Ball with Neemias Queta Out? | Garden Report

Clutch Points Celtics’ Jaylen Brown proposes simple fix to technical foul trend

Last Word on Sports The Untold Story Behind the Decision That Saved Celtics’ Title Run

Sportscasting Jayson Tatum Has 80% Chance Of Playing This Season, According To Polymarket

The Lead Anfernee Simons Is Still Finding His Footing in New Role

Locked on Celtics What Happens If Neemias Queta Is OUT? | What is Jaylen Brown TALKING about?

Heavy Celtics’ Latest Injury Scare Reveals a Major Truth

Awful Announcing Netflix reportedly canceling ‘Starting 5’ after two-season run

Barstool Sports The Growth Of Jaylen Brown Has Been One Of The Most Enjoyable Parts Of The Celtics Season

Hoops Rumors Atlantic Notes: Simons, Clowney, McCain, Raptors’ Start

ESPN Press Room ESPN NBA Full Court Press: ESPN to air first-ever tripleheader on Thanksgiving Eve

ABC 7 Former NBA champ Rick Fox to run for legislative seat in Bahamas

Source: https://www.celticsblog.com/boston-celtics-daily-links/125540/boston-celtics-daily-links-11-25-25
 
Neemias Queta injury update from Celtics practice

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BOSTONNeemias Queta went down with a left ankle sprain in the first quarter of Sunday’s Celtics game against the Orlando Magic, and the team later shared he was questionable to return.

After the game, Joe Mazzulla did not have an update, sharing he had yet to speak with his starting center.

At practice on Tuesday, Joe Mazzula maintained he had not seen Queta nor spoken with him, but Queta did make a brief appearance, walking across the practice court in sneakers on his way to the weight room.

Joe Mazzulla didn’t have an update on Neemias Queta, but he’s here at practice in sneakers pic.twitter.com/B29WGsSqVL

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

How does that bode for Queta’s availability ahead of Wednesday’s Celtics game against the Detroit Pistons? That remains to be seen.

But with Queta potentially slated to miss some time, the Celtics will have to identify another solution in the frontcourt.

Queta has started all 17 games for Boston this season, and the Celtics have outscored opponents by a team-best 16.4 points per 100 possessions. Meanwhile, when he’s off the floor, the Celtics have been outscored by 6.4 points per 100 possessions.

Most of the impact is felt on the defensive end; in 382 minutes with Queta on the floor, the Celtics’ defensive rating is 105.3, which would be good for second-best in the NBA. In 340 minutes with him off the floor, the Celtics’ defensive rating is 125.4, which would be the third-worst in the league.

The 26-year-old is averaging 9.3 points, 7.9 rebounds, and 1.4 blocks in 23.6 minutes per game.

And, Queta’s teammates know that everyone will have to step up if he is to miss extended time.

“He provides a lot of shot-blocking,” said Sam Hauser. “Without his presence down there, we have to make up for it in other ways — be aggressive, keep guys out of the paint, rebound really well collectively, and just trying to be a playmaker on defense.”

In Neemias Queta’s place, the Celtics have several options​


Luka Garza has been Joe Mazzulla’s preferred choice as backup center this season; he’s averaged 7.1 points and 4.2 rebounds in 14.8 minutes per game, while shooting 56.7% from the field and 43.5% from three. But the defense has not been as effective with the former Iowa star anchoring the post.

Mazzulla has a few other options. Xavier Tillman has only appeared in 8 games this season, but has appeared in critical moments, and was on the floor to close out a clutch-time win over the Philadelphia 76ers last month. And, Chris Boucher played some minutes at center on Sunday, but has been used sparingly by Mazzulla.

“We don’t really have a guy that replaces what Neemy does for us,” said Derrick White. “So it’s got to be just a group effort, obviously — X, Luka, Chris, they’re gonna get a bigger chance, and we’re gonna need a lot from them. But, it’s also on us — we don’t have Neemy back there to kind of take out some of the problems or the mistakes we make on the perimeter. So it’s gonna be a team effort — rebounding, everything. Hopefully, he comes back as quickly as possible, but we all gotta step up.”

Source: https://www.celticsblog.com/articles/125572/neemias-queta-injury-update-celtics-practice
 
Celtics get statement win over the Pistons, 117-114

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On a night where the Pistons came in winners of 13 in a row, they left TD Garden losers of 1 in a row. The Celtics were on fire from three throughout the game, going 20/43 from beyond the arc. The Garden was rocking all night as the Celtics got their best win of the season thus far without their starting center.

The Celtics were without Neemias Queta due to a high ankle sprain. That is a big loss for Boston, which would have been crazy to say once upon a time.

I never thought we’d be like “the celtics are in trouble tonight because neemias queta is out” but the celtics are in trouble because neemias queta is out.

— jack (@janderson22_) November 26, 2025

Without Queta, Boston started Payton Pritchard, Derrick White, Jaylen Brown, Jordan Walsh and Luka Garza. The Pistons did not have any significant injuries so they started Cade Cunningham, Duncan Robinson, Ausar Thompson, Tobias Harris and Jalen Duren.

Duren is a Most Improved player candidate early in the season, he is averaging 20.3 points and 11.5 rebounds per game, up from the 12 and 10 he averaged last season. He running the floor really well to start the season, which is leading to some easy baskets. His post-up game has also been effective scoring 1.1 points per possession when he posts up entering Wednesday night’s contest.

Celtics two-way rookie Amari Williams was among the first of the subs to check into the game along with Sam Hauser and Baylor Scheierman.

After one quarter, the Celtics trailed 30-24. The Celtics struggled shooting the ball, shooting just 30% from the field and 29% from three.

Baylor Scheierman was cooking off of the bench, he had 10 points on 4/4 from the field and 2/2 from three 13 minutes into the game.

Williams also had a block on Pistons star Cade Cunningham early in the 2nd quarter.

Amari with the block on Cade. Love to see it pic.twitter.com/cE3zj1SfWf

— Pull up shoot (@NElGHT_) November 26, 2025

Jaylen Brown missed some shots in the first half but he did a good job of getting to his spots and the line against a Pistons team that can match his athleticism and physicality. He had 19 first half points.

The Celtics trailed the Pistons 58-57 after an Ausar Thompson buzzer beater.

AUSAR THOMPSON AT THE BUZZER 🤯

pic.twitter.com/oCAADLdYj8

— 𝔗𝔥𝔢 𝔇𝔢𝔱𝔯𝔬𝔦𝔱 𝔗𝔦𝔪𝔢𝔰 📰 (@the_det_times) November 26, 2025

Brown led the in scoring with Scheierman and Pritchard also in double digits.

The third quarter was a very fun quarter of basketball. The two teams went back and forth throughout the quarter, Derrick White had 14 points and hitting 3 threes in the period.

At the end of the third, the Celtics led 86-83. Jaylen Brown led the team with 24 points while White had 16, Pritchard had 14 and Scheierman had 13.

Derrick White really found his three point stroke in the 2nd half, he scored 25 points and hit 6 threes. Hopefully he can parlay that to lead his bounce back the rest of the season.

The Celtics closed with an ultra small lineup, of Pritchard, Scheierman, White, Brown and Walsh and they paid for it on the glass. The Pistons had offensive rebounds on three straight possessions late in the game, scoring on two of them.

However, when the Celtics needed a stop they got one, Walsh and White forced a Cade Cunningham turnover with 12.8 to go in the game.

The Celtics then played the foul game, Derrick White made two free throws, Cunningham made two free throws and Anfernee Simons made two free throws.

Then as the Celtics tried to foul Cunningham again, they ruled that Cade was going up into his shooting motion and gave him three free throws.

This should be on the floor. pic.twitter.com/lsjlgKLbuD

— Bobby Manning (@RealBobManning) November 27, 2025

Cunningham made the first two but missed the third in the ultimate ball don’t lie moment.

Pritchard was then foul and made 2 free throws, then the Pistons turned it over as the Celtics held on to win, 117-114.

The Celtics shot 44% from the field and 46% from three while the Pistons shot 40% and 30% from three. The Celtics next game is Saturday in Minnesota against the Timberwolves at 5pm EST.

Source: https://www.celticsblog.com/celtics...wn-joe-mazzulla-derrick-white-cade-cunningham
 
Boston Celtics Daily Links 11/27/25

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Herald Celtics notebook: Two-way rookie steps up in upset of Pistons

Celtics, down one starter, upset East-leading Pistons in instant classic

Globe Derrick White breaks out of slump and other takeaways from Celtics win over Pistons

The Celtics rose to the occasion and halted the Pistons’ win streak. How did they do it? With teamwork and guile.

Celtics snap Pistons’ 13-game winning streak, led by Jaylen Brown with 33 points

Celtics Green Comments from the Other Side – Pistons 11/27/25

CelticsBlog 10 Takeaways the Celtics-Pistons battle in Boston

Joe Mazzulla praises Boston’s ‘grit and toughness’ in win over Detroit

Derrick White’s cold start vs. Pistons left Joe Mazzulla “excited” before second-half eruption

Celtics officially eliminated from NBA Cup

Celtics get statement win over the Pistons, 117-114

CLNS Media Why Celtics Upset of Pistons Ranks Among Joe Mazzulla’s Best Moments

Celtics .com Celtics Put the Brakes on Pistons’ Streak in Gritty Crunch-Time Win

Keys to the Game: Celtics 117, Pistons 114

NBC Sports Boston Celtics-Pistons recap: Derrick White catches fire as C’s stun Detroit

These next two weeks could be a defining stretch for 2025-26 Celtics

NESN Jaylen Brown Sends Clear Message To Celtics Fans After Big Win

Joe Mazzulla Raves About Derrick White After Celtics Beat Pistons

Celtics’ Jaylen Brown Surges In New NBA Player Rankings

Celtics End Pistons’ Historic Winning Streak After Shocking Finish

J.B. Bickerstaff Praises Derrick White For Performance In Celtics-Pistons

Celtics vs. Pistons score, highlights: Boston ends Detroit’s win streak in Thanksgiving Eve thriller

NBA Writer Floats Trade Idea Sending Anfernee Simons For Veteran Center

Mass Live Pistons coach raves about Celtics guard after upset win

Celtics teammates stunned by two-way center in win over Pistons

Jaylen Brown raves about Boston Celtics crowd in Pistons win

Celtics reserve emerges from mix for crucial minutes in Pistons win

Why NBA referees changed controversial call in Celtics win over Pistons

Derrick White is the Celtics ‘Name to Know’ Player of the Game in Wednesday’s win over Pistons

4 takeaways as Celtics beat Pistons to end historic streak

Celtics Wire Can the Celtics start stacking some wins together?

Is Jaylen Brown playing at an All-NBA level for the Celtics?

Is the Boston Celtics fanbase split this season?

Boston Celtics jersey history No. 44 – Danny Ainge (1981-89)

How much do you know about the Celtics home arena of TD Garden?

Celtics history: 2nd-highest point total vs. Bullets

The Celtics thanked the TD Garden crowd for giving them a boost vs. the Pistons

Celtics end Pistons NBA-best streak, win 117-114 (PHOTOS)

The Celtics cooled down the red-hot Pistons in a Wednesday thriller

Isaiah Thomas on his ties to the city of Boston, Celtics fans

The Celtics need to find consistency to take the next step

Are the Celtics showing signs of the team they can become?

Joe Mazzulla earns praise for coaching methods

The Athletic Derrick White, Celtics find the blueprint in gritty win against Pistons

Boston Sports Journal A fired-up Celtics team, and crowd, rides the best effort of the season to its best win

BSJ Game Report: Celtics 117, Pistons 114 – White comes alive, C’s survive frantic finish

Hardwood Houdini Celtics tried to trade for potential starting center if latest rumor is true

Celtics just got Baylor Scheierman reality check against Cade Cunningham

Amari Williams earns rave reviews from Jaylen Brown after Celtics’ win vs. Pistons

Celtics just took down Pistons in classic thriller: 4 instant reactions

Chowder and Champions Celtics Should Be Thankful for Jaylen Brown on Thanksgiving

3 Celtics Trade Targets to Watch Ahead of Dec. 15

3 Celtics on Thin Ice on Thanksgiving

CLNS Media/YouTube Garden Report: Celtics vs Pistons Post Game Show on CLNS Media – C’s Win Game of the Year vs Detroit

Derrick White Postgame Press Conference | Celtics vs Pistons 11-26

Baylor Scheierman Postgame Press Conference | Celtics vs Pistons 11-26

Joe Mazzulla Postgame Press Conference | Celtics vs Pistons 11-26

JB Bickerstaff PRAISES “Scrappy” Young Celtics Players | Pistons Pregame

Clutch Points Celtics’ Joe Mazzulla drops gritty bars after ending Pistons’ 13-game winning streak

Why Celtics’ Joe Mazzulla kept his cool after controversial Cade Cunningham call

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Source: https://www.celticsblog.com/boston-celtics-daily-links/125619/boston-celtics-daily-links-11-27-25
 
10 Takeaways the Celtics-Pistons battle in Boston

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1. Incredible Resilience by Boston​


In a game where everything was stacked against the Celtics, they were able to take down the number one seeded Detroit Pistons on a 13 game winning streak without Neemias Queta. That is just an incredible accomplishment for this group in easily their best win of the season. This is a game where you got contributions from everyone up and down the roster and for a young team like Boston without a lot of established pieces, that is a huge confidence builder. They held the Pistons to 40% shooting from the field and 31% shooting from three while themselves shooting 44% from the field and 46% from three. Just a great performance overall.

Jaylen Brown had a great quote about this win and this Celtics team in general in the postgame interviews: “Great win. Just shows that on any given night, we can play with anybody.”

Jaylen Brown on the Celtics win over the Pistons:

“Great win. Just shows that on any given night, we can play with anybody.” pic.twitter.com/XfVBkXaoq1

— Noa Dalzell 🏀 (@NoaDalzell) November 27, 2025

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2. Welcome Back, Derrick White​


Sadly, I have to give credit to Kendrick Perkins on ESPN’s halftime show as he said Derrick White had to step up in the second half if the Celtics wanted to win this game after only scoring 2 points. I’m not sure if White heard that, but he locked in and finished with his best game of the season. White had 14 points in the 3rd quarter alone and another 11 in the 4th quarter to finish with a season-high 27 points on the night on 7-13 FG and 6-11 3PT along with 7 rebounds, 3 assists, 3 steals, and 1 block.

This is the type of shooting performance I think everyone in Celtics nation expected from White going into this season. He made some incredible clutch shots in the 4th quarter including a 31-foot moon ball to give Boston a 4-point lead with a minute to go.

DERRICK WHITE CLUTCH pic.twitter.com/TRjNMpaLPv

— NikNBA🏀 (@NIKNBAYT) November 27, 2025

His clutch contributions didn’t stop here as with 17.9 seconds to go and the Pistons coming out of a timeout, White made a heads up play as he poked the ball away from Cade Cunningham to give the Celtics the ball back. Without this play I’m not sure Boston has a chance to win this game.

WALSH. WHITE. CLAMPS.

AHHH pic.twitter.com/Wq13gsmjSu

— Pull up shoot (@NElGHT_) November 27, 2025

I loved seeing this performance out of Derrick White and I hope this officially puts his shooting slump to bed and he can really start to turn up for the Celtics.

3. Another JB Masterclass​


If you look at Jaylen Brown’s shooting line you might not be incredibly impressed with it (12-32 FG, 2-7 3PT), but just like almost every win the Celtics have had this season, they would not have won this game without his offensive performance. Brown finished with 33 points with 10 rebounds, 5 assists, 2 steals, and 2 blocks, showcasing his entire skillset on both sides of the ball. He got on a hot streak in the 4th quarter and hit a huge and-1 layup to give Boston the lead with 1:37 to go.

AND ONE ☝️ pic.twitter.com/716grLzOt9

— Boston Celtics (@celtics) November 27, 2025

Brown has become an incredible leader for this Celtics team as it felt like the entire team was playing with the aggressive mindset that he possessed. Mark Jones on the ESPN broadcast told a story about how Brown made it a priority to come to training camp early just to build chemistry and camaraderie with all of the new players on the roster. This is a microcosm of why Boston can still be successful with Brown at the helm and I am so thankful he is a Celtic.

4. Amari Williams is a NBA Player​


With Neemias Queta being out with a left ankle sprain, the Celtics decided to activate the contract for Amari Williams so he could join the team in Boston for this game. This meant he was going to get thrown in the fire right away having to battle Jalen Duren and Isaiah Stewert from the Pistons and overall, I think he was able to hold his own. Williams played 15 minutes off the bench that proved to be huge, finishing with 1 point, 3 rebounds and 2 blocks. One of his blocks coming on Cade Cunningham in a similar way another Williams that wore a Celtics uniform used to look.


In no way am I saying Amari Williams is going to be the next Robert Williams right away, but I do think he showed that he is a legit NBA player. Now he is on a two-way with the Celtics but I think it would be in their best interest to keep him in Boston as much as he can for his development. He has shown some good tools in the G-League and could play a third center role similar to what Neemias Queta did in the last couple seasons. Whatever they end up doing with Williams, I do think it’s safe to say he deserves a chance to show what he can do in the absence of Queta.

5. Wingstop Trio: Gonzalez, Minott, and Walsh​


I’m not sure if the nickname will stick but I would like to start calling the trio of Hugo Gonzalez, Josh Minott, and Jordan Walsh, Wingstop. They bring a young, chaotic energy to the Celtics wing position and are turning into some legit lockdown defenders.

Wingstop ☘️ pic.twitter.com/5SkyCHWs8O

— Benjay 🖌 (@BenjayCreates) November 12, 2025

Starting with Jordan Walsh who I think has cemented himself in the starting and closing lineups for this iteration of the Celtics. Walsh finished with 7 points, 6 rebounds, 4 assists, and 2 steals vs the Pistons and did a great job when it came to creating chaos. He was the primary defender on Cunningham on Detroit’s offensive possession with 17.9 seconds left to go in the game that ended with a turnover while playing at the small-ball center position. Not only that, he had another play early in the game on Cunningham where he stripped him leading to a Derrick White layup and made multiple great cuts to the basket on offense that led to easy dunks.

Great cut and finish by Walsh pic.twitter.com/7NsB0gIt6O

— NikNBA🏀 (@NIKNBAYT) November 26, 2025

Josh Minott also had a great game finishing with 9 points, 5 rebounds and 3 assists while hitting two 3-pointers. Similar to Walsh, Minott also played a lot of small-ball five in this game and it led to some success on the defensive end as it slowed down Jalen Duren a little bit. Minott’s best play of the game came early in the second quarter as he hit an and-1 three pointer while Duren landed underneath him.

WHYYNOT COUNT IT 👇🏾 pic.twitter.com/FEmLyAfL5K

— Boston Celtics (@celtics) November 26, 2025

Finally, Hugo Gonzalez only played 7 minutes in this game but a lot of them came in the beginning of the 4th quarter where he played some really tough defense on the Pistons that kept the game close.

Look at this possession by Hugo pic.twitter.com/LwidBKfMKC

— NikNBA🏀 (@NIKNBAYT) November 27, 2025

All three of these players have started games over the course of the season and all three of them have had varied levels of success, but one thing all three of them share is that when they step on the court, they are going to create chaos, and they are going to be important pieces in the Mazzulla Ball Machine.

6. Scheierman Showed Out​


Baylor Scheierman is having a sneaky solid season so far in year two with the Celtics and this was maybe his most important performance of the season so far. With Brown and White struggling to shoot the ball early, Scheierman came up firing with confidence and kept the Celtics in the game with 13 points on 5-6 FG and 3-4 3PT at the half. This included some nice bag work as he was able to show a stop and pop midrange shot over the outstretched arms of Jalen Duren

Baylor be BALLIN 🔥 pic.twitter.com/WrCeBmkHTc

— Boston Celtics (@celtics) November 26, 2025

With Walsh and Minott playing small-ball five, Scheierman ended up playing 30 minutes in total for the Celtics and even though he didn’t score again in the second half, he was still able to hold his own before fouling out late in the 4th quarter. Scheierman is really showing he deserves minutes with Boston and is taking advantage of his opportunities.

7. Survived the Paint Battle​


Something that makes or breaks games for the Celtics this season is always going to be the rebounding battle and with no Queta, there was a sense of dread that Jalen Duren was going to grab a minimum of 40 rebounds on his own. That was slight hyperbole but overall Boston did enough to survive getting out-rebounded 56-44 and giving up 21 offensive rebounds. Detroit was also able to score at the basket at will, outscoring the Celtics 42-22 in points in the paint. The lack of a center for Boston was the main excuse and you can overlook this but it’s still something to be concerned about depending on how long Queta will be out.

DET-vs-BOS-on-11_26_2025.png

8. Tank or Tatum?​


This was an incredible win by the Celtics and it really makes a statement that says they might be a Jayson Tatum return away from being a legit team in the East again. However, then there are also games like the loss to Brooklyn that says, maybe a semi-tank isn’t so bad. This conundrum will continue to be debated amongst Celtics fans for the rest of the season but since it’s still early enough, I there’s a case that Tatum comes back and this team can make some noise in the playoffs.

On the NBC Sports Boston Pregame Show, in a question on who is the best team in the East, Brian Scalabrine said to Chris Forsberg, “We’re the best team in the east if [Jayson Tatum] comes back.” Forsberg responded with, “How early do you expect him to be Jayson Tatum?” and Scal responded with, “April 1st.”

Scal: “We’re the best team in the east if [Jayson Tatum] comes back.”

Q: “How early do you expect him to be Jayson Tatum?”

Scal: “April 1st” 👀 pic.twitter.com/FuG0Yknb4v

— jb (@lockedupjb) November 26, 2025

This does bring up more questions to think about as if Tatum comes back around February and starts to look and feel comfortable again around April, is a playoff run out of the realm of possibility? Obviously we would have to see what the Celtics record is by the time Tatum could be back but I might agree with Scal, Boston could be the best team in the East with a healthy Jayson Tatum.

9. Cade Cunningham is a superstar​


Even in the loss, Cade Cunningham put up a ridiculous stat-line vs the Celtics, scoring 42 points, 8 rebounds, 5 assists on 12-26 FG, 4-9 3PTm and 14-16 FT. Cunningham really is the key to the Pistons success this season as he is having an MVP-level campaign so far. I knew he was great but watching torch the Celtics all night really reinforced to me that he is a superstar in this league. He can get to anywhere he wants whether its a three pointer from 30-feet, mid range jumper, or just bullying his way into the paint, he is a legit three-level scorer. However the thing that really impressed me was his defense. He finished with only 1 steal and 1 block but he made what felt like at least 5 pass deflections and he always seemed to be able to breakup any fast break the Celtics had. The Pistons haven’t had this level of a player in a long time and I’m happy to see the city of Detroit be a respected basketball city again.

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10. Ball Don’t Lie​


I spent my 9th takeaway applauding Cade Cunningham for his amazing performance and season overall so I feel its okay to talk about the insane foul call he got at the end of the game. With 6.3 seconds to go in the game, Anfernee Simons hit two free throws to give the Celtics a 115-112 lead. Cade Cunningham got the ball and started to make his way up the court off the inbound pass and Jordan Walsh fouled him on the floor with 4.4 seconds. However, Tony Brothers changed the call from the other side of the court to award Cunningham with a shooting foul and give the Pistons three free throws to potentially tie the game. It was a seemingly ridiculous call in real time but karma came for the Celtics as Cunningham missed the third free throw, Boston got the rebound, and the game was over.

What a finish in Boston!

Cade Cunningham had the chance to tie the game at the line after the on the floor foul was upgraded to a shooting foul, for three shot!

Drama in the NBA! pic.twitter.com/AkgkweAcpx

— ESPN Australia & NZ (@ESPNAusNZ) November 27, 2025

This was maybe the most perfect example of an old saying that former Boston Celtic and Detroit Piston Rasheed Wallace coined long ago, “Ball Don’t Lie.” Jaylen Brown agreed with this sentiment as when he was asked postgame, he had the same three word phrase in response.

Jaylen Brown on Cade's missed game-tying free throw:

"Ball don't lie, ball don't f*ckin lie" 😭😭pic.twitter.com/KcZQUsaEie

— CelticsMuse (@CelticsMuse) November 27, 2025

Boston’s next game is on Saturday November 29th at 5pm as they take a trip to Minnesota to face the Timberwolves.

Happy Thanksgiving Everyone!

Source: https://www.celticsblog.com/article...tle-vs-the-pistons-derrick-white-jaylen-brown
 
Trading Anfernee Simons to all 30 teams (part 2)

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This is a continuation from part 1 which you can find here.

Dallas Mavericks

Simons and a smaller contract (like Chris Boucher) almost works with Daniel Gafford and Klay Thompson. Here again, in theory the money could work if you rerouted a small salary elsewhere.

The Celtics would get a quality big man and while Klay’s best years are behind him, he would be a welcome shooting threat. The Mavericks get off some longer term money as they look to reset around Cooper Flagg.

Denver Nuggets

I don’t think any of the deals work for either team but in the spirit of the exercise, the following deal works (using one of the TPEs). Simons and Payton Pritchard for Cam Johnson and Zeke Nnaji.

Again, I don’t know why either team does this but if I were the Celtics I’d want draft compensation in return.

Golden State Warriors

This isn’t legal, but Simons for Jonathan Kuminga and Al Horford comes close money-wise. Horford (sadly) can’t be re-acquired by the Celtics so he would need to be routed to a 3rd team. (Yes, I know that I keep breaking my “two teams only” rule, but this is hard!)

I don’t know if the Celtics would necessarily want to be the ones that sign Kuminga for the long term but he certainly has some talent.

Houston Rockets

Simons for Fred VanVleet and Jeff Green works.

FVV is out for the year but in theory he’ll be healthy next year (under contract for one more year) and Simons would help the Rockets with another scorer this year.

Los Angeles Clippers

Simons for John Collins works straight up and actually seems pretty reasonable. Both are on expiring contracts and I could see both teams taking a flyer on finding a better fit.

Collins isn’t the player he once was, but he could be a useful rotation guy going forward.

Los Angeles Lakers

Simons for Jarred Vanderbilt, Maxi Kleber, and Marcus Smart almost works. Only $26K off, so I think it could be handled.

I just couldn’t resist bringing back Marcus!

gettyimages-2246435819.jpg

Memphis Grizzlies

Simons for Kentavious Caldwell-Pope works and saves the Celtics $6.1M. The catch is that KCP has a player option for $21M next year and his game has fallen off a cliff in recent years.

Minnesota Timberwolves

I don’t think this is realistic but you can get close on salaries with Simons for Jaden McDaniels and one of their minimum contracts. I don’t think Minny considers this and if they did they’d probably want some kind of draft compensation. The Wolves are another team with big contracts and small contracts which makes it hard for the math to line up.

New Orleans Pelicans

You can get close on salaries by doing Simons and Scheierman for Dejounte Murray. The timeline on Murray’s injury is similar to that of Jayson Tatum’s and he’s under contract for 2 more years. New Orleans would have to be shifting into full sunk-cost mode (remember they don’t own their own pick this year) and they would likely want draft compensation from Boston.

I’d prefer to target Trey Murphy III who’s making $25M but that would cost a number of picks and if he became available there would be a bit of a bidding war. But you never know.

Oklahoma City Thunder

I don’t see the Thunder doing anything to mess with this team, but if Presti wanted to get cute and dump Isaiah Hartenstein, then Simons’ expiring contract comes close. Not happening though, so I’m moving on.

Phoenix Suns

Simons for Grayson Allen and Royce O’Neale works. Both have 2 years left on their deals.

Simons for Dillon Brooks and Nick Richards works as well.

You could even do Simons for Dillon Brooks straight up and save $6.6M this year (taking on his $19.9M deal for next year).

See, that’s 3 trade ideas for one team (to make up some for the teams I couldn’t figure something out for).

Portland Trail Blazers

The Blazers are restricted from re-acquiring Simons, so this doesn’t work unless there’s a 3 team deal.

Sacramento Kings

Simons for DeMar DeRozan works straight up, saves the Celtics $2.9M this year, but adds his $25.7M deal to next year’s payroll.

I don’t see the Celtics taking on that salary for next season without at least exploring their options this summer, but you never know. Note that I tried to do something with Malik Monk coming back but couldn’t figure anything out that was viable.

San Antonio Spurs

Simons for Harrison Barnes and Julian Champagnie works.

Simons for Keldon Johnson and Jeremy Sochan also works.

(Shrug) I’m losing steam here, need to kick things in for the final stretch.

gettyimages-2244498053.jpg

Utah Jazz

Simons for Jusuf Nurkic works and saves the Celtics $8.3M this year (both on expiring contracts).

I’m sure Danny would want to squeeze a pick out of this somehow.

Bonus Ideas

The Nets in general have a lot of easily movable, mid-range salaries and are clearly in a rebuild/tank mode. Because Michael Scotto brought up the Celtics interest in Day’Ron Sharpe, I’ll point out that Simons for Sharpe and Terance Mann works and saves the Celtics $5.9M this year (but adds 2 years for Mann and 1 for Sharpe).

The Bulls have a few mid-sized contracts as well you could mix and match. Kevin Huerter and Jalen Smith? Zach Collins and Tre Jones?

Ok, here’s a 3 team deal that might make sense if the Pistons are serious about landing Lauri Markkanen. The expiring contracts of Simons and Tobias Harris to the Jazz (with several picks coming from Detroit), Markkanen to the Pistons, and Isaiah (“Beef Stew”) Stewart to the Celtics.

General Conclusions

The big takeaway from this exercise is the difficulty of finding trades where the financials actually work. Simons isn’t on a max contract, but he’s far from a bargain deal. My guess is that he’s a bit overpaid for his role (but not by much – scorers get paid), so that’s a negative effect on his trade value. The fact that he’s on an expiring deal is a positive effect. Several teams are top heavy with max contracts (or close) and a bunch of minimum type deals, which just doesn’t work without complex 3 team deals.

Note that I didn’t set out to make this a mean-natured attack on Simons. I just don’t think he’s the best long term fit for what we’re trying to do and he has a useful contract to bring in other players that could fit that vision better. Unless there are clear signals that he’s open to re-signing to a team friendly deal this summer (why should he?) then I think the chances of him being moved are pretty high.

Will any of these deals actually happen? Probably not, but perhaps some of the players mentioned above could be involved somehow. And if all my ideas are terrible, well, at least I tried. Rosebud.

Source: https://www.celticsblog.com/boston-...rading-anfernee-simons-to-all-30-teams-part-2
 
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