Jaylen Brown is guiding Celtics through brutal reality he knew was coming

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ORLANDO — From the beginning of the season, Jaylen Brown maintained that figuring out the process of winning would be a challenge.

“It takes time,” Brown said after the Celtics’ loss to the Detroit Pistons, which knocked them down to an 0-3 start. “It does.”

And, through 10 games, Boston has struggled more than at any point throughout Brown’s NBA tenure: they’re 4-6, good for the Eastern Conference’s 5th-worst record. They’re last in pace, assist percentage, and free-throw rate. They have the 7th-lowest scoring offense in the NBA.

Despite that, the players don’t feel their record reflects their potential; Payton Pritchard said he feels like the Celtics should be 6-4, having dropped close, winnable games against the Philadelphia 76ers on opening night and against the Utah Jazz on Monday.

“It could be completely different if we won two games that we were supposed to,” Pritchard said after Friday’s 123-110 loss to the Orlando Magic

That’s the challenge with a new roster inundated with more inexperienced players: the mistakes mount, and the margin of error is slim. Winnable games become much harder to win when young guys with limited NBA minutes are the ones who are executing.

“That’s the fine line between where you’re at and where you could be,” Mazzulla said. ”It’s very, very simply just the process of 10 to 15 possessions. I know I talk about it a lot, and it sounds as if I’m just saying it, but no, that’s the truth. 10 to 15 possessions are the difference between a win and a loss. And, we’re learning that. And it’s the same thing. Last night, there were maybe five possessions a quarter that dictated that game — you get it to four, they go on a 6-0 run. You get it tied, you put them to the free throw line on tendencies. You go up two, you give up transition after a make. Those 10 to 15 possessions —more times than not, it’s the difference between winning and losing. It’s the difference between the record that you have and the record that you could have. And so that’s the process of it: how can we be great at those 10 to 15 things that really dictate the difference of the game.”

Brown has helped put the Celtics in a position where it’s even come down to those few possessions. He’s taken the new players under his wing, relishing a leadership role and the adversity this season would inevitably bring.

“He’s always been one of the most supportive guys on the team,” Queta said. “His demeanor is always great. He’s always going to try and push us to the next level.”

Jaylen Brown getting Josh Minott ready to go on the bench pic.twitter.com/kUNzIDYMQA

— Noa Dalzell 🏀 (@NoaDalzell) November 8, 2025

Through 10 games, as the Celtics continue to figure out that elusive process of winning, Jaylen Brown has established himself among the league’s top performers. He’s averaging 28.1 points on 53.5% shooting, along with 4.9 rebounds and 4.2 assists. He’s the league’s 9th-leading scorer, and he’s scored 30 or more points six times this season — tied for second most in the NBA (only trailing reigning MVP Shai Gilgeous-Alexander).

“He’s taking his game to the next level — the way he’s scoring the ball, the way he’s making plays for others as well,” Neemias Queta said. “He’s such a threat getting downhill that teams are starting to load up the head and shift, making the right reads, getting guys open. Yeah, man, he’s a dawg, even on the defensive end as well.”

Brown hasn’t expressed any frustrations with the Celtics’ inexperience or roster shortcomings this season. His only outward point of frustration has been the officials.

After Friday’s loss to the Magic, Brown complained about the officiating, seemingly insinuating that his previous critiques of the refereeing after the Jazz loss cost him in this one.

“I think in the fourth quarter, I think the officials made their point,” Brown said. “So I get it. I’ll keep my mouth closed.”

Jaylen Brown on being held to two points in the fourth quarter:

“I think in the fourth quarter. I think the officials made their point. So I get it. I’ll keep my mouth closed.”
@CLNSMedia | @AdamHimmelsbach pic.twitter.com/S7RXwDOzwM

— Celtics on CLNS (@CelticsCLNS) November 8, 2025

Mazzulla is unconcerned with Brown’s critiques, though he noted he supports Brown and agrees with him. The Celtics’ head coach doesn’t believe Brown’s officiating concerns have impacted his play.

“He’s playing well,” Mazzulla said.“I think if he wasn’t playing well, that would be a signal that his head’s not on straight. So I don’t think those two things are correlated — he’s playing very well, and doing what we need to do.”

Still, so far this season, Brown’s offensive prowess hasn’t been enough to lift the Celtics to the record they desire.

Alongside the four-time All-Star, three other Celtics are scoring in the double-figures: Payton Pritchard, who is averaging 16.5 points per game; Derrick White, who is averaging 14.3; and Anfernee Simons, who is averaging 14. The Celtics’ three-point percentage is the fourth-worst in the NBA, in large part due to concurrent three-point shooting slumps by Pritchard (26.7%) and White (26.4%), the team’s two highest-volume sharpshooters. White is shooting 33.3% from the field, his least efficient season so far.

Brown still feels like he has to do more. And, after Friday’s loss, he wrestled with some missed fourth-quarter looks.

“A couple of shots that I wish I could have back — settled maybe a little bit from three,” he said. “Maybe I could have gotten downhill a little bit more. But, if you’re getting downhill, and they’re not giving you those that whistle, then it looks like a bad possession. Maybe I could not settle a little bit more, but I’m also trying to get to the free throw line.”

Still, so far through 10 games, he has undoubtedly been the Celtics’ best source of offense. He’s shooting 60.7% on two-pointers and getting to the line more times per game (5.8 free throw attempts) than the next two Celtics combined. Perhaps most remarkable is that Brown’s still not physically at 100% — he dunked for the first time all season on Friday night as he continues to recover from a hamstring tweak he suffered in preseason.

“That’s crazy,” he said when he learned of that uncharacteristic reality.

“As the season goes on, I’ll feel better, more strong, and it’ll be some more dunks coming soon, I promise you.”

Jaylen Brown on his first dunk coming 10 games into the season:

“That’s crazy.”

Asked him about where he’s at physically:

“As the season goes on, I'll feel better, more strong, and it'll be some more dunks coming soon, I promise you.” pic.twitter.com/e8trMtZD4n

— Noa Dalzell 🏀 (@NoaDalzell) November 8, 2025

The Celtics will continue to follow Brown’s lead as the learning curve continues. That’s a reality Brown embraces.

“He’s making a lot of big-time plays for us,” Queta said. “So we just got to keep on relying on him, leaning on him, and making his life easier.”

Source: https://www.celticsblog.com/article...ics-through-brutal-reality-he-knew-was-coming
 
Ten takeaways as Boston loses late in Orlando

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#1 – A rivalry brewing?​


Last night we watched a spirited Boston performance, deserving of plaudits, particularly for those second and third quarters. Ultimately, though, away from home, Orlando handed Boston our first cup loss.

Last year I went on CelticsBlog’s very own Adam Taylor’s podcast, and we spoke about Eastern Conference contenders that could threaten Boston in the postseason. Cleveland had gotten off to an electric start, yet we dismissed their playoff viability, particularly against the C’s, because of their two-small, two-big construction. The opening night against the Knicks was still fresh in memory, and we concluded that NYC had built a pale imitation of their eastern seaboard rivals. The Pacers hadn’t yet announced themselves as serious players in the East, but I raised Orlando as my long-term threat to the Boston hegemony we were envisioning.

I tend to make my takes a little early when I analyze the NBA. It’s the excitement and the optimist in me that wants to see certain players take the leap; teams glue together. While we dispatched Orlando in the first round of the playoffs last year, I stand by my take. I wasn’t wrong; I was just early. The Orlando Magic are a future rival. I think the Magic are a contender this year. We’ll be seeing more of Orlando in the years to come as Brad reassembles a contender at TD Garden.

#2 – Days of future past​


The most frustrating thing about watching the C’s last night was what they faced: a roster built around two big, playmaking wings; high-level complementary guards who can space, defend, and create in a balanced way; and several different frontcourt archetypes that adjust the team’s style depending on who’s on the floor.

Sound familiar?

Jeff Weltman might be the most devoted follower of Brad Stevens in the NBA. The C’s worked through the challenges of building around a young wing duo, cycling through high-scoring, high-touch guards before finding the formula that maximized Jayson Tatum and Jaylen Brown. Orlando has skipped straight to the endgame, bringing in Desmond Bane and, in doing so, assembling a team in Boston’s image. My concern is what that might suggest about the future of this team.

The best team of the “Spaced Out” era, credit to Mike Prada, has so far been the Golden State Warriors. Even before the Durant acquisition, the Warriors broke basketball by prioritizing the three-ball and integrating movement, handoffs, and split cuts at a time when almost every team except the Spurs was playing a more static style. Along with having an all-time great in Steph, supported by Draymond, Klay, and later Durant, Golden State enjoyed an innovation advantage over the rest of the league for nearly half a decade. Year by year, more teams started to realize they had to get on board with the Golden State model. Seven or eight years later, you may still have your signature style, and you might even be the best at it, but the innovation advantage fades with each passing season.

That’s my concern for the Boston Celtics. Years are precious in a copycat league, and missing Tatum this season gives others another year to build the “Boston way.” Orlando are the first to do so; others will follow. Let’s hope that Tatum and Brown remain the same roster-building cheat code by 2026–27.

#3 – Cold streak snapped?​


This season, Payton Pritchard has really struggled from behind the arc. Anyone reading a “Ten Takeaways” article will know that. Thankfully, the cold front seems to be subsiding, with clear skies on the way. Pritchard went five for eight from downtown tonight, scoring a season-high twenty-seven points against Orlando.

In my previous “Ten Takeaways” piece, I did some digging to see if there was a clear reason for Pritch’s misfortunes from three and came up empty. A higher proportion of his three-point looks are assisted this season, and there’s been an increase in on-ball responsibility, but not to the degree you’d expect it to tank his shooting percentages. Watching tonight’s threes back should put a lot of Celtics fans at ease.

The first two three’s of the night were pull ups:

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Difficult efforts, particularly the second make, but Pritch has actually shot better off the dribble than off the catch this season. Maybe he found his confidence early with those off-the-dribble makes, which helped the good times roll on the catch later.

His final three makes of the night came on catch-and-shoot opportunities or set plays, the kind Payton has really struggled with this year.

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Note the passion after the transition make. I thought Pritchard really took a moment to set himself for the open three in transition, holding onto the ball, taking a breath before firing away, and that was the make that prompted the biggest reaction. All shooters know that off-the-dribble threes are always going to be high variance. They’re the hardest shot to take in the game, and with that comes the understanding that they aren’t always going to go in.

Looking at Payton’s reaction after that make tells me he knows he has added responsibility this year. He knows he’s one of the best shooters in the league, and maybe he’s putting even more pressure on himself to make the so-called “easy ones.” That could have something to do with the cold start to the year.

That being said, they’ve started to go in. I don’t think they’ll stop.

#4 – Derrick White: Trigger-man​


I was worried before the start of the game that the Magic would swarm Boston’s handoff actions and stifle the offense down in Disneyland. Those concerns mainly came from Boston’s statement win earlier this year at the Garden against Cleveland. I thought Boston won in spite of some lax handoff action run through Queta at the elbows and at the top of the key, and tonight there was a clear change in usage.

Against Cleveland, Queta had the ball in hand for 1.4 minutes over 25 minutes of playing time. Against Orlando last night, Queta had the ball for just 0.8 minutes despite playing 30. So where were those touches redistributed?

Derrick White largely set up the offense last night as Boston ditched much of its handoff game. In its place, White took over as the trigger man from the logo while Boston ran off-ball action. He recorded a season-high 96 touches, dished out 10 assists, and turned the ball over only once against the Magic.

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You can see that White is occupying the spaces that Queta was a few games ago. While these aren’t eye-popping assists, they’re actions run crisply. These are simple plays made well. Pressuring White is less effective than pressuring Queta; he’s less likely to turn the ball over and more likely to make you pay if you’re stretching your defensive shell.

I wouldn’t call this a complete revamp of Boston’s offensive strategy. Orlando isn’t blessed with gifted rim protectors at the five, so there’s less benefit to pulling their centers out of the paint than there is against teams like Cleveland or Philadelphia. But by placing White in this position, you have a better decision-maker than Queta running the floor on more possessions.

#5 – What do you mean we can’t switch anymore?​


I felt a little rotten watching the first quarter of this game. The old core looms over the current one every single day, but sometimes the reminders that this is a different Celtics squad hit harder than others.

Gone are the days of Jrue Holiday, Jayson Tatum (for now), and Big Al Horford. The Celtics can’t switch everything anymore. Watch how Orlando started the game, targeting mismatches:

Franz Wagner:

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Paolo Banchero:

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In all of these instances, one of Pritchard, White, or Simons is being taken to the cleaners, bullied by a bigger frame. Obviously, White and Pritchard would’ve been vulnerable to this type of targeting before, but the drop in matchup versatility and the lack of comparative chemistry compared to previous iterations of the C’s mean we’re more likely to see this kind of bullying as the season goes on.

#6 – Portugese physicality​


We saw both the good and the bad from Neemias Queta tonight. A +7 in 30 minutes against Orlando represents a strong showing, and it’s primarily down to the physicality and athleticism he brings on the defensive end. I thought he was massive for Boston to start the night, and he made a few eye-popping plays. Anthony Black won’t be looking forward to tonight’s game.

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It wasn’t Queta’s best offensive showing. Five points on twenty-five percent shooting and two assists are the kind of numbers that get you benched on MyCareer, but the fact that Queta can still be a positive for this team on an off offensive night bodes well for his future with the group. Boston looks like a more functional unit with Queta manning the block. Game after game, it’s becoming clear that Queta isn’t just a center for a purgatory seasos. He’ll be here to stay.

#7 – “Neemy, No!”​

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You know all that nice stuff I just said about Neemias Queta? It still stands, but he definitely broke Joe Mazzulla’s heart against Orlando. With four minutes left in the fourth quarter, the Celtics had stuck this game out. They sat four points behind when Derrick White found Queta below the basket. Goga Bitadze flailed to recover a few feet away. With a chance to close the gap to two points, Queta blew the layup and that’s not all. In a moment of frustration, he grabbed Goga as the Magic looked to go the other way, giving up the cheapest take foul you’ll see all season. Watch below if you can stomach it:

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Every good horror gets a sequel. Desmond Bane made the ensuing free throw and then did this:

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In the space of fifteen seconds, the game slipped away. I don’t have the heart to show you Mazzulla’s reaction after the take foul. He was absolutely gutted after watching his C’s stay in it on a tough night away from home. This team will compete, but the margin for error is Aleksej Pokuševski thin.

#8 – The way to Joe’s heart​


I think there were fears at the start of the season that Jordan Walsh’s time in a Celtics jersey was running out. Hugo Gonzales is a similar player to Walsh who was struggling to earn minutes early in the year. But Walsh is starting to turn it around, and in doing so, he’s showing us the real way to Joe Mazzulla’s heart.

Walsh played 18:48 last night, following nearly 24 minutes against the Wizards, and despite a fairly bleak box score, he was a +7 in his time on the floor.

In his eighteen minutes, Walsh played with the kind of physicality you’d expect in a do-or-die Game 7 slugfest. He flew around the court, corralling rebounds he had no right to get anywhere near. His boxouts were vicious, his passing-lane play opportunistic. I thought the play below summed up Walsh’s night perfectly:

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There aren’t a ton of players who can close out on a shooter like Walsh does in the clip above. He sprints out on Wagner who sells the pumpfake and 99% of defenders sit on the parquet and watch, hoping for good fortune. Walsh somehow recovers, contests the shot and grabs the rebound. He kind of moves like a cartoon character. A mess of arms moving at breakneck pace but it’s that athleticism and effort that’ll keep Walsh on the floor for a Joe Mazzula team.

If you had asked analysts or fans of the league what a Mazzula player was a couple of years ago they would not have described Jordan Walsh. They might have described….

#9 – Anfernee Simons​


Anfernee Simons played two, yes two, first-half minutes against the Orlando Magic. A few years ago, if you’d asked those aforementioned analysts about Mazzulla’s “type,” they might’ve described Simons: a flamethrower from three with real ability to attack closeouts and make reads out of the pick and roll. Someone who fits into the math of Mazzulla Ball.

Now, Anfernee played fifteen minutes in the second half against Orlando and actually shot Boston back into the game. He made half of his six attempts from beyond the arc and received praise from Joe in the postgame interviews:

“I thought he responded pretty well. I thought he was more aggressive in the 2nd half, and there was no message there. He just has an understanding of what we have to do on both sides of the floor. I thought he did a much better job of that in the 2nd half.”

The message is clear: a Joe Mazzulla player is aggressive and energetic first and foremost. There isn’t room for a lack of intensity, even if you can light it up from three with the best of them.

It’ll be interesting to see if Simons can carry the momentum he built in the fourth quarter into tonight’s rematch with the Magic. He has to, or we could start to see Simons more as a salary slot than a basketball player for the Boston Celtics.

#10 – Games in​


The season is ten games old for the Boston Celtics. We sit at 4–6, winning at a 32.5-game pace. We’re 1–1 in the NBA Cup. This team is fighting night in and night out, and as a few others have pointed out, there’s too much talent to tank when teams like Brooklyn, Washington, and Indiana are sitting at the bottom of the conference with one win apiece. But with our record and roster, I don’t know if Boston can truly hope to make noise in the postseason.

@azad-rosay wrote about Boston stumbling into being a mid-range team for CelticsBlog this week (check it out here: How Boston Accidentally Became a Mid-Range Team). Work will have to be done to make sure the C’s don’t end up as a middle-of-the-road NBA team, one way or the other.

If Pritch put his cold spell from deep to rest tonight and Derrick White’s shooting percentages rebound with the tenacity of a Jordan Walsh, maybe a run can be made by the C’s. But as Neemias Queta showed us tonight, the margins are fine for a Boston team that’s undermanned compared to seasons past.

After the next ten games, we’ll really have an idea of what this season will look like for Boston. As things stand, I’m just hoping to see Jaylen continue to thrive as a number one. I’m hoping to see the wing depth continue to emerge in the form of Josh Minott, Hugo González, and Jordan Walsh. I’m hoping to see this team keep fighting every single night the way they have to start the season. No team-only meeting needs to be had. The effort is there. Let’s see if we can start to turn this around back against the Magic tonight.

Source: https://www.celticsblog.com/articles/124362/ten-takeaways-as-boston-loses-late-in-orlando
 
Boston Celtics (4-6) at Orlando Magic (4-5) Game #11 11/9/25

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Boston Celtics (4-6) at Orlando Magic (4-5)
Sunday, November 9, 2025
6:00 PM ET
Regular Season Game #11 Road Game #6
TV: NBCSB, FDSNFL, NBA-LP
Radio: Sirius XM, 98.5 Sports Hub, WYGM 96.9
Kia Center


The Celtics visit the Orlando Magic for the second straight game, having lost to them 123-110 on Friday in an NBA Cup game. This is the 2nd of 4 meetings between these teams this season. They will meet in Boston on November 23 and on April 12 for their final meeting. This is the start of 3 games in 4 nights for the Celtics that will end in the Celtics 3rd back to back set on Tuesday and Wednesday.

The Celtics won the series 2-1 last season. The Celtics won 1 game in Boston and 1 game in Orlando and the Magic won one game in Orlando. The Celtics are 76-58 overall all time against the Magic. They are 26-40 all time in games played in Orlando. The Celtics are 12-10 against the Magic in the playoffs, including a 4-1 win in the first round of last year’s playoffs.

The Magic have made a few changes since last season. Their biggest move was to trade Cole Anthony and Kentavious Caldwell-Pope and 4 first round picks to Memphis in exchange for Desmond Bane. So far, Bane has struggled somewhat with his new team. They signed Jamal Cain and Colin Castleton to 2 Way contracts. They signed Tyus Jones as a free agent. Finally, they traded for the rights to Noah Penda from Boston in exchange for the rights to Amari Williams and Max Shulga.

After this game at Orlando, the Celtics will stay on the road for a game at Philadelphia on Tuesday. Then they return home to face Memphis on Wednesday and have 3 days off before hosting the LA Clippers on Sunday. Then it is one game on the road at Brooklyn before playing Brooklyn, Orlando, and Detroit at home. The home game against Brooklyn will also be an Emerates NBA Cup game.

After this game, the Magic will play at home against Portland. They then head out on the road to play one game at New York before playing onr game at home against Brooklyn. Then it’s one game at Houston before a 3 game home stand against Golden State, the LA Clippers and New York. Then it’s a 3 game road trip through Boston, Philadelphia and Detroit.

Jayson Tatum remains out for this game as he rehabs from the torn Achilles that he suffered in last year’s playoffs. Xavier Tillman is questionable for personal reasons. For the Magic, Moritz Wagner has yet to debut this season and is expected to miss this game as he rehabs from a torn Achilles. I’m expecting both teams to field the same starting lineups that they used on Friday.

Probable Starting Matchups
PG: Derrick White vs Jalen Suggs


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SG: Payton Pritchard vs Desmond Bane

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SF: Jaylen Brown vs Franz Wagner

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PF: Josh Minott vs Paolo Banchero

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C: Neemias Queta vs Wendell Carter, Jr

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Celtics Reserves
Anfernee Simons
Hugo Gonzalez
Jordan Walsh
Sam Hauser
Luka Garza
Baylon Scheierman
Chris Boucher
Xavier Tillman

2-Way Players

Ron Harper, Jr
Max Shulga
Amari Williams

Injuries/Out

Jayson Tatum (Achilles) out

Head Coach
Joe Mazzulla

Magic Reserves
Goga Bitadze
Anthony Black
Tristan da Silva
Jett Howard
Jonathan Isaac
Tyus Jones
Noah Penda
Jase Richardon

2-Way Players
Jamal Cain
Colin Castleton
Orlando Robinson

Injuries/Out

Moritz Wagner (knee) out

Head Coach

Jamahl Mosley

Key Matchups
Jaylen Brown vs Franz Wagner

Wagner is leading the Magic with 22.6 points, 5.6 rebounds, 3.6 assists and 1.0 steals per game. He is shooting 49.7% from the field and 37.5% from beyond the arc. On Friday, he finished with 27 points, 6 rebounds, 6 assists, and 1 block while shooting 50% from the field and 28.6% from beyond the arc. The Celtics need to defend him better in this game.

Josh Minott vs Paolo Banchero
Banchero is averaging 22.2 points, 9.4 rebounds, 4.4 assists, 1.1 blocks per game. He is shooting 44.3% from the field and 25.0% from beyond the arc. On Friday, he finished with 15 points, 9 rebounds, 4 assists, 1 steal and 1 block while shooting 40% from the field and 33.3% from beyond the arc. The Celtics need to stay with him on defense, especially in the paint. They also have to box him out to prevent him from grabbing rebounds as he has been strong on the boards.

Honorable Mention
Payton Pritchard vs Desmond Bane

Bane has struggled somewhat to begin the season with his new team but he had a strong game on Friday against the Celtics. He is averaging 13.9 points, 3.9 rebounds, and 3.5 assists. He is shooting 41.4% from the field and 28.6% from beyond the arc. On Friday, he finished with 22 points, 6 rebounds, 7 assists, 1 steal and 2 blocks while shooting 53.3% from the field and 40% from beyond the arc. The Celtics need to do a better job defending him in this game.

Keys to the Game
Defense
– Defense is always the key to winning games. The Celtics were second in the preseason with a defensive rating of 100.2, so they are capable of playing good defense. The Celtics are dropping and are now 14th with a defensive rating of 113.9. The Magic are 15th with a defensive rating of 114.0. The Celtics allowed the Magic to shoot 50% from the field and 47.2% from beyond the arc. 7 Orlando players scored in double figures. The Celtics must play better defense in this game.

Rebound – Rebounding may be the biggest key to winning right now since the Celtics’ previous losses are largely because they weren’t able to rebound. The Magic are 12th with 45.1 rebounds per game while the Celtics are 19th with 42.5 rebounds per game. They simply have to fight harder to grab rebounds than the Magic. Much of rebounding is effort as evidenced by Payton Pritchard grabbing 10 rebounds against the Pistons and averaging 4 rebounds per game. Every Celtic has got to crash the boards and fight for every rebound. Their effort on the boards will make all the difference.

Effort and Execution – I’ve already mentioned that the Celtics need to put out more effort on the boards but they have to play with more effort overall for all 4 quarters. In their 4 wins, the Celtics played harder and with more energy than their opponents. That has to be their identity this season. They have to play harder on defense and they have to rebound harder. They also have to execute better on both ends of the court. They have a very small margin of error and have to cut down on mistakes.

Offensive Execution – The Celtics shot just 21.6% from 3 against the Jazz. They are 27th in the league, averaging just 32.2% from beyond the arc. It’s not just one Celtic who is struggling to hit their 3’s, it is almost everyone on the team. On Friday, Brown was 1 for 6 on 3’s, Hauser was 1 for 5 and White was also 1 for 6. They need to work on their spacing and focus on their shooting. If they struggle early in the game, they need to score in the midrange or in the paint and not continue to brick 3’s the entire game.

Consistency – The Celtics have been able to build a lead in most of their losses. They led by 13 against the 76ers, 8 against the Knicks, 17 against the Pistons and 14 against the Jazz. However, they weren’t able to keep or build on those leads. Against the 76ers, they built a 24 point lead but won by just 1 point. They need to play well on both ends of the court for all 4 quarters and not allow the Magic to build a lead or to overcome a Celtics’ lead. The Celtics know how to play to win, but they have to play that way consistently and not just for 1 or 2 quarters.

X-Factors
Road Game
– The Celtics are playing on the road. They are facing distractions of travel and playing in an unfamiliar arena in front of hostile fans. Although, there is often a large contingent of Celtics fans in the arena. They need to shake off those distractions and keep their focus on playing the game. Young players often struggle more on the road and so the young Celtics have to stay focused and try to ignore the distractions.

Officiating – Officiating can always be an X-Factor. In some games, you don’t even notice the referees and in other games, they seem to make the game all about them. Some crews call the game tight and others let the teams play. Some crews favor one of the teams while others call it fairly. Jaylen Brown would tell you that they definitely can be an x-factor after the last 2 games. No matter how the game is called, the Celtics must adjust and not allow the officiating to take away from their focus.

Source: https://www.celticsblog.com/boston-...tics-4-6-at-orlando-magic-4-5-game-11-11-9-25
 
Anfernee Simons makes history, earns Jaylen Brown’s praise in win over Magic

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ORLANDO — Anfernee Simons played just two minutes in the first half of Friday’s 123-110 loss to the Orlando Magic. The Celtics were outscored by 11 in that stretch, and Joe Mazzulla opted to give Jordan Walsh and Hugo Gonzalez more extended run.

Afterwards, Simons was gracious about his benching.

“J-Walsh and Hugo came in and changed the game for us,” Simons said. “They got us back in the game with all their energy plays and stuff like that. It was really that simple.”

On Sunday, Simons’ first-half stint was far more productive; in fact, it was historic.

The Celtics guard almost immediately caught fire upon checking into the ballgame midway through the first quarter, and finished the first half with 25 points on 8-11 shooting in just 14 minutes, including 5-7 from three.

Simon’s performance marked the highest-scoring first half by a Celtics reserve in the play-by-play era, per the Celtics.

The first-half explosion also undoubtedly swung the game; the Celtics outscored the Magic by 15 points with Simons on the floor in the first two quarters, erasing a double-digit deficit to tie up the game at 54 entering the half.

Anfernee Simons is up to 23 points (!!) and Sam Hauser is acting like Simons’ hands are literally on fire lol pic.twitter.com/qPsPy9GKSV

— Noa Dalzell 🏀 (@NoaDalzell) November 9, 2025

“Anfernee, in the first half, really got us going,” Joe Mazzulla said after the Celtics’ 111-107 win.

In the second half, Simons played 8 minutes, going scoreless but nonetheless changing the way Orlando defended Boston. That opened up the floor for Simons’ Celtics teammates.

“He made them change their pick-and-roll coverage, which was great,” Mazzulla said.

Simons probably would have played more if it were not for Jordan Walsh’s outstanding fourth-quarter play; the 21-year-old Celtic played all 12 minutes in the fourth, as did Derrick White. Payton Pritchard also played 10 minutes, while Hugo Gonzalez (7 minutes) and Jaylen Brown (5 minutes) rounded out the non-big minutes.

Should the Celtics get more out of Anfernee Simons?​


Simons’ offensive role as a Celtic is significantly diminished compared to his offensive role the past two years on the Portland Trail Blazers; in Boston, Simons has come off the bench every game, and his minutes have decreased from 32.7 to 25.7 a night. At the same time, his scoring has declined from 19.3 to 15 points per game, though his efficiency has slightly improved.

Still, Simons has been one of Boston’s top offensive options; he has the team’s second-highest usage rate at 22.6% (meaning that nearly a quarter of possessions that Simons is on the court for end up with him taking a shot, attempting a free throw, or turning the ball over). And, he attempts the fourth-most shots per game.

Still, Jaylen Brown — the Celtics leading scorer this season — thinks the team can go further in maximizing the 26-year-old’s impact.

“Anfernee’s a guy who’s very talented, so we have to figure out how we can continue to maximize his potential regardless of what it looks like,” Brown said. “We just got to keep an open mind. It was great to see him be aggressive in the first half and get going a little bit. That’s what we need. That takes pressure off everyone. So going forward, we’ve got to look for that more — and it’s a long season, so we just got to keep an open mind.”

Source: https://www.celticsblog.com/articles/124452/anfernee-simons-celtics-magic-stats
 
Celtics add player to injury report ahead of 76ers game

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The Celtics have added Sam Hauser to the injury report ahead of Tuesday’s game against the Philadelphia 76ers; Hauser, who has yet to miss a game this season, is probable with a right wrist sprain.

Celtics Injury Report vs. Philadelphia (11/11):

Sam Hauser – Right Wrist Sprain – PROBABLE
Jayson Tatum – Right Achilles Repair – OUT

— Noa Dalzell 🏀 (@NoaDalzell) November 10, 2025

Hauser is in the midst of a shooting slump for the Celtics; he’s made just 3 of his last 20 three-pointers and is down to 36.7% shooting from three, well below his 41.6% clip from last season. It’s not clear at this time if Hauser’s recent shooting struggles could be related to his wrist sprain.

The 27-year-old Celtics guard has been quiet offensively of late; he hasn’t scored double-digit points since a 21-point outing against the Cleveland Cavaliers. For the year, he is averaging 7.5 points, 3.5 rebounds, and 1.5 assists per game while shooting 33.8% from the field.

The Celtics have been healthy to begin the year


Outside of Hauser, the only other Celtics player on Monday’s injury report is Jayson Tatum, who is expected to miss most, if not all, of the season as he recovers from a ruptured Achilles.

The only players to have missed time this season are Xavier Tillman — who missed Friday’s game against the Magic for personal reasons — and Luka Garza, who dealt with a concussion in the early weeks of the season.

The Celtics will look to improve to 6-6 on Tuesday night. So far this season, they’re 1-1 against the 76ers, having lost a narrow contest on opening night at TD Garden, and following that with a one-point win in Philadelphia on Halloween.

Source: https://www.celticsblog.com/articles/124550/celtics-injury-report-sam-hauser-philadelphia-76ers
 
Jordan Walsh is starting to figure it out

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When Jordan Walsh joined the Celtics as pick #38 in the 2023 NBA Draft and he was more idea than player. As a 19-year-old prospect with selling points of length, athleticism and motor, he was your textbook example of a project prospect.

Since then, the flashes have been as exciting as they’ve been rare. There were just enough moments to see the vision, but not enough consistency or playing time to feel confident about his standing in the team’s plans.

Now, Walsh is reintroducing himself as a building block with the most encouraging stretch of his young career.

Through three straight games in the rotation, he’s displayed all of the athletic traits that originally intrigued Boston. But he’s also adding to the game in less flashy ways that will ultimately extend his time on the floor.

During Media Day, Walsh mentioned several times that he worked to improve his “role player IQ” over the summer. This entails learning to thrive in a system where he’s not going to have the ball often, and finding ways to impact the game regardless.

This has manifested itself in noticeable ways like crashing the offensive glass, and high-pointing defensive rebounds. But it’s also apparent in how he’s thinking the game. This play is rather unremarkable on the surface, but it offers a glimpse at how he’s processing larger ideas like spacing and floor balance.

They’ve got a numbers advantage and he cuts toward the paint, forcing Bane to pick between him and Pritchard. Then he parks himself in open space and makes the easy read to Garza pic.twitter.com/24malzzGg4

— Pull up shoot (@NElGHT_) November 10, 2025

He beats everyone down the floor, and quickly identifies the Celtics’ numbers advantage. Boston has a 5-on-3 with Paolo Banchero and Jalen Suggs trailing the play, and a 3-on-2 on the strong side. Walsh initially holds the attention of Desmond Bane — who’s forced to try to cover two — and his cut makes Bane commit to Payton Pritchard, while freeing himself up. Unguarded, Walsh lets Derrick White know and plants himself in the passing lane. He’s patient enough to make Banchero commit, and then drops the easy feed to Luka Garza.

Joe Mazzulla’s teachings often revolve around his team seeking out 3-on-2’s and getting into their spacing quickly. It looks like it’s starting to click for Walsh.

D3RRICK. Still clutch pic.twitter.com/R2Yt6u10SY

— Pull up shoot (@NElGHT_) November 10, 2025

On one of the biggest possessions of the night, the Magic try to trap Jaylen Brown. Instead of setting up at the 3pt line, Walsh extends out toward half-court to give Brown a lifeline. He catches, scans and fires a pass to an open White. With Orlando caught in another 3-on-2 scenario, Walsh stretches the defense and allows them very little time to recover.

There’s no hesitation or overthinking with Walsh right now, and Mazzulla is rewarding him for it. He played the entire 4th quarter against the Magic but kept enough gas in the tank to ice the game.


He rushed in for an offensive rebound, but spotted a scrambling defense and relocated back out to three. It’s the type of moment that could really supercharge the confidence of a player that already seems to be ascending.

You often see the game start to slow down for young players, but Walsh is speeding up at the same time. He’s reading and reacting, while understanding how the team wants to operate.

It’s the simple things with Walsh that I’ve found most encouraging pic.twitter.com/PrVyHznNyI

— Pull up shoot (@NElGHT_) November 10, 2025

Walsh calls for the ball here, not for himself, but because he wants to help the team flow into an action for one of their scorers. As soon as he touches it, he’s sprinting into a handoff to activate Anfernee Simons. He sets a solid screen, and his pace kept Jonathan Isaac attached long enough to delay the switch and give Simons an opening.

This type of role player IQ shows both an unselfishness and execution of the gameplan that will keep getting his number called. When you pair that with his already useful athleticism, rebounding and defense, the vision Boston had when drafting Walsh starts to get clearer.

Walsh with some great defense on Paolo forcing the turnover here pic.twitter.com/9WpYNffNV8

— Pull up shoot (@NElGHT_) November 10, 2025

Along with Boston’s two other rising wings — Hugo Gonzalez and Josh Minott — the Celtics have the pop of athleticism and switchable wing defense they’ve been missing. Brown and Tatum will always be prepared to take the top defensive assignment, but these three could be the answer to lift some of that burden from their shoulders.

It is still early, and three games admittedly isn’t much of a sample. However, the decisions that Walsh is making are sustainable in terms of contributing to winning basketball. The minutes will always be available this season, but it’s a great sign that he’s been trusted with a larger role so quickly.

Walsh’s growth looks like that of a young player starting to get it. He’s finding ways to blend effort with intention, and that’s what turns spot minutes into a real role. If this version of Walsh sticks, Boston’s rotation — and maybe its future wing depth — just got a lot more interesting.

Source: https://www.celticsblog.com/articles/124547/jordan-walsh-is-starting-to-figure-it-out
 
Boston Celtics (5-6) at Philadelphia 76ers (6-4) Game #12 11/11/25

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Boston Celtics (5-6) at Philadelphia 76ers (6-4)
Tuesday, November 11, 2025
8:00 PM ET
Regular Season Game #12 Road Game #7
TV: Peacock/NBC
Radio: 98.5 The Sports Hub, 97.5 The Fanatic, Sirius XM
Xfinity Mobile Arena


The Celtics travel to Philadelphia to take on the 76ers for the third of 4 games this season. They played in Boston in the first game of the season that Philly won 117-116. The Celtics evened the series with a 109-108 win on October 31 at Philadelphia. They will play the final game in Boston on March 1. The Celtics are playing in their 3rd back to back set this season. They are 1-1 so are in the first of back to back games.

The Celtics beat the 76ers 3-1 last season and they were also 3-1 against the 76ers in the 2023-24 season. The 76ers tanked hard the last part of last season and finished 24-58 to get the 3rd pick in the draft. The Celtics finished with a 61-21 record last season. The Celtics are 276-198 overall all time and they are 94-128 all time in Philadelphia.

The 76ers started the season 4-0. They are now 6-4. The Celtics gave them their first loss on October 31. They have lost 3 of their last 4 games and are coming off a 111-108 loss to the Pistons on Sunday. The 76ers are 7th in the East and are in the first play in spot. The Celtics are the 10th seed and in the final play in spot.

The 76ers haven’t changed much since last season. They added Trendon Watford as a free agent. They also added Igor Milicic, Jr, who went undrafted in this year’s draft. They added VJ Edgecombe with the 3rd pick in the draft and Johni Broome with the 35th pick in the draft. They lost Guerschon Yabusele, Jared Butler, and Ricky Council IV. The 76ers have a veteran core and an exciting lottery pick and if they can stay healthy, they could be a good team this season.

After this game at Philadelphia the Celtics will return home to face Memphis on Wednesday and have 3 days off before hosting the LA Clippers on Sunday. Then it is one game on the road at Brooklyn before playing Brooklyn, Orlando, and Detroit at home. The home game against Brooklyn will also be an Emerates NBA Cup game.

After this game, the 76ers will play at Detroit and then home against the LA Clippers and Toronto. Following those 2 games at home, they will play at Milwaukee before 2 more home games against Miami and Orlando. Then it’s at Brooklyn and back home against Atlanta, Washington and Golden State.

Jayson Tatum remains out for the Celtics as he continues to rehab from the torn Achilles he suffered in the playoffs. Sam Hauser sprained his wrist against the Magic but is available for this game. For the 76ers, Paul George (knee), Johni Broome (ankle) and Dominick Barlow (elbow) are all listed as out. Joel Embiid was a late scratch with knee soreness. Andre Drummond will likely start in his place.

Probable Starting Matchups
PG: Derrick White vs Tyrese Maxey


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SG: Payton Pritchard vs VJ Edgecombe

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SF: Jaylen Brown vs Trendon Watford

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PF: Josh Minott vs Kelly Oubre, Jr

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C: Neemias Queta vs Andre Drummond

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Celtics Reserves
Anfernee Simons
Chris Boucher
Xavier Tillman
Jordan Walsh
Hugo Gonzalez
Luka Garza
Baylon Scheierman
Sam Hauser

2-Way Players
Ron Harper, Jr
Max Shulga
Amari Williams

Injuries/Out
Jayson Tatum (Achilles) out
Sam Hauser (wrist) available

Head Coach
Joe Mazzulla

76ers Reserves
Johni Broome
Justin Edwards
Eric Gordon
Quentin Grimes
Kyle Lowry
Igor Milicic, Jr

2-Way Players
Dominick Barlow
Hunter Sallis
Jabari Walker

Injuries/Out

Paul George (knee) out
Johni Broome (ankle) out
Dominick Barlow (elbow) out
Joel Embiid (knee) out

Head Coach

Nick Nurse

Key Matchups
Derrick White vs Tyrese Maxey

Maxey is averaging 33.2 points, 4.9 rebounds, 8.2 assists 1.0 block and 1.2 steals per game while shooting 47.0% from the field and 44.1% from beyond the arc. In the first 2 games against the Celtics, he averaged 33 points, 5 rebounds, 10 assists, 2 steals and 1.5 block while shooting 52.5% from the field and 61.1% from beyond the arc. He is quick and shoots the ball well and so the Celtics will have their hands full defending him but they must make it a priority to slow him down.

Payton Pritchard vs VJ Edgecombe
Edgecombe is one of the leaders for Rookie of the Year. He is averaging 16.3 points, 5.8 rebounds, 4.4 assists and 1.5 steals per game while shooting 42.7% from the field and 36.5% from beyond the arc. In the first 2 games against the Celtics, he averaged 25.5 points, 6 rebounds, and 4 assists while shooting 54.1% from the field and 41.2% from beyond the arc. The Celtics need to be ready for him and defend him better in this game.

Honorable Mention
Josh Minott vs Kelly Oubre, Jr

Oubre is averaging 18.6 points, 5.3 rebounds, 1.5 assists, 1.0 blocks and 1.1 steals. He is shooting 51.1% from the field and 38.3% from beyond the arc. Against the Celtics this season, he averaged 13.5 points, 6.5 rebounds, and 1.0 blocks while shooting 44.4% from the field and 38.5% from beyond the arc. The Celtics need to stay with him, especially on the perimeter.

Keys to the Game
Defense
– As always, defense is a key to winning this, and every, game. The Celtics were second in the preseason with a defensive rating of 100.2. They have slipped to 13th with a defensive rating of 113.8. The 76ers are 22nd with a defensive rating of 116.1. The Celtics must play tough lock down defense in this game if they want to beat the 76ers.

Rebound
– Rebounding may be the biggest key to winning right now since the Celtics lost their first 3 games largely because they weren’t able to rebound. The Celtics are 1-5 in games that they are out-rebounded. They simply have to fight harder to grab rebounds than their opponents. Much of rebounding is effort as evidenced by Payton Pritchard grabbing 10 rebounds against the Pistons and averaging almost 4 rebounds per game. Every Celtic has got to crash the boards and fight for every rebound.

Effort and Pace – I’ve already mentioned that the Celtics need to put out more effort on the boards but they have to play with more effort overall for all 4 quarters. In their 5 wins, the Celtics played harder and with more energy than their opponents. That has to be their identity this season. They have to play harder on defense and they have to rebound harder. They also need to play faster and run in order to get easier shots before the defense sets up. The Celtics are 29th with a pace of 97.00. The 76ers are 18th with a pace of 100.95.

Offensive Execution – The Celtics are 27th in the league, shooting just 32.7% from beyond the arc. It’s not just one Celtic who is struggling to hit their 3’s, it is almost everyone on the team. Pritchard and Simons appear to be breaking out of their slumps and White hit a big 3 at the end of Sunday’s game. But, if they struggle early in the game, they need to score in the midrange or in the paint and not continue to brick 3’s the entire game.

X-Factors
On the Road
– The Celtics will be on the road and facing a very hostile crowd. Philly fans hate the Celtics because they have pretty much owned them in recent years. They hate Jayson Tatum because the Celtics took him with Philly’s pick after the 76ers traded up to take Markelle Fultz. There will likely be a lot of boos and the Celtics need to play through them. They have to shake off the distractions of playing in their 3rd straight road game and stay focused on playing good basketball.

Officiating – Officiating is always an x-factor. Just ask Jaylen Brown if you don’t believe that. Every crew calls the game differently. Some call it tight and call every bit of contact while others allow more physical play. Some favor the home team while others call both sides evenly. The Celtics have to adjust to the way the refs are calling the game and not allow the no calls and bad calls to affect their focus on playing the game.

Source: https://www.celticsblog.com/boston-...-6-at-philadelphia-76ers-6-4-game-12-11-11-25
 
Celtics lose a heartbreaker in Philly, 102-100

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After a bad first half, the Celtics fought back in the third quarter but came up just short in Philadelphia, ultimately losing 102-100 to the 76ers. Jordan Walsh had a great game with 8 points, 7 rebounds, 2 steals and 2 blocks while Jaylen Brown had 24 points, 6 rebounds, and 5 assists and Derrick White had 18 points, 7 assists, and 5 rebounds.

The Celtics put out the same starting five they have put out for every game since the fourth game of the season with Payton Pritchard, Derrick White, Jaylen Brown, Josh Minott and Neemias Queta. For the 76ers, Joel Embiid did not play, along with Paul George who hasn’t played at all this season. As a result, Philadelphia started Tyrese Maxey, V.J. Edgecombe, Kelly Oubre Jr., Trenton Watford and Andre Drummond.

It was also the debut of the Celtics’ new City Edition jerseys.

Solid gold ⭐pic.twitter.com/3Q7n8Ndzi6

— Boston Celtics (@celtics) November 12, 2025

After a good start for the Celtics, Philadelphia rattled off 7 straight points to put them up 14-11, leading to a Joe Mazzulla timeout. Anfernee Simons and Sam Hauser were the first two Celtics off of the bench.

After one quarter, Philly led the Celtics 23-22. Simons led the team in scoring with 5 points off of the bench with Jaylen Brown was 0/5 from the field.

It was a tough first half of the 2nd quarter for the Celtics, they were outscored 15-7 during the first 5:34 of the quarter, capped off by a 9-0 Sixers run.

However, Jordan Walsh’s activity stood out in a big way in the first half. In the first half, he had 3 rebounds, 1 steal and 1 block — those are the little things the Celtics need from him right now. He needs to be active to stay on the floor and he has done that very well over the last few games. The shooting struggles remain however. He was 1-5 in the first half, but if he can figure that out, even just a little bit, he has a chance to become a real piece for the Celtics.

The Celtics trailed the Sixers 51-41 at the half with Simons, Brown and Luka Garza leading the team in scoring with 7 points while Andre Drummond led the game in scoring with 10 points to go along with 6 rebounds. Boston went 4/21 from three in the first half.

Brown finally started to hit some shots in the third quarter, he scored 14 points going 5/7 from two point range and 1/1 from three. Derrick White also chipped in 13 points.

Quinton Grimes ended the quarter with a half court buzzer beater.

Grimes to beat the buzzer! pic.twitter.com/I0nk0meKkv

— ALL NBA Podcast (@ALLCITY_NBA) November 12, 2025

However, that could not takeaway from what a great quarter it was for the Celtics. They outscored the 76ers 36-20, leading the game 77-71 at the end of three. Jaylen led the team with 21 points while White was the only other Celtic in double figures with 15.

The Celtics got off to a good start to the fourth but the Sixers reclaimed the lead with 4:40 to go in the game behind a flurry of Justin Edwards threes. Edwards hit his first 8 shots of the game, including 5 three pointers.

A V.J. Edgecombe three put Philly up 4 but after a pair of Sixers fouls, Derrick White hit a deep three to cut the lead back to one. Jaylen Brown stepped up to the line with a chance to take the lead but he went 1/2 and only tied the game.

Justin Edwards ended his perfect streak but offensive rebounding came back to bite the Celtics again and Kelly Oubre’s putback put the Sixers up 102-100 with 8.7 seconds left.

The Celtics had one more chance but Derrick White was stripped by Andre Drummond and had to force up a prayer. Neemias Queta got the offensive rebound but missed the tip in and the Sixers outlasted the Celtics 102-100. The Celtics shot 39% from the field and 34% from three while Philly shot 43% from the field and 39% from three.

The Celtics next game is Wednesday at home against the Memphis Grizzlies at 7:30 EST.

Source: https://www.celticsblog.com/celtics...celtics-lose-a-heartbreaker-in-philly-102-100
 
High IQ plays of Week 3

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We’re back! 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 5th to November 12th, but not including the Grizzlies game, are considered.

5. Picture perfect Ice

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This play might seem simple, but these are the types of TEAM defensive possessions that result in winning. White begins the play by shifting his body to the high side of Maxey so that he can’t get going to his right hand (and to the middle of the floor). This is what we call icing a ball screen. But what’s great is everyone else’s positioning on the play. Garza mirrors the basketball and gets in a low, athletic stance with his arms out. Simons pinches over onto the right block, thus taking away the pocket pass and forcing a hard skip pass. And let’s not forget about Brown, who’s simple yet effective one-foot stunt throws off Maxey just enough to have his shot blocked by the best shot-blocking guard in the league. This is what it looks like to effectively execute an ice screen coverage.

4. Fun offensive action = layup

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I absolutely love this offensive set that the Celtics have been running to start the season. As Jaylen Brown sets the screen for Simons at the top of the key, Jaylen’s defender gets ready to help on Anfernee’s initial drive. But what he doesn’t realize is that Brown isn’t rolling to the rim or popping for three like normal; he’s actually sprinting right off of a flare screen from Queta. As a result, Champagnie is multiple steps behind the play and can’t catch up to Brown, creating a significant advantage once he gets the rock swung to him. Queta thinks quickly and darts to the rim, getting himself an easy finish. Good, creative basketball with hard, decisive cuts. Pretty, pretty good stuff.

3. Heady peel switch

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To be fair, this play starts off with a dumb move—Walsh aimlessly jumping at a below-average three-point shooter’s pump fake—but he more than makes up for it with a textbook peel switch. As Jordan gets beaten off the dribble, Pritchard seamlessly notices and gets into good help position; and instead of sprinting back into the play, Walsh sprints straight to the shooter in the corner, knowing that’s where the ball handler thinks the open player will be. He turns a defensive disadvantage (getting beaten off the dribble) into a difficult offensive decision to navigate. There isn’t much more effective defensively than a well-executed peel switch. Well done, Jordan.

2. Sneaky steal

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Jose Alvarado gets all the love for his sneaky baseline steals off the opposing team’s defensive rebounds, but White deserves some shine too. He takes baseline crashing to a new level here; even when his crash is a little bit late and Paolo gets the easy rebound, Derrick doesn’t give up on the play. He knows Banchero doesn’t see him, but he still waits for him to put the ball on the floor before attacking him like a piranha from behind. He also swipes up—not down—which makes it significantly less likely that he’ll be called for a reach-in foul. Big time stuff from DWhite.

1. Special body control

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Yes, I know. I wrote about an eerily similar play last week from Pritchard — but this one was just too good to pass up. This possession, which showcases PP’s body control, patience, and feel, literally needs to be watched by every single small guard who has any hopes of playing hoops at the college or pro level. It needs to be put in the Louvre, to be frank. Pritchard gets Anthony Black (a very good defender, by the way) on his back and crosses over three (3!!!!!!) separate times as Black tries to back tap him for a steal. But this doesn’t make him lose his dribble or shift his focus. Payton still keeps his eyes on the rim and decisively attacks Carter for the and-one finish. This is just beyond special IQ, feel, and ball-handling. Wow.

Source: https://www.celticsblog.com/celtics-videos/124698/high-iq-plays-of-week-3
 
10 Takeaways from a complete Celtics win over Memphis

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First, our apologies for not getting out Ten Takeaways for the final two games of the road trip in Orlando and Philadelphia. We’ve got a “life first, blog second” motto here at CelticsBlog and so many of writers were busy over the holiday. We’ll try and not let that happen again.

And now, on to Ten Takeaways from the Celtics’ 131-95 homecoming romp over the Grizzlies.

Jordan Walsh, starter​


In just his third career start, the third year pro out of Arkansas didn’t disappoint. Walsh didn’t just start — he started with a defensive assignment on Jaren Jackson Jr.

A block & a bucket for Walsh 😌 pic.twitter.com/b9YvlqBDRr

— Boston Celtics (@celtics) November 13, 2025

In Orlando and Philadelphia, Walsh was a revelation defending Tyrese Maxey and making key offensive plays against the Magic, including hitting the game-clinching corner three. Against JJJ, he personally held Memphis’ star big man to 0-for-4 shooting and frustated him enough to force two offensive fouls.

So many of the Celtics wings have had their moments so far in this young season. First, it was Hugo Gonzalez. Then Josh Minott took the baton. And for the last three games, it’s been the culmination of two-plus seasons for Walsh to get his time to shine.

Jaylen Brown is mid and that’s peak​


Last week, CelticsBlog’s Azad Rozay wrote about JB’s dramatic shift in his shooting profile:

With more responsibilities, Brown’s offensive game now relies much more on jump shots. His usage rate went from 29% to 35% per Cleaning the Glass, the 6th-highest offensive load in the NBA this season. This new level of responsibility has had a direct impact on his shot profile.

Last season, JB’s long mid-range attempts represented 13% of his FGA — already a lot (88th percentile). But this season, he has taken the mid-range to a whole new level, with 29% of his shots coming from that zone. That’s more than Kevin Durant or Brandon Ingram. Across the entire NBA, only DeMar DeRozan has a bigger share of long mid-ranges, at 41% of his FGA.

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Against the Grizzlies, Brown was again an assassin in the mid-range. You could never criticize him for his size and strength from 18-feet and now, his handle and footwork have caught up. He was 5-for-8 from what’s usually considered a “bad shot” and finished with 19 points, 6 rebounds, and 6 assists in under 26 minutes.

Like butter 🧈 pic.twitter.com/EJ0eROAdXa

— Boston Celtics (@celtics) November 13, 2025

The awakening​


After posting two duds to close out the road trip, Payton Pritchard put together arguably his best game of the season with 24 points (5-of-10 from behind the arc), 6 rebounds, and 9 assists against Memphis for a +42. Not to be outdone, Derrick White chipped in with an efficient 22 points (6-of-11), 5 rebounds, 4 assists, 2 steals, and a block.

Over the last five games, Boston’s starting backcourt has hit 27-of-72 (37.5%) from 3. That’s not exactly lights out, but much better than their 24.1% clip in their first eight games.

Sim👀ns​


ChatGPT and StatsMuse couldn’t handle the query, but I’m guessing there are few times in his career than Anfernee Simons had more assists than points in a single game. Against Memphis, he hit just two shots, but racked up seven assists in just under 22 minutes of play. Few were of the spectacular type (except for a slippery pocket pass to a cutting Neemias Queta for an and-1). However, he seemed more aggressive with his drive which led to a few kick-outs to Luka Garza — yes, Luka Garza — and White. He dished out a season-high five dimes in Philly and then surpassed that number the following night. Emoji eyes.

Picture perfect​


Queta’s 6-for-6 night was already the third time this season that he’s gone perfect from the field (4-for-4 against the Jazz and 7-for-7 against the Wizards); on Opening Night against Joel Embiid and the 76ers, he missed on an alley-oop attempt from Pritchard. Most of his attempts are of that variety — he’s got magnetic hands and good hops that are shades of Robert Williams in his prime in Boston.

Anfernee Simons 🤝 Neemias Queta
pic.twitter.com/mRqSuh8bYZ

— Celtics Nation (@CelticsNationCP) November 13, 2025

He’s also shown Kevin McHalesque footwork in the post and attempted a few fadeaway jumpers and hook shots to add to his repertoire, too. Expanding his game will probably drop his gaudy 65% FG%, but that variety will make him more of a threat in the future.

Luka Garza is simultaneously making me forget and reminding me of Al Horford​


Maybe it’s the way the 26-year-old Garza runs like the 39-year-young Horford. Maybe it’s their catapult release on their threes. Maybe it’s just how hard they play. Here’s Mazzulla on Garza:

Joe Mazzulla on Luka Garza:

“He has a special gift to be able to play just harder than everybody else on the floor.”

(Q: @BobbyKrivitsky) https://t.co/eA7EPdNOlQ pic.twitter.com/GeQlvq48x8

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

Make sure to check out Noa Dalzell’s feature on LG and his father.

Pacemaker​


In our CelticsBlog Slack channel, we talked about pace and more specifically, how the Celtics rank 29th in the league at 96.69. To be clear, that’s 96.69 possessions per 48 minutes of regulation play. By comparison, the Miami Heat lead the NBA at 106.70, over ten possessions per game over Boston.

After preaching throughout training camp that the Celtics wanted to be one of the fastest teams this season, you would think that Joe Mazzulla would envy Erik Spoelstra’s frantic pace. But let’s be clear: pace doesn’t just mean turning the parquet into a 100-meter dash and getting up and down the court in transition just to generate more possessions. It’s more about churning teams through multiple actions in the half court and ultimately, wearing them out.

On a night when Boston set their season-high in assists (34), it’s plays like this that show you much Boston wants to put you in a blender:

Payton 🤝 Luka pic.twitter.com/WdzN67GICZ

— Boston Celtics (@celtics) November 13, 2025

Controlling the controllables​


Sure, it came against a banged up 4-8 Grizzlies team without Zach Edey and Brandon Clarke, but Boston dominated the glass, giving up just 15 offensive rebounds and won the second chance points margin 34 to 12. They coughed up the ball just ten times and they’re still leading the league in taking care of the ball at just 11.4 turnovers a game.

30,000 feet​


Zooming out after the blowout, the Celtics now have the 8th best net rating in the league (4.9). They’re again top-10 in offensive and defensive rating, but the only top-15 team with a sub-.500 record.

Rest and recovery starts early with Gino Time​

🚨 GINO TIME HAS RETURNED TO TD GARDEN ‼️ pic.twitter.com/JI0vs9lyrW

— Meghan Ottolini (@Meghan_Ottolini) November 13, 2025

At 6-7, the Celtics finally have their first stretch of multiple days rest of the season. They won’t play again until early Sunday night when they host the Los Angeles Clippers.

Source: https://www.celticsblog.com/articles/124719/10-takeaways-from-a-complete-celtics-win-over-memphis
 
Boston Celtics Daily Links 11/13/25

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Herald Luka Garza’s ‘inspired’ play for Celtics draws high praise from Joe Mazzulla

Haircut, then breakout: How Payton Pritchard got his mojo back vs. Memphis

Celtics’ season-best shooting paves way for rout of shorthanded Grizzlies

Celtics make big change to starting lineup for matchup vs. Grizzlies

Globe Payton Pritchard scores 24 points, Celtics roll past Grizzlies 131-95

Small mistakes have hounded the Celtics, but rout of Grizzlies shows what’s possible when they’re in control

Payton Pritchard, Derrick White get back on track to help Celtics rout Grizzlies

Celtics Green Comments from the Other Side – Grizzlies 11/12/25

CelticsBlog 10 Takeaways from a complete Celtics win over Memphis

A haircut may have helped turn Payton Pritchard’s season around

“It’s all part of the journey”: Derrick White patiently embraced his shooting slump — and finally broke out

Celtics set several season-highs blowing out Grizzlies

Celtics crush Grizzlies 131-95 with five players in double figures

CLNS Media How Jordan Walsh Became a Starter for Celtics Team That Rarely Played Him

Boston Dominates Memphis in Home Victory | Celtics vs Grizzlies Postgame Show

Celtics .com Pritchard, White Lead Celtics to Season-Best Rout of Grizzlies

Keys to the Game: Celtics 131, Grizzlies 95

Mass Live Grizzlies coach calls out team after Celtics dominant rout

Celtics surprise starter shows intriguing potential in Grizzlies win

Boston Celtics coach explains reserve big man’s ‘special gift’

Payton Pritchard makes honest admission following recent struggles

Payton Pritchard is the Celtics ‘Name to Know’ Player of the Game in Wednesday’s win over Grizzlies

4 takeaways as Celtics crush Grizzlies after unveiling new starting lineup

Boston Celtics promising wing gets 1st start after recent stellar play

NBC Sports Boston 13 for 13, Part 1: Assessing Celtics’ core four starters through 13 games

Celtics-Grizzlies recap: C’s bounce back and cruise to blowout win

NESN Stunning Statistic Emerges After Celtics Blowout Victory Vs. Grizzlies

Payton Pritchard Shines As Celtics Obliterate Grizzlies

Proposed Trade Lands $97 Million Rim-Runner With Celtics

No, The Celtics Should Not Target Domantas Sabonis Via Trade

Celtics Wire Jeff Teague says Celtics should trade for Mavs star Anthony Davis

Payton Pritchard likes what he sees from Jordan Walsh in recent Celtics games

Luka Garza on the Boston Celtics finding their shot from deep vs. the Memphis Grizzlies

Boston Celtics jersey history No. 43 – Derek Smith (1990)

Celtics legend Larry Bird weighs in on the NBA’s 3-point revolution

Celtics history: Gamble, Hamer, Stump born; Mariaschin, Ehlers debut; Duerod passes

Joe Mazzulla spoke highly of Luka Garza’s effort vs. Grizzlies

The Celtics earned a blowout win over the Grizzlies and some rest

The Athletic The Decision, the Bubble and the Process: Key NBA off-court moments of the 21st century

Boston Sports Journal Karalis: Process is important, but results against Memphis is nice reward for slumping Celtics

BSJ Game Report: Celtics 131, Grizzlies 95 – Boston hit shots, executes well, and earns an easy win

Hardwood Houdini Celtics might already have the perfect Anfernee Simons trade partner

Luka Garza credits his parents and self-awareness for his standout trait

Celtics’ breakthrough makes slow start to season even more confusing

4 instant reactions from Celtics’ dominant win over the Grizzlies

Celtics make bold starting lineup change before Wednesday’s game vs. Grizzlies

Chowder and Champions Celtics Offseason Signing Already Boston’s Biggest Disappointment

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

5 Things to LOVE💚 from Celtics Win Over Grizzlies | You Got Boston w/ Noa Dalzell

Luka Garza’s Goal is to Play HARDER Than Everyone | Postgame Interview

Derrick White on trying “Everything” to get out of Shooting Slump | Postgame Interview

Payton Pritchard said he was DISSAPOINTED in himself in last two games | Postgame Interview

Joe Mazzulla on Celtics 36 point BLOWOUT Win | Postgame Interview

Audacy The Celtics just need to be average to be good

Raptors Republic 905 continue historic start by steamrolling Celtics

Locked on Celtics From BAD to WORSE: Grizzlies NBA season spirals after being embarrassed by Celtics in Boston

Celtics DOMINATE Memphis as Derrick White and Payton Pritchard BREAK Out of Slump

Celtics Chronicle Buckets…Buckets Everywhere

The Sports Hub Impressive shooting leads Celtics to blowout win against Grizzlies

NBA/YouTube GRIZZLIES at CELTICS | FULL GAME HIGHLIGHTS | November 12, 2025

Clutch Points Shaq ‘fools’ on Celtics’ Jaylen Brown for hair dye faux pas

NBA .com Shaqtin’ A Fool: Jaylen Brown nabs top ‘spot’

Fan Recap Celtics Linked to Former Trade Target Amid Early Season Struggles

SI .com Celtics, Ja-less Grizzlies shuffle lineups ahead of second of back-to-back

Bleacher Report 1 Trade Every NBA Team Would Make If the Deadline Was Today

NBA Analysis Payton Pritchard called out for performances by former Celtics star, ‘I was wrong’

Sporting News Mavericks predicted to cut ties with Kyrie Irving via blockbuster three-team trade to Celtics

Source: https://www.celticsblog.com/boston-celtics-daily-links/124717/boston-celtics-daily-links-11-13-25
 
Are the Celtics good?

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Through thirteen games, the Boston Celtics are sitting at 6-7 and 11th in the Eastern Conference — nothing special which was too be expect when you lose your best player for most of the season and your top three centers from last season’s roster leave for nothing in return.

However, when you look under the hood, the Celtics may be better than their record leads us to believe.

The Celtics are 8th (4th in the Eastern Conference) in net rating for the season per NBA.com. Cleaning the Glass filters out ‘garbage time’ and they have the Celtics at 11th in net rating (6th in the East), at +4.1 points per 100 possessions, less than NBA.com but still the markings of a good basketball team.

Cleaning the Glass also tracks a teams expected wins and what the difference is between that number and how many wins you have. This is tracked based on net rating and how many games a team has played. The Celtics are dead last in the NBA in that category at -2.1 expected wins. The Rockets are 29th, they are at -1.1, a whole game better than Boston is.

The Celtics net rating is indicative of a team that is on pace to win 51 games this season; that is higher than the 7-4 76ers and the 8-4 Lakers (though that Lakers number is skewed a bit due to their blowout loss in Oklahoma City on Wednesday night).

The Celtics also have not shot the three-pointer well this season. Since coming to the Celtics, Derrick White has been a 38% three-point shooter, but he is at just 29% this season. Payton Pritchard who is a career 39% three-point shooter is at just 28% from beyond the arc this season. Sam Hauser who is a career 44% three-point shooter is shooting 32% this season.

Water is likely to find its level with those guys because they are too good of shooters to keep shooting like this. As a result, there is an argument that the Celtics could be even better than the numbers suggest.

Why is the Celtics net rating high but their record mediocre? They just have not done a good job at closing game.

The Celtics are one of two teams to have four 20+ point wins this season, Boston is 4-1 in games decided by 20+ points. The early indication is that they blow teams out and don’t get blown out themselves.

That makes sense because, no matter how many people want to deny it, they are an extremely well-coached team. Joe Mazzulla has put their players in positions to be successful throughout the year. That, coupled with a championship DNA, and you have a team that isn’t going to get blown out very often.

They have had some brutal losses this season, many of which can be traced back to their inability to grab a late game rebound here and there. The loss at Philadelphia on Tuesday was decided because Jaylen Brown was out of position on a rebound and Kelly Oubre Jr. tipped it in. Their loss to the Jazz on November 3rd was decided on a Jusuf Nurkic offensive rebound when he went over Neemias Queta to grab it and put it back in. In the Celtics October 26th loss in Detroit, the Pistons had five offensive rebounds in the last 3 minutes of the game that led to eight Pistons points in a game Boston lost by 6.

That’s three games decided by the Celtics inability to get defensive rebounds. Instead of a potential 9-4, Boston is 6-7. Sure, 9-4 is not promised but they could be 8-5, which is where Cleaning the Glass says they should be.

So, are the Celtics good? I do think the Celtics have the makings a good basketball team.

They have gotten contributions from players we did not expect to play as well as they have. Neemias Queta is 7th individual net rating for players who have played 20+ minutes per game. Jordan Walsh, Josh Minott and Hugo Gonzalez all look like they can be real contributors next year. Jaylen Brown mid-range game has carried the Celtics offense at times this season.

Source: https://www.celticsblog.com/article...lla-derrick-white-brad-stevens-nba-net-rating
 
Boston Celtics Daily Links 11/14/25

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Herald Ex-Celtics guard applying lessons from Brad Stevens, Joe Mazzulla in new G League job

Celtics notebook: How NBA rule change has altered Boston’s game prep

Globe How to watch Boston sports in 2025: The best streaming services for Patriots, Red Sox, Bruins, Celtics fans

Small mistakes have hounded the Celtics, but rout of Grizzlies shows what’s possible when they’re in control

CelticsBlog Are the Celtics good?

CLNS Media Ja Morant: the Poster Boy for NBA Haters

NBC Sports Boston 13 for 13, Part 2: Assessing key Celtics role players through 13 games

NESN Jordan Walsh Is Second In NBA In This Stat, Ahead Of Nikola Jokic

Maine Celtics Coach Calls Big Man A ‘Monster’ With ‘High Upside’

Celtics Enjoying Much-Needed Break From Grueling Schedule

Celtics’ Jaylen Brown Leads NBA In This Unique Statistic

Mass Live Former Celtics forward suffers injury, tough Pacers season continues

Celtics Mailbag: Will Boston regret making intriguing trade at NBA Draft?

Celtics Wire Phil Pressey (like Joe Mazzulla) uses film as a tool for coaching

Celtics jersey history No. 43 – Lorenzo Williams (1993)

Today in Boston Celtics history: White debuts; Sanders fired, Cowens hired; Wesley born

Havlicek Stole the Pod: Larry Bird, Boston ghosts, Celtics grail stories y Expensive Basketball

How Jordan Walsh has been supercharging the Celtics defense

Hardwood Houdini Celtics regret in passing on Ryan Kalkbrenner grows as Neemias Queta needs help

Payton Pritchard opens up about the mental funk he had to shake out of

Derrick White finally found missing piece that could change everything

What do the Celtics need to happen in NBA Cup Week 3 to have a chance to advance?

Phil Pressey’s foundation will be why he flourishes as Maine Celtics’ head coach

Warriors finally learn why Celtics felt fine letting Al Horford go

Chowder and Champions Key Celtics’ Statistic Hints Early Boston Concerns Are Overblown

CLNS Media/YouTube Sam Hauser: Josh Minott is FUNNIEST New Celtics Player | Practice Interview

Joe Mazzulla Asks Reporter About His Haircut | Celtics Practice

Who Should Be Celtics 5th Starter? | Garden Report

Barstool Sports After Their Biggest Blowout Win Of The Season, The Boston Celtics Remain An Extremely Hilarious Team

SI .com Celtics Face Crucial $2.4 Million Decision On Rising Forward This Summer

Celtics’ Payton Pritchard Reveals How He Handled Shooting Slump

M Sports Jordan Walsh stuns Celtics fans with breakout November: “Just staying ready”

Hoops Rumors Atlantic Notes: McCain, Barlow, Walsh, Minott, Ingram

NESN/YouTube Did the Celtics Prove Anything by Beating The Grizzlies?

Are the Celtics Regretting These Offseason Moves?

Hoops Wire NBA Notes: Pelicans, Zion Williamson, Celtics, Jordan Walsh, Bulls

Clutch Points Celtics’ Joe Mazzulla finds silver lining to shaky first 13 games

Marcus Smart drops Celtics’ Jayson Tatum admission amid his injury recovery

Sportskeeda “This is so evil”: NBA Fans Lose It After Sixers Mascot Brutally Mocks Jaylen Brown’s Fake Hairline

Heavy Celtics Floated in New Trade Idea for Impact Center

Marcus Smart Reveals Conversation With Celtics’ Jayson Tatum

Proposed Trade Flips Celtics’ Sam Hauser For Frontcourt Help

Lakers Reportedly Discussed Anthony Davis Trade with Hated Rival Before Luka Doncic Deal

The Ringer OK, So What Are the Boston Celtics?

AJ Dybantsa Isn’t Your Typical Boston Story

Hoops Rumors Atlantic Notes: McCain, Barlow, Walsh, Minott, Ingram

Fan Recap Celtics Eye Perfect Simons Trade That Solves Two Big Problems

Bleacher Report Grading Every NBA Team’s Starting Lineup So Far

Hardwood Heroics “He’s the Ultimate Competitor” – Boston Celtics Starter Draws Praise for Setting the Tone in Win Vs. Memphis Grizzlies

Locked on Celtics Boston Celtics ‘CANDY’ win over Memphis | Need MORE Neemias Queta?

Source: https://www.celticsblog.com/boston-celtics-daily-links/124787/boston-celtics-daily-links-11-14-25
 
The Maine Celtics could have their next great prospect

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BOSTONRon Harper Jr. didn’t know he’d be spending the week with the Boston Celtics.

But, the 25-year-old two-way Celtics player hopped on a commercial flight on Sunday to meet the Celtics in Orlando amid their three-game road trip.

It wasn’t smooth sailing; the same flight delays that have plagued the country meant Harper missed the Celtics’ win over the Magic; he ultimately arrived in Orlando after the game ended.

The schedule didn’t let up from there; he ended up traveling with the team to Philadelphia for a Tuesday game against the 76ers, and then back to Boston for a game against the Grizzlies on Wednesday.

Then, on Thursday, he attended a fundraiser for Jaylen Brown’s 7uice Foundation, along with several other Celtics teammates.

“It’s just life as a two-way,” Harper told CelticsBlog.

He’s intimately familiar with the grind.

After going undrafted in 2022, the Rutgers star signed a two-way contract with the Toronto Raptors. Then, in December of 2023, he was waived in the midst of his second two-way contract with the Raptors after suffering a torn labrum in his shoulder.

Season-ending surgery set him back both mentally and physically, and after months of rehab, he ultimately joined the Celtics for Summer League and training camp last fall. Harper spent the first few months of last season with the Maine Celtics and then signed a two-way contract with the Detroit Pistons, his third such NBA contract.

But the Pistons didn’t re-sign him, and in August, Harper returned to the Celtics for a second training camp. After a training camp battle between multiple Exhibit 10 players, the 6’5 guard signed the Celtics’ third two-way contract.

The life of a two-way player​


Last week, Harper didn’t know what his week would hold. He didn’t have any insight that a roadtrip was in the cards, nor did he know how long he’d be staying in Boston two nights upon his return.

“You don’t really get much notice, you feel me?” he said. “But every time you get called up, you’re grateful for the opportunity.”

On Wednesday, that opportunity resulted in a 4-minute, 6-point stint with the Celtics, in which he sank both of his three-point attempts in front of a raucous TD Garden crowd.

Back-to-back threes for Ron Harper Jr. pic.twitter.com/6mzAEOrrj3

— Danielle Hobeika (@DanielleHobeika) November 13, 2025

Before the game, he knew that real minutes were possible, though they only ended up coming with the game out of reach.

“Joe don’t care if you haven’t played in 20 games,” Harper said. “If you go out there, he wants you to produce, and he wants you to compete.”

That stint with the Celtics came after Harper excelled in his first two games in Maine, averaging 28.5 points, 3.5 rebounds, 2.5 assists, and 1.5 steals. In Maine’s second game, he caught fire down the stretch, sinking four threes in the final minutes.

Harper’s shotmaking ability could be what translates most in the NBA; in his senior season, he averaged 15.8 points and shot 39.8% from beyond the arc. Last year in the G-League, he shot 37% from three.

“He’s been great,” Joe Mazzulla said last month. “His professionalism has been great. His basketball IQ has really improved. He’s shooting the ball really well.”

Maine Celtics head coach Phil Pressey — who doubles as a member of the Celtics’ player development staff — is often in Harper’s ear, providing encouragement and motivation.

“Ron Harper goes from playing in the G-League one night, getting 28-30 points, playing 40 minutes, to going to the NBA to not playing at all or playing very little,” Pressey said. “In the G-League, his usage rate is extremely high. Then, he goes to the NBA, and it drops dramatically. You have to be adaptable. So, that’s something that we talk about on a daily basis.”

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Part of what makes life easier is that Maine and Boston work in tandem; Harper might learn a new play in the G-League and then have to run it with the Celtics in Boston.

Mazzulla and Pressey work closely together, making the back-and-forth transitions far more seamless.

“The play calls are usually the same, the coverage, terminology, stuff like that,” Harper said. “So, it’s easier for me to get a grasp on it quicker.”

When Harper is in Boston, Mazzulla views him as any other player on the roster.

“He worked hard this preseason and his training camp, and so depending upon the night, he could give us a chance to impact winning just as much as anybody can,” Mazzulla said.

Could Ron Harper be the Celtics’ next development success story?


Plenty of Celtics have their roots in Maine. Jordan Walsh and Neemias Queta — who currently have the best net rating of any two-man lineup in the NBA (minimum 30 mins) — both played together in the G-League two years ago.

Then, there are stories like Luke Kornet’s; Kornet revived his career with the Maine Celtics and is now a critical piece of an excellent San Antonio Spurs team after spending the last few years as a backup center for the Celtics.

Sam Hauser, now playing on a 4-year, $45 million contract, also got his start in Portland after going undrafted in 2021. He credits his time in Maine for his eventual NBA success.

“They put the time in to invest in you, and as long as you reciprocate their investment, and you put in the work every day, they’re gonna give you a chance, and you just have to take advantage of it,” Hauser said. “We have a few guys who’ve shown that you can work your way up, and the G League’s not a bad thing by any means. Honestly, it’s a great thing to go down there and get game reps, game speed, game reads, and all that.”

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Upon returning to Boston this week, Harper Jr. reviewed film from his G-League game with his Celtics player development coaches. He’s been working hard on getting better at handling ball pressure: “Playing with the ball in my hands, making the right decision 8 out of 10 times — that’s the goal.”

Earlier Friday morning, he headed up to Portland for the Maine Celtics’ first home game of the season. Sometimes, he makes the drive back and forth. Othertimes, he uses a car service. Harper has a place in Boston and a hotel room in Portland, which makes the uncertain lifestyle more convenient.

Harper tallied 15 points and 12 rebounds in Maine’s Friday night game, a 116-92 win over the Long Island Nets. He’s continued to show promise throughout as one of the team’s most veteran players.

Now, he’s just waiting for a breakthrough moment into the league, the same one so many before him have experienced.

“He’s right there, right?” Pressey said. “He’s knocking on the door.”

Source: https://www.celticsblog.com/nba-pla...arper-jr-celtics-two-way-player-maine-celtics
 
Boston Celtics Daily Links 11/15/25

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Globe Brown around town: Celtics ‘fashion fits’ from the first few weeks of the 2025-26 season

Mavericks make necessary move to fire GM Nico Harrison, which clears the path to better future

Joe Mazzulla finds fulfillment facing the challenges of his fourth season with Celtics

CelticsBlog Jaylen Brown’s special event showcased everything great about Celtics

The Maine Celtics could have their next great prospect

Celtics Film Round-Up: Week 4

CLNS Media AJ Dybantsa Talks Boston Return and Fans Wanting Him on Celtics

Celtics .com Phil Pressey Makes Celtics History as he Leads Maine into Home Opener

NESN Lakers Reportedly Shopped Anthony Davis To Celtics Before Luka Doncic Trade

Mass Live Celtics star guiding new starting center in emerging role

Former Celtics guard calls out Grizzlies after trade deadline deal

Celtics Wire Did the Celtics try to trade for Mavericks big man Anthony Davis?

Sam Hauser is a believer in the G League as a path to the NBA

Boston Celtics two way guard Max Shulga sanctioned by FIBA

Boston Celtics jersey history No. 43 – Tony Harris (1994-96)

Celtics history: Acres, Pavlovic born; Sykes debut; Noszka, Russell pass

Derrick White on getting through shooting slumps

Should the Celtics trade for Ja Morant?

First as player, now as coach: Phil Pressey on growth of the G League

For Celtics (and NBA) fans, Shea Serrano’s ‘Expensive Basketball’ is a must-read

Jayson Tatum doing fine, flexing leadership skills with Boston Celtics during rehab

Boston Sports Journal Celtics practice notebook: What’s slowing down Jaylen Brown, and will Hugo Gonzalez play in Portland?

Picks ‘n Pops: Bizarre stats, how Queta levels up, and a picture that stings

Hardwood Houdini Forget the box score—this is where the Celtics are actually winning

Celtics’ Xavier Tillman found real leadership in an unexpected place

Sam Hauser shares what he leans on when struggles arrive

Sam Hauser brings perspective to teammates’ recent promotion

Hawks quickly making Kristaps Porzingis realization Celtics have known

Joe Mazzulla details the growth that led to Phil Pressey’s ascent

CLNS Media/YouTube Hugo Gonzalez Prepared to Play in Boston OR Maine | Celtics Practice

Jaylen Brown: Celtics Need to Take “Whatever Shot We Can Get” | Practice Interview

Joe Mazzulla Gives Jayson Tatum Injury Update: “He’s Doing Well” | Celtics Practice

AJ Dybantsa EXCLUSIVE: Potentially Playing for Hometown Celtics

Xavier Tillman Talks Jayson Tatum Rehab and Celtics Playbook Initiative

Neemias Queta READY to Play 40 Minutes if Necessary | Celtics Practice

Clutch Points Watch Celtics’ Joe Mazzulla ask reporter about haircut in middle of interview

SI .com Celtics Almost Traded with Lakers for Anthony Davis Last Season

Celtics HC Joe Mazzulla Gets Honest About Rotation

Mock Trade Lands Nets Center Nic Claxton with Celtics

Heavy Celtics’ Jaylen Brown Quietly Leads NBA in a Stat Even SGA Can’t Touch

Celtics Secretly Held Early Trade Talks for 10-Time NBA All-Star: Report

Celtics Linked to Rising Prospect After Eye-Opening Comments

M Sports Joe Mazzulla’s bold rotation shake-up stuns Celtics fans: “Complacency breeds entitlement”

Bleacher Report Could Kristaps Porzingis Be Traded By Hawks? Rival NBA Execs Weigh In on Possibility

Basketball Network Bill Simmons breaks down why Detroit’s young core suddenly looks like the toughest team in the East

Nets Daily Danny Wolf flirts with double-double but Long Island collapses vs. Maine, 116-92

WMTW Maine Celtics win home opener

Essentially Sports Jaylen Brown Confirms Jayson Tatum’s New Role in Celtics Amid Injury Recovery

CBS Sports Celtics set to face Clippers with adjusted rotation

Mavericks make necessary move to fire GM Nico Harrison, which clears the path to better future

Joe Mazzulla finds fulfillment facing the challenges of his fourth season with Celtics

CelticsBlog Jaylen Brown’s special event showcased everything great about Celtics

The Maine Celtics could have their next great prospect

Celtics Film Round-Up: Week 4

CLNS Media AJ Dybantsa Talks Boston Return and Fans Wanting Him on Celtics

Celtics .com Phil Pressey Makes Celtics History as he Leads Maine into Home Opener

NESN Lakers Reportedly Shopped Anthony Davis To Celtics Before Luka Doncic Trade

Mass Live Celtics star guiding new starting center in emerging role

Former Celtics guard calls out Grizzlies after trade deadline deal

Celtics Wire Did the Celtics try to trade for Mavericks big man Anthony Davis?

Sam Hauser is a believer in the G League as a path to the NBA

Boston Celtics two way guard Max Shulga sanctioned by FIBA

Boston Celtics jersey history No. 43 – Tony Harris (1994-96)

Celtics history: Acres, Pavlovic born; Sykes debut; Noszka, Russell pass

Derrick White on getting through shooting slumps

Should the Celtics trade for Ja Morant?

First as player, now as coach: Phil Pressey on growth of the G League

For Celtics (and NBA) fans, Shea Serrano’s ‘Expensive Basketball’ is a must-read

Jayson Tatum doing fine, flexing leadership skills with Boston Celtics during rehab

Boston Sports Journal Celtics practice notebook: What’s slowing down Jaylen Brown, and will Hugo Gonzalez play in Portland?

Picks ‘n Pops: Bizarre stats, how Queta levels up, and a picture that stings

Hardwood Houdini Forget the box score—this is where the Celtics are actually winning

Celtics’ Xavier Tillman found real leadership in an unexpected place

Sam Hauser shares what he leans on when struggles arrive

Sam Hauser brings perspective to teammates’ recent promotion

Hawks quickly making Kristaps Porzingis realization Celtics have known

Joe Mazzulla details the growth that led to Phil Pressey’s ascent

CLNS Media/YouTube Hugo Gonzalez Prepared to Play in Boston OR Maine | Celtics Practice

Jaylen Brown: Celtics Need to Take “Whatever Shot We Can Get” | Practice Interview

Joe Mazzulla Gives Jayson Tatum Injury Update: “He’s Doing Well” | Celtics Practice

AJ Dybantsa EXCLUSIVE: Potentially Playing for Hometown Celtics

Xavier Tillman Talks Jayson Tatum Rehab and Celtics Playbook Initiative

Neemias Queta READY to Play 40 Minutes if Necessary | Celtics Practice

Clutch Points Watch Celtics’ Joe Mazzulla ask reporter about haircut in middle of interview

SI .com Celtics Almost Traded with Lakers for Anthony Davis Last Season

Celtics HC Joe Mazzulla Gets Honest About Rotation

Mock Trade Lands Nets Center Nic Claxton with Celtics

Heavy Celtics’ Jaylen Brown Quietly Leads NBA in a Stat Even SGA Can’t Touch

Celtics Secretly Held Early Trade Talks for 10-Time NBA All-Star: Report

Celtics Linked to Rising Prospect After Eye-Opening Comments

M Sports Joe Mazzulla’s bold rotation shake-up stuns Celtics fans: “Complacency breeds entitlement”

Bleacher Report Could Kristaps Porzingis Be Traded By Hawks? Rival NBA Execs Weigh In on Possibility

Basketball Network Bill Simmons breaks down why Detroit’s young core suddenly looks like the toughest team in the East

Nets Daily Danny Wolf flirts with double-double but Long Island collapses vs. Maine, 116-92

WMTW Maine Celtics win home opener

Essentially Sports Jaylen Brown Confirms Jayson Tatum’s New Role in Celtics Amid Injury Recovery

CBS Sports Celtics set to face Clippers with adjusted rotation

Source: https://www.celticsblog.com/boston-celtics-daily-links/124834/boston-celtics-daily-links-11-15-25
 
The Celtics’ gap year gives them options going forward

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Six months ago, Jayson Tatum ruptured his Achilles tendon and the Boston Celtics were eliminated from the playoffs. That triggered a series of events that led to the departures of beloved players like Jrue Holiday, Al Horford, Luke Kornet, and Kristaps Porzingis. It also led to a resetting of the Celtics cap sheet.

By now you know the story, but here’s a reminder of the numbers. By shedding salaries through trades and free agency, the Celtics went from a projected $20M over the 2nd apron to currently standing just $4M above the 1st apron. And as it stands, they’ve saved themselves something in the range of $238M in luxury tax payments.

Perhaps more importantly (at least to fans), by being under the 2nd apron, the team avoids some the harsher penalties under the new CBA. Teams over the 2nd apron have additional trade restrictions and repeat offenders can see their future draft picks frozen and/or moved to the end of the first round.

So now what?

We haven’t even made it 20 games into the season and the unofficial start of “trade season” doesn’t really start until December 15 (when most free agents signed in the offseason are eligible to be traded). But it is never too early to think about what’s coming next. Especially when it seems like the whole season is just one long reset for the future.

Brad Stevens hasn’t just saved the new owners a boatload of cash. He’s set the team up with the flexibility to make moves for the future. Even if Tatum had not been injured, the team was widely rumored to have made some cost cutting moves this past summer. They didn’t want to be locked into a roster with aging support players with increasing penalties from a CBA designed to tear down teams just like this. Instead, the team has options and assets.

Inventory

As we approach trade season, let’s review some assets that the team holds.

Draft Picks:

  • 2026 – Celtics own their own pick.
  • 2027 – Celtics own their own pick.
  • 2028 – The San Antonio Spurs have the right to swap 1st round picks with the Celtics in the 2028 draft (as part of the Derrick White trade).
  • 2029 – The Celtics also owe a 2029 first round pick to the Portland Trail Blazers as part of the deal that brought Jrue Holiday to Boston.
  • 2030 – Celtics own their own pick.
  • 2031 – Celtics own their own pick.
  • 2032 – This pick is frozen at the moment so it cannot be traded for at least the next three years. To un-freeze it the Celtics will need to stay under the second apron in at least three of the next four seasons.

Trade Exceptions:

  • $4 million exception expiring in February 2026 (from the Jaden Springer trade)
  • $8.2 million exception expiring in August 2026 (from the Georges Niang trade)
  • $22.5 million exception expiring in July 2026 (from the Kristaps Porzingis trade)

And of course there’s every player on the current roster, including Anfernee Simons and his $27.7M expiring salary.

Different Paths Forward

The whole idea behind this reset is to prepare the team to be better in the future (both near and long term). There are an infinite number of possible paths forward, but I think it is reasonable to rule out a few. With Jayson Tatum expected to recover fully (or as much as one could expect), I don’t see the team tearing things completely down to the studs. With Jaylen Brown playing so well, I tend to believe that he’ll be part of the plan going forward as well (at least for now). Other than that, the crystal ball gets a lot more foggy.

One possible path is a more concerted effort to tank the current year. Injuries to any of the starters could create a natural soft tank scenario, but if everyone is healthy the team might be too good for that plan. Would the team consider trading Derrick White for a haul of future assets that they could use to build a long term roster around Jayson and Jaylen?

On the other end of the spectrum would be an all-in move for this year. The team could move Simons and/or use their trade exceptions to add established talent on deals that last beyond this season. Conceivably they could do so without exceeding the 2nd apron. They would still be over the 1st apron and subject to increasing repeater tax penalties, but under the right circumstances it could very well be worth it.

Perhaps the more realistic path is somewhere in between, where the team makes minimal moves this season and reevaluates where it stands in the summer (theoretically having seen the progress Jayson Tatum makes on the court). Many expect the team to make some kind of cost cutting move to dip under the 1st apron, if only because they are so close they might as well.

Sometimes the best path is to be flexible enough to pursue the best options that present themselves to you over time. Who knows what player might become available in the coming months that might not have seemed reasonable a few months ago? Who knows how league trends will shift over the next several months? The Celtics seem to be stuck in the middle ground between tanking and competing, which traditionally is not a great place to be for the long term. However, in a gap year or soft reset (or whatever you want to call it), it might just be where this team needs to be to hit the ground running next year.

Source: https://www.celticsblog.com/articles/124814/the-celtics-gap-year-gives-them-options-going-forward
 
Celtics survives late scare, beat Clippers 121-118

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The Boston Celtics made it two straight wins with a home victory over the Los Angeles Clippers. Jaylen Brown led the way with 33 points and 12 rebounds, while Payton Pritchard added 30. The win moved Boston to 7-7 on the season. The Celtics led by as many as 24, but the Clippers kept clawing back and made it close late. Boston has struggled in tight games this season, but it held on despite James Harden’s clutch-time heroics.

Boston opened fast, taking a 9-2 lead after a Jaylen Brown mid-range jumper forced Clippers coach Tyronn Lue to call a timeout with just under nine minutes left in the quarter.

Los Angeles missed its first five shots, while Boston started 5-for-10. James Harden ended the Clippers’ drought with a three-pointer.

Payton Pritchard and Derrick White knocked down back-to-back threes to push the lead to 21-9 with 5:35 remaining, prompting another timeout. White had seven points, five rebounds and two assists during the early surge.

Derrick White with the shooter's bounce!

His triple caps a 21-9 Boston run to open the game… pic.twitter.com/7iaokLqzSP

— NBA (@NBA) November 16, 2025

Brown stayed aggressive, blocking Harden on one end before going coast to coast for a layup that made it 29-13.

JB said DON'T 🚫 pic.twitter.com/1G93TIlR1w

— Boston Celtics (@celtics) November 16, 2025

Pritchard continued his strong start, scoring all 12 of his first-quarter points from deep on 4-for-6 shooting.

The Clippers closed the quarter on an 8-0 run, capped by a corner 3 from Kobe Sanders, cutting the Celtics’ lead to 37-30 heading into the second.

The Clippers’ run carried into the second quarter, fueled in part by a 21-5 bench-points deficit for Boston through the first 15 minutes. A banked three-pointer by Nicolas Batum cut the Celtics’ lead to 40-35, capping a 13-2 stretch.

Boston answered with a run of its own, pushing the margin back to double digits at 47-37 after a Jordan Walsh steal and dunk. The Celtics increased their defensive pressure and converted turnovers into transition buckets.

Jordan Walsh just had two steals on James Harden, a minute apart.

He has at least 2 steals in 4 of the last six games.

— Justin Turpin (@JustinmTurpin) November 16, 2025

A scary sight for Clippers fans as Derrick Jones Jr.’s knee was hit by Jaylen Brown as Brown fell on the floor and had to be helped back to the locker room.

It continued to be a game of runs. Each time Los Angeles trimmed the deficit, Boston countered but couldn’t land the knockout blow it delivered against Memphis.

With 15.9 seconds left in the half, Neemias Queta tipped in a miss to extend Boston’s lead to 63-49. On the other end, Walsh blocked Harden’s 3-point attempt to close the half.

Brown led Boston with 16 points at the break. White added 15, and Pritchard had 14. John Collins paced the Clippers with eight.

Boston opened the second half on an 8-0 run. Payton Pritchard hit a pair of 3-pointers before Jordan Walsh tipped in a Derrick White miss, forcing a Clippers timeout.

Look at Jordan Walsh go!!! pic.twitter.com/XnVW4j0KTb

— Bobby Manning (@RealBobManning) November 16, 2025

The timeout did little to slow Pritchard, who knocked down his seventh 3-pointer on 10 attempts. He later drilled his eighth, pushing the Celtics’ lead to 79-55 with just under nine minutes left in the third.

Walsh’s defense continued to stand out. Midway through the quarter, he had held James Harden to 12 points on 1-for-9 shooting, with nine of those points coming at the free-throw line.

Rearview contest on Harden

Looks like DWhite. He might be JWalsh now. https://t.co/22vOgX3M5j pic.twitter.com/C9n8cwt4Xs

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

Boston maintained an 81-64 lead midway through the frame, but despite being up by as many as 24, the Clippers surged again. A 23-7 run cut the deficit to 86-78 after a Bogdan Bogdanović 3-pointer, prompting a Joe Mazzulla timeout with 4:07 remaining.

Harden later buried a trademark step-back three with 2.4 seconds left, trimming Boston’s lead to 90-85 entering the fourth.

Brown steadied Boston early in the fourth, knocking down a 3-pointer to push the lead to 95-87 and force a timeout.

Out of the break, Brown picked off a pass and finished through contact, converting the three-point play to make it 98-87.

Despite another strong showing on the glass and several timely buckets, Luka Garza (13 points) fouled out early in the quarter.

Brown continued to cook in the midrange, repeatedly finding his spots to keep the Clippers at bay.

Jaylen omg. Sweet little combo pic.twitter.com/1tWcNIPn1k

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

With 5:16 left, Harden drove and attempted to dunk over Derrick White, but White—one of the league’s best shot-blocking guards—turned it away. The block led to a Neemias Queta and-one on the other end, though he missed the free throw for a 108-96 lead.

Potential game winning sequence by Queta. pic.twitter.com/IKO0806hlN

— Bobby Manning (@RealBobManning) November 16, 2025

Harden answered by drilling a straightaway three to cut it to 108-103 with 3:36 left, then drew a questionable foul on Walsh in the lane, sinking both free throws to make it 108-105. The free throws capped a 9-0 run.

Queta ended the surge with a layup off a White feed in the pick-and-roll.

White later buried a clutch three to extend the lead to 115-105 with 1:29 remaining.

A few possessions later, Harden drew another foul on Walsh on a three-point attempt and hit all three free throws, trimming the lead to 115-112 with 21.8 seconds left.

Against pressure and a double-team, Pritchard found a cutting Brown for a dunk. Harden responded again with a step-back three over White—his 29th point of the second half—to make it 117-115.

White was fouled on the next trip and hit both to restore a two-possession lead. Harden then drilled yet another three with two seconds remaining to cut it to one.

Pritchard made two free throws with 1.6 seconds left. Harden got a clean look at the buzzer, but finally missed, and the Celtics escaped with the win.

Source: https://www.celticsblog.com/celtics...ics-survives-late-scare-beat-clippers-121-118
 
Clippers-Celtics Ten Takeaways

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With five of six games at TD Garden and a couple of practice days at the Auerbach Center, Boston has an opportunity to work out the kinks before their schedule ramps back up. It’s admittedly small sample size theater, but the Celtics have been “good” to start off the year. They’re one of just three teams in the league with a top-8 offensive and defensive rating. Rebounding has been an issue, but they’ve kept their turnovers down and have weathered below average shooting nights controlling pace and winning possessions one at a time. After a 121-118 win over the visiting Clippers, everything seems to be coming together.

Queta’s floater​


The league average in the restricted area FG’s is 60.8%; Neemias Queta hits 73.4%. A lot of those looks are alley-oops and putbacks after offensive rebounds because Neemy has great hands. However, he’s also developed a short roll floater that’s become an important part of his offense and a nice release valve around the rim.

Neemias Queta 1st quarter highlights pic.twitter.com/yEzuB9cvep

— Danielle Hobeika (@DanielleHobeika) November 16, 2025

Payton’s place​


In Wednesday’s win against the Grizzlies, Pritchard hit five threes in the blowout. He credited a fresh haircut for the breakout game and now, with three days off and more home cooking, he continued his hot shooting streaking, hitting 8-of-13 from behind the arc.

Hot in a hurry 🔥🔥🔥🔥 pic.twitter.com/BsFRul2ETE

— Boston Celtics (@celtics) November 16, 2025

Transition​


Before the game, Boston Sports Journal’s John Karalis asked Joe Mazzulla about the Celtics’ 30th rank in pace (possessions per 48 minutes). He remarked that that might be a product of defensive rebounding, generating turnovers, and racing out for transition buckets, but he didn’t seem too concerned.

Against Los Angeles, it appeared that Boston may have made it a priority to run in the Sunday matinee. They outscore the older, on-Pacific-time Clippers 22-9 in fastbreak points.

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Baylor Scheierman vs. Hugo Gonzalez​


Baylor Scheierman collected three DNP’s on the road trip in Orlando and Philadelphia, but he’s played non-garbage time minutes so far in the homestand against Memphis on Wednesday and LA on Sunday. As effectively the 10th man in the rotation, Mazzulla has elected to either go with his rookie or sophomore wing and they’ve both shown out in that role.

Curiously, I wonder what the thought process is behind who plays on any given night. Is it how they do in prior practice? Does he only use Gonzalez when the game needs a little energy? Is Baylor the better decision maker?

Walsh’s D​


In his second start, Walsh’s individual defense has become an impactful part of Boston’s approach against the opposing team’s best player. He pestered Paolo Banchero and Tyrese Maxey off the bench and as a starter, his lockdown D has made a difference against big man Jaren Jackson Jr. and yesterday, point guard grifter James Harden.

Harden’s 37 points were a product of getting hot late in the game. Before that, the Clippers’ offensive engine stalled out, shooting 4-of-14 through three quarters in large part to Walsh’s defense. Here’s LA’s head coach Tyrone Lue:

Defensive breakdown​


After beating the Clippers, the Celtics’ defensive rating went up a tad to 113.2 points per 100 possessions. A strong first half at 108.9 crumbled to 140 in the final two quarters, but Boston won anyway. They’re rebounding the ball a lot better over the last five games. LA grabbed just 10 offensive rebounds on Sunday and had just a two-point edge over Boston in second chance points.

However, fouls were still an issue though…

…Free throws​


In the third quarter, Boston was in the penalty with over seven minutes remaining. That led to twelve Clippers free throws in the frame, fueling a 36-27 run to make it a five-point game to start the fourth quarter.

After the Thunder modeled an overaggressive, handsy style last season and hung a banner, teams tried to duplicate that defense in the preseason, but the league has cracked down on fouling. The Celtics are still guilty of committing too many fouls that can lead to too many free throws.

Conversely, the Celtics are last in the NBA in free throw attempts by a large margin. They average just 18.3 trips to the charity strip a night and on a night when Harden went to the line 15 times, that disparity can eat into the little margin that you already have.

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Lovable Luka​


Garza collected six fouls in just under fifteen minutes, but was effective in his time on the parquet. Yes, he was a -14 in his playing time, but he filled the box score with 13 points and four rebounds, making 5-of-6 including two threes and grabbing four rebounds.

Brown bag it​


After the Clippers cut a 24-point lead to just three early in the fourth quarter, Jaylen Brown scored 13 of his 33 points and grabbed seven rebounds, playing all twelve minutes in the final frame. After the game, Brown said, “my team counts on me to play a little bit better. Tonight, I really didn’t play well. I’m looking forward to the next two games and kinda bounce back.” Good luck, Nets.

Despite scoring 33 points, Jaylen Brown was unhappy with his performance:

“My team counts on me to play a little bit better. Tonight, I really didn’t play that well.”
@CLNSMedia pic.twitter.com/IDeYNEP8RY

— Celtics on CLNS (@CelticsCLNS) November 17, 2025

.500​


Coming into the game, the Celtics were 2-7 in clutch opportunities. Make that 3-7 and 7-7 on the year. They’re finally back even in wins and losses with a home and home with the Brooklyn Nets on Tuesday and Friday night.

Source: https://www.celticsblog.com/articles/124921/clippers-celtics-ten-takeaways
 
Boston Celtics Daily Links 11/17/25

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Herald Celtics notebook: Jordan Walsh impresses teammates in ‘great’ game vs. James Harden

Jaylen Brown, Celtics hold off James Harden charge to beat Clippers

Globe Jaylen Brown, Celtics hold off James Harden, Clippers late to claim rare clutch win: 8 takeaways

Celtics’ Jordan Walsh get first-hand look at the James Harden Experience

Jaylen Brown, Payton Pritchard help Celtics survive late comeback bid in win over Clippers

Celtics Green Comments from the Other Side – Clippers 11/16/25

CelticsBlog The Celtics season is turning — and there are 2 reasons why

Ten Takeaways from a Celtics win overcoming the James Harden Experience

Boston is curing their athleticism deficiency

“Not a great game from me”: Jaylen Brown shoulders blame for blemish in win vs. Clippers

Celtics survives late scare, beat Clippers 121-118

ESPN Tiers for all 30 NBA teams: Real contenders to play-in dreamers

Jaylen Brown scores 33, Payton Pritchard 30 as Celtics hold off Clippers 121-118

CLNS Media Boston Survives Late Scare From Los Angeles Clippers | Celtics vs Clippers Postgame Show

Celtics .com Jordan Walsh Earns Praise from Clippers for High-Pressure Defense on Harden

Keys to the Game: Celtics 121, Clippers 118

NBC Sports Boston Neemias Queta is a lean, mean screening machine for Celtics

Celtics-Clippers recap: Brown, Pritchard lead the way to clutch win

NESN NBA Writer Says Celtics Have Been ‘Unluckiest’ Team In League

Former Celtics Fan-Favorite Makes Appearance At Practice

Celtics’ Jaylen Brown Makes Important Point About His Career

Jaylen Brown Sends ‘Optimistic’ Message After Celtics Defeat Clippers

Celtics Insider Drops Strong Neemias Queta Message After Win Vs. Clippers

Former MVP Passes Celtics Legends On NBA Career Scoring List

Celtics’ Joe Mazzulla Drops Truth Bomb On Kid Reporter

Mass Live Former Celtics guard has injury, highlights importance for new team

Celtics guard reveals blunt adjustment that ended shooting slump

Celtics star has surprising reaction to his 33-point game in Clippers win

Boston Celtics get valuable reps in early area of weakness in Clippers win

Rising Celtics wing did ‘great job’ in challenging role in Clippers win

Payton Pritchard is the Celtics ‘Name to Know’ Player of the Game in Sunday‘s win over Clippers

4 takeaways as Celtics fend off Clippers in important clutch game win

Celtics Wire Celtics, Shamrock Foundation, New Balance host new Playbook Initiative

Despite close win vs. Clippers, Mazzulla wants Celtics to play the same

Why the Boston Celtics should steer clear of any Anthony Davis trade talk

Does Payton Pritchard hold the keys for the Boston Celtics this season?

Why the Celtics should avoid any talk of a DeMar DeRozan trade

What are the biggest questions surrounding the Celtics right now?

Celtics jersey history No. 43 – Chris Carr (2000-01)

Celtics history: Joe Mullaney born; Allan Ray, Michael Smith debut

According to Joe Mazzulla, all Jaylen Brown cares about is winning

Jaylen Brown and the Celtics curbed a late rally from the Clippers

Should the Celtics play backup guard Anfernee Simons more?

The Athletic NBA Power Rankings: Cade Cunningham, Pistons motor into an elite tier

NBA Rewind: Let’s revisit that incredible Wemby-Draymond showdown (and staredown)

Jordan Walsh’s defensive education continues as Celtics escape James Harden, Clippers

Boston Sports Journal Karalis: The Celtics keep getting themselves in sticky situations, but finding a way out this time matters

BSJ Game Report: Celtics 121, Clippers 118 – Celtics lose big lead, survive Harden’s late heroics

Hardwood Houdini Celtics fans owe Joe Mazzulla a massive apology based on latest developments

Harden gave Celtics a terrifying reminder they can’t afford to ignore

Celtics just failed their easiest job, and Clippers almost made them pay

Celtics’ path to filling a crucial role has become obvious

CLNS Media/YouTube LIVE Garden Report: Celtics vs Clippers Postgame Show on CLNS Media

Are Celtics better than We gave them credit for?

Biggest Takeaway from Celtics Big Win vs Clippers | You Got Boston w/ Noa Dalzell

James Harden Reacts to Jordan Walsh’s DEFENSE | Celtics vs Clippers

Derrick White on Jayson Tatum’s role on the sidelines: “He’s just annoying me” | Postgame Interview

Payton Pritchard on getting his Ankles Broken by James Harden: “He made me touch earth” | Interview

Joe Mazzulla on Jordan Walsh: “I’m never gonna console him”

Jaylen Brown Wasn’t Satisfied with his performance | Postgame Interview

NBA/YouTube Harden (37 PTS) & Brown (33 PTS) Were SENSATIONAL In Boston! | November 15, 2025

NBA Analysis Jaylen Brown claims Boston Celtics star has shown him a ‘great sign’ amid talk of G-League demotion

Essentially Sports Jayson Tatum’s Family Member Shares Recovery Update Amid Impact on Celtics From Sidelines

LA Times Clippers’ rally falls short in road loss to the Celtics

NBA .com Duel: Jaylen Brown and James Harden take Celtics-Clippers down to the wire

Power Rankings, Week 5: Pistons, Warriors take step forward in Top 10

Celtics Chronicle No More Six Seven…

Audacy This is the Jordan Walsh the Celtics need

The Sports Rush Derrick White’s Candid Admission On Jayson Tatum’s Constant Sideline Presence

SI .com Celtics Free Agent Signing Took 12,000 More Practice Shots Than Any Other NBA Player Last Year

TalkBasket Joe Mazzulla details Celtics’ late-game execution in win over Clippers

Heavy Joe Mazzulla Gives Extremely Blunt Answer To Kids Day Question

Jordan Walsh Finds His Niche With Celtics in Win Over Clippers

Celtics’ Payton Pritchard Makes Hilarious Comment On James Harden

Locked on Celtics Boston Celtics SURVIVE James Harden Scare, HOLD On in Wild Clippers Thriller

The Ringer The Celtics Get Back to .500, With Evan Valenti

Dunking with Wolves Jordan Walsh is quietly starting to fulfill his Jaden McDaniels prophecy

Rip City Project Celtics are paying $27 million to learn what Blazers already knew

Source: https://www.celticsblog.com/boston-celtics-daily-links/124950/boston-celtics-daily-links-11-17-25
 
4 Maine Celtics standouts through the first 5 games of the season

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The Maine Celtics are 5 games into the season, and several players have already stood out in the early days. The Celtics G-League affiliate team dropped their first three games of the season — all road games — but followed that up with back-to-back wins at home against the Long Island Nets to improve to 2-3 on the year.

Maine’s three two-way players — center Amari Williams, guard/forward Ron Harper Jr, and point guard Max Shulga — have all shown some promising flashes in the early days.

Here’s who has stood out through five games:

Amari Williams: The Celtics drafted Amari Williams with the 46th overall pick in June, and so far, the 23-year-old big man has demonstrated exactly what it is about his game they liked. Through 5 games, Williams is averaging 14.6 points, 8.8 rebounds (3 offensive), 4 assists, and 2.2 blocks.

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The former Kentucky center has had a few standout performances so far and earned the praise of head coach Phil Pressey: “He’s a monster. He’s a beast. I think he has a high upside. He just has to continue to get better, continue to improve on his offensive and defensive IQ, and that just comes with film study.”

Ron Harper Jr: Ron Harper Jr has been the star for the Maine Celtics so far, and he’s also the player who appears to be the closest to being a real NBA player. Harper Jr. is on his fourth two-way contract and has already appeared in two games with the Boston Celtics, and joined the Celtics on their Orlando/Philadelphia road trip last week.

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Through four games with the Maine Celtics, he’s averaged 25.8 points, 6 rebounds, 3 assists, and 1.3 steals. Harper Jr has the best plus-minus on the roster (Maine’s outscoring opponents by 8 points per game with him on the floor), and he’s been the engine of their offense in the early days. The former Rutgers star will look to become more efficient; he’s shooting 43.2% from the field and 31.8% from three so far this season.

His coaches believe an NBA opportunity is around the corner: “He’s right there, right?” Pressey said. “He’s knocking on the door.”

Max Shulga: Max Shulga was drafted with the 57th overall pick and now serves as Maine’s starting point guard, a role that JD Davison held for the past three seasons. Shulga struggled a bit in the early days, but through 5 games, he’s averaging 12.4 points, 7.6 assists, and 5.6 rebounds.

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There have been some early-season turnover woes (he’s averaging 3.6 turnovers per game) and efficiency woes (36.2% from the field, 25% from three), but Shulga has also showcased the playmaking flashes that helped get him drafted.

“He’s done a phenomenal job of running the show,” Pressey said. “He’s coming in from VCU, and he’s a guy who can play both on-ball and off-ball, but I’ve put the ball in his hands, allowed him to grow through his mistakes. Being able to run an NBA offense is not easy. It’s a lot of play calls — defensively, offensively — you’re seeing the best defenders, especially in the G League, on every team. But for him, he’s learned so much. He’s grown so much since day one, since the day he was drafted.”

Kendall Brown: Brown is currently Maine’s second-leading scorer, averaging 16.2 points on 49.2% from the field and 35.7% from three, alongside 5.2 rebounds and a team-high 2.2 steals. The former Baylor star spent Summer League and training camp with the Celtics, and thus far has been one of Maine’s most efficient sources of offense.

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Brown is not currently on a two-way contract, though he’s previously signed two-way contracts with the Indiana Pacers and Brooklyn Nets. It’ll be interesting to see if another team scoops him up, just as the Detroit Pistons signed Wendell Moore Jr. to a two-way contract a couple of weeks ago after a strong start to the season with the Maine Celtics.

The Maine Celtics’ next game is at the Portland Expo on Friday, November 21, at 7pm against the Delaware Blue Coats. They’ll look to improve to 3-3 on the season.

Source: https://www.celticsblog.com/article...-williams-max-shulga-ron-harper-kendall-brown
 
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