Jaylen Brown should be proud. He should be praised for having his best season ever with the Celts. He deserves credit for leading a team that outperformed all pre-season expectations. He deserves to be considered for league MVP and All-NBA. So why is he being criticized by Stephen Smith and others for saying this past year was his ‘favorite season’? The answer: he committed a classic Kinsley gaffe by telling the truth. He wasn’t supposed to say or even hint he enjoyed the spotlight without Jayson Tatum. He wasn’t supposed to say he enjoyed being the team leader. He wasn’t supposed to distantly suggest, as many others have, that there might be chemistry problems when he and Tatum are on the court together. He blurted out truths. … And it’s truths that suggest another truth: that, yes, maybe it’s time to break up the Brown-Tatum duo. … A Brown trade for Giannis Antetokounmpo? I’d take it in a second. For that matter, I’d be open to trading Tatum for the right price. But that still leaves us with the stubborn Joe ‘Process’ Mazzulla problem.
Update — 5.10.26 – From Perk, via the Globe:
I like Queta but I don’t think he’s a starter. They need to go find that All-Star-caliber big. If I’m the Celtics, do I break up JB and JT? No. But if a Giannis Antetokounmpo becomes available, I might have to think about it. Or if Anthony Davis is feeling some type of way as a Washington Wizard and you could package something up and bring him to Boston.
Re yet another proven Celts problem, there’s this from Gary Washburn in the same piece:
Of the top 12 teams in 3-point attempts this season, only five reached the playoffs and just two, the Knicks and Cavaliers, are still playing. The three teams that shot more 3-pointers than the Celtics during the regular season were the Warriors, Hornets, and Trail Blazers. Only Portland reached the playoffs.
Will someone in the organization point this out to Joe M?


