Close Menu
CLNS Media
  • Home
  • NBA
  • NFL
  • MLB
  • NHL
  • WNBA
  • Betting
  • NBA History
  • Podcasts
    • podcast
      • The Big 3 NBA Podcast
      • Bruins Beat
      • Bob Ryan and Jeff Goodman
      • Cedric Maxwell Podcast
      • Celtics Beat
    • podcast
      • Celtics Postgame Live
      • First to the Floor
      • The Garden Report
      • Greg Bedard’s Patriots Podcast
      • Patriots Beat
    • podcast
      • Pucks with Haggs
      • Patriots Postgame Show
      • Pats Interference
      • Poke the Bear
      • Patriots Daily
    • podcast
      • All 32 NFL Podcast
      • Still Poddable
      • ITM Podcast
      • You Got Boston w/ Noa Dalzell
      • View All Podcasts
  • About
    • About CLNS
    • Our Sponsors
    • Talent
    • Job Opportunities
    • Join Our Network
    • Advertise With Us
  • Merch

Subscribe to Updates

Get the latest creative news from FooBar about art, design and business.

What's Hot

A.J. Brown is Patriots Best Wide Receiver Since Randy Moss

06/02/2026

Should Celtics Trade for Trey Murphy? | Still Poddable

06/02/2026

AJ Brown Makes Patriots AFC Favorites | All 32 NFL Podcast

06/02/2026
Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram YouTube TikTok
Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram YouTube TikTok Discord
CLNS Media
Subscribe
  • Home
  • NBA
  • NFL
  • MLB
  • NHL
  • WNBA
  • Betting
  • NBA History
  • Podcasts
    • podcast
      • The Big 3 NBA Podcast
      • Bruins Beat
      • Bob Ryan and Jeff Goodman
      • Cedric Maxwell Podcast
      • Celtics Beat
    • podcast
      • Celtics Postgame Live
      • First to the Floor
      • The Garden Report
      • Greg Bedard’s Patriots Podcast
      • Patriots Beat
    • podcast
      • Pucks with Haggs
      • Patriots Postgame Show
      • Pats Interference
      • Poke the Bear
      • Patriots Daily
    • podcast
      • All 32 NFL Podcast
      • Still Poddable
      • ITM Podcast
      • You Got Boston w/ Noa Dalzell
      • View All Podcasts
  • About
    • About CLNS
    • Our Sponsors
    • Talent
    • Job Opportunities
    • Join Our Network
    • Advertise With Us
  • Merch
CLNS Media
Home » Kristaps Porzingis, Tatum and Brown Seeking Balance for Celtics
Home Featured Banner

Kristaps Porzingis, Tatum and Brown Seeking Balance for Celtics

Kristaps Porzingis, Jaylen Brown and Jayson Tatum all need touches in a Celtics offense that hasn't been as fluid and automatic this year.
Bobby ManningBy Bobby Manning01/31/20255 Mins Read
Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn WhatsApp Reddit Email
Nov 13, 2023; Boston, Massachusetts, USA; Boston Celtics forward Jayson Tatum (0), center Kristaps Porzingis (8) and guard Jaylen Brown (7) react after a play against th eNew York Knicks in the second quarter at TD Garden. Mandatory Credit: David Butler II-USA TODAY Sports
Share
Facebook Twitter Email

BOSTON — The Bulls double-teamed Jayson Tatum on nearly every possession on Wednesday. That left Kristaps Porziņģis popping, trailing or otherwise open to shoot three after three. On a night where he finished 8-for-14, wrapping up a month where he’s shooting over 50% from three, it looked like the formula that should always drive Boston’s offense.

Just have Porziņģis take and make everything.

“Honestly, today I didn’t feel perfect,” he said after scoring a season high 34 points. “Before the game, my energy was not crazy, but sometimes you have good games like that … tonight was a game where I was gonna get the shots. It was a matter of whether I was gonna make them or not, and they were going in.”

Instead, it’s been a make-or-miss season for the Celtics — even for Porziņģis when he first returned. Despite a shot profile that Joe Mazzulla approves, the Celtics have witnessed their worst results this month with a 9-6 record. Tatum, shooting 42.4% this month, and Jaylen Brown (42.5% FG) swapped rotation spots hoping for better results.

Following a season where targeting mismatches and urgent selflessness made a new-look team instantly flow, 2024-25 has at times looked like what you would’ve expected last year: a struggle to figure out where and when shots will come from with such a talented roster.

Porziņģis’ return exacerbated that challenge. It’s easy to forget he wasn’t a significant part of the playoff picture last off-season or the opening month of this regular season after surgery.

“It’s not so much about playing with (Porziņģis),” Mazzulla said. “It’s how people are defending him, how people treat him, so the adjustment is how people impact him, because he has the ability to play inside and out. So it’s not so much that we gotta get used to playing with him, and that’s for everybody. We gotta get used to playing with guys depending on how they’re defending and attacking us.”

Houston went even further to take Tatum out of Monday’s loss, throwing crowds around him that held him scoreless in a half for the first time since 2021-22. Mazzulla responded by playing Tatum the entire second half, which helped him score 15 points in the third quarter. As Mazzulla noted previously, it’s not about getting one player going. Their matchup-based attack allows the team to naturally focus on getting the ball to the best spot and leaves the coaches without the responsibility of dictating shot totals.

That can often leave one of the stars out of the action, especially when the offense slows. Boston ranks 29th in pace this month and it shows. That leaves less possessions and a smaller pie to share. When all their starters take the floor together, they can devolve into setting up the matchup then watching one player go to work. The Celtics rank third in offense this month and third in season-long isolation efficiency, but it’s worth wondering what impact the nightly disparity in opportunity has on the energy level for those not involved.

“When the ball’s moving, I think everybody’s getting shots, everybody’s getting good looks. And that’s when we’re at our best,” Sam Hauser said earlier this month. “Because everyone can contribute in different ways to this team. When the ball’s moving, everyone able to showcase what they bring to the table.”

For all the talk about rotations, shot totals and the dynamic between Brown and Tatum, they could both benefit from more activity between each other when they both share the floor.

Their average passes between each other per game floated back above even this month, matching last year’s mark, but prior to the west coast trip, that dipped to 7.4 through the first nine January games. During that stretch, they fell to last in team passes made each night, rising to 28th since.

In eight games since the Celtics switched their rotations, Brown averaged 6.6 points in the first quarter while shooting 56.4%. Tatum’s down to 4.6 on 36.4% FG after averaging 8.3 points on 43.3% shooting in those situations with a full stint. A lack of stoppage left him out of the game for nearly the entire second quarter on Wednesday.

It’s a tough balance for Mazzulla as stats increasingly show this season that more Tatum usage equates to more wins. The equal opportunity formula worked last season. They won a championship with Tatum managing extra pressure from defenses throughout the playoffs. So it’s understandable why they don’t want to deviate due to a month of poorer shooting.

Having Porziņģis positioned between Brown and Tatum’s minutes as an easy target should help. But it doesn’t totally solve the ball movement and shot distribution problems we’ve watched the team have at times.

It’s a new year, and while individual players should be able to persevere through slower workload nights to allow for winning, that hasn’t totally been the case this season.

“To me, it’s more about finding two-on-ones,” Mazzulla said. “When they’re in the blitz, I think our spacing got a little distorted (on Monday) because we were cutting at the wrong time. One time, we hit a seam pass and Luke missed Neemy. So it’s really just reading the two-on-one. It’s actually easier to see the two-on-one on the blitz. You have to just maintain your spacing and make the right pass versus that and execute … whether it’s a shot or dribble drive … it’s easier to come against that than versus switching … with the guys that we have, they’re doing it.”

Share. Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn WhatsApp Reddit Email
Bobby Manning
  • Website
  • X (Twitter)
  • Instagram
  • LinkedIn

Boston Celtics beat reporter for CLNS Media and host of the Garden Report Celtics Post Game Show. NBA national columnist for Boston Sports Journal. Contributor to SB Nation's CelticsBlog. Host of the Dome Theory Sports and Culture Podcast on CLNS. Syracuse University 2020.

Related Posts

Should Celtics Trade for Trey Murphy? | Still Poddable

06/02/2026

BREAKING: A.J. Brown Traded to Patriots | Patriots Daily

06/01/2026

What the Celtics Can Learn from NBA Finals and Other Offseason Notes

06/01/2026

Fixing the Celtics, Jaylen Brown Trade Rumors, and NBA Flopping | The Garden Report

05/27/2026

Patriots Open OTA 1: Up-and-Down Day for Drake Maye, Top Offense

05/27/2026

Does Joe Mazzulla’s Coach of the Year or Playoff Loss Matter More? | Celtics Daily

05/27/2026

Comments are closed.

Follow Us
Facebook-f Twitter Instagram Youtube
Featured Videos
Featured

Should Celtics Trade for Trey Murphy? | Still Poddable

By CLNS Media06/02/2026

Jam Packard and Brian Robb give some opening thoughts on a Spurs-Knicks Finals, reflect on…

AJ Brown Makes Patriots AFC Favorites | All 32 NFL Podcast

06/02/2026

Super Bowl or bust? Patriots trade for A.J. Brown | Pats Chat

06/01/2026

Patriots Trade for A.J. Brown | Patriots Beat

06/01/2026
Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram YouTube TikTok Discord
  • Home
  • NBA
  • NFL
  • MLB
  • NHL
  • View All Podcasts
  • About
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms of Use

2026 North Station Media. Website Design by J&R Marketing


At North Station Media, we don’t just celebrate diversity, we live it. North Station Media is an equal opportunity employer that commits itself everyday creating the most inclusive environment for all its employees and hiring the best and most qualified individuals. We do not discriminate on the basis of race, color, religion, marital status, age, national origin, ancestry, physical or mental disability, medical condition, pregnancy, genetic information, gender, sexual orientation, gender identity or expression, veteran status, or any other status protected under federal, state, or local law.

Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.