logo
Jaylen Brown's knee injury another unknown to Boston Celtics offseason

Jaylen Brown's knee injury another unknown to Boston Celtics offseason

Yahoo18 hours ago

Jaylen Brown alluded to some of the injury struggles he endured throughout the season and playoffs, but he declined to get into any specifics. After the Celtics lost to the Knicks in the second round of the playoffs, the extent of Brown's knee injury was revealed as he played through a partially-torn meniscus.
Those who have watched Brown, the 2024 NBA Finals MVP, at his best know that he didn't look 100% throughout the Celtics' playoff run. The burst and explosiveness weren't there as he managed the knee injury for weeks before the end of the season. At this point, Brown revealed to CelticsBlog's Noa Dalzell in a recent interview that surgery is still a possibility, though that's still up in the air.
Advertisement
'l got a lot of doctors I gotta get evaluated with — see the potential for surgery versus no surgery, wait to speak to the organization,' Brown told Dalzell. 'For now, it's just rest and recovery. I'm taking a step back from a long season. Mentally, it was a lot of stuff going on.'
Brown's knee injury is just another unknown when it comes to an important Celtics offseason. The front office must formulate a plan for the organization's future. The payroll is expensive, so the C's will need to shed salary. Jayson Tatum's ruptured Achilles tendon is the main injury fans will keep an eye on as the star embarks on a long rehab process. Add Brown's knee on top of all that and how he'll look to get healthy.
While Brown put together a career year in 2023-24, injuries slowed him down significantly this past season. When healthy, Brown leaned into his athleticism and two-way play. He got to the paint consistently, setting the tone physically, all while guarding the opposing team's best player on defense. But he couldn't lift the Celtics consistently like that down the stretch due to the knee injury.
The Celtics' future remains in limbo as it's unclear who on the roster will remain at the start of training camp in a few months. But, for now, Brown is Boston's top guy. With Tatum sidelined, Brown is set to lead the team for the foreseeable future. To do so, he will need to be healthy as he looks to capitalize on another prime year of his career.
Advertisement
'The reality is we have a ton of good players,' Boston president Brad Stevens said last week. 'That said, Jaylen and Jayson have gotten the majority of attention because of how good they are. And I have full faith that any game that you have those guys on the court, or one of those guys on the court, you have a great shot. And so I have full faith in Jaylen.'
More Celtics content
Read the original article on MassLive.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Kyle Lowry says he is ‘kinda' Canadian during NBA Finals watch party
Kyle Lowry says he is ‘kinda' Canadian during NBA Finals watch party

Hamilton Spectator

time43 minutes ago

  • Hamilton Spectator

Kyle Lowry says he is ‘kinda' Canadian during NBA Finals watch party

It's been five seasons since Kyle Lowry wore a Raptors jersey, but he's still repping Canada. Lowry spoke about 'kinda' being a Canadian citizen, the country's NBA players and Pascal Siakam during a WhatsApp watch party of Game Four of the NBA Finals on Friday. 'Wait Canada a legitimate country,' the point guard wrote, adding 'we got 4 players in the finals,' referencing Canadians Shai Gilgeous-Alexander, Luguentz Dort, Andrew Nembhard, and Bennedict Mathurin that play for the Oklahoma City Thunder and Indiana Pacers He then clarified his use of 'we' when referring to Canada writing 'I'm not a full citizen but I'm kinda like 1.' The GROAT Kyle Lowry is a Canadian at heart. 😭❤️ 'We got 4 players in the Finals playing.' Give him a permanent citizenship right now, @MarkJCarney . 🤧 😂 [via. @WhatsApp ] The watch party was a public WhatsApp group chat with former NBA players Kevin Love and Channing Frye. Fans could tune in for their live reaction to Friday's battle that saw the Thunder squeak past the Pacers in a 111-104 win to tie the series at two games apiece. Lowry also spoke about his former Raptors running-mate and current Pacer Pascal Siakam, saying that he 'got to be a star within 3 years.' 'He worked his ass off,' Lowry wrote. The six time all-star played 35 games for the Philadelphia 76ers this season under former Raptors head coach Nick Nurse. Retirement rumours have followed the 39-year-old all season after a disastrous, 13th place finish for his club. Lowry ranks second all-time in games, minutes played and points for Toronto.

Magic reportedly acquire Desmond Bane: Fantasy impact
Magic reportedly acquire Desmond Bane: Fantasy impact

Yahoo

timean hour ago

  • Yahoo

Magic reportedly acquire Desmond Bane: Fantasy impact

While the Indiana Pacers and Oklahoma City Thunder are still competing in the NBA Finals, the rest of the NBA is focused on the future. For the Memphis Grizzlies and Orlando Magic, that meant making a significant trade on Sunday, according to ESPN's Shams Charania. Headed to Orlando is shooting guard Desmond Bane, and the Magic gave up a lot to acquire his services. Here's a look at how the trade impacts fantasy basketball in 2025-26. Orlando receives: Desmond Bane Advertisement While his scoring average decreased this season, Bane's availability improved after being unable to hit 60 games in either of the prior two campaigns. In 69 appearances, he averaged 19.2 points, 6.1 rebounds, 5.3 assists, 1.2 steals and 2.4 three-pointers in 32.0 minutes. Shooting 48.4 percent from the field, 39.2 percent from three and 89.4 percent from the foul line, Bane was a third-round player in eight- and nine-cat formats. Heading to a team that's in dire need of perimeter shooting may raise his fantasy ceiling, even with Paolo Banchero and Franz Wagner due to have the basketball in their hands quite often. Bane entered last season with a Yahoo! ADP of 44; he may go a bit earlier in standard league drafts. Having a shooter of Bane's caliber in the lineup should improve the spacing for Wagner and Banchero, with the former averaging a career-high 4.7 assists per game this season. Banchero has been a better option for points leagues than category leagues for much of his NBA career, but he did provide top-100 value in eight-cat formats in 2024-25. Also worth watching from a fantasy standpoint will be Jalen Suggs, who was a sixth-round player before going down with a season-ending quad injury in early March. Playing alongside Bane should also benefit Suggs, but he's only exceeded 55 games once in his first four seasons. Memphis receives: Kentavious Caldwell-Pope Advertisement Cole Anthony 2025 first-round pick 2026 first-round pick via Phoenix 2028 first-round pick 2030 first-round pick 2029 first-round pick swap (lightly protected) The Grizzlies' decision to part ways with Bane nets the franchise a significant haul in terms of draft capital; are they done, or will some of those picks be used to add a star to the lineup? The 2025 pick gets Memphis back into the first round after sending their pick (18th overall) to Washington as part of the Marcus Smart trade consummated at the February deadline. As for the players Memphis has acquired, Caldwell-Pope appears well-positioned to slot into the spot left vacant by Bane. KCP struggled in Orlando this season, averaging 8.7 points, 2.2 rebounds, 1.8 assists, 1.3 steals and 1.5 three-pointers in 77 appearances. While solid defensively, Caldwell-Pope's scoring average was his lowest since his rookie season (2013-14). Also, his 34.2 percent mark from beyond the arc was KCP's lowest since 2015-16. He would finish the regular season outside the top-150 in eight- and nine-cat formats. The change of scenery may be a positive for Caldwell-Pope, but he should once again be no better than a late-round option in standard leagues. Advertisement Anthony may also benefit from a move, as the 2024-25 season was his least productive in five years with the Magic. Appearing in 67 games, he averaged 9.4 points, 3.0 rebounds, 2.9 assists, 0.9 steals and 1.1 three-pointers in 18.4 minutes, shooting 42.4 percent from the field and 82.3 percent from the foul line. Due to Suggs' injury-related absences, Anthony made 22 starts, but he was not productive enough to become a reliable streamer in most leagues. Anthony finished the season ranked well outside the top-200 in eight- and nine-cat formats, and that does not appear likely to change in Memphis. In addition to having Ja Morant, the Grizzlies' confidence in Scotty Pippen Jr. increased throughout the 2024-25 season. By the end of his time in Orlando, Anthony was not a lock for rotation minutes, and he may be headed for a similar situation with the Grizzlies.

2025 NBA Finals: Pacers Beat Themselves, Have To Own Late-Game Failure
2025 NBA Finals: Pacers Beat Themselves, Have To Own Late-Game Failure

Forbes

timean hour ago

  • Forbes

2025 NBA Finals: Pacers Beat Themselves, Have To Own Late-Game Failure

Indiana, UNITED STATES - June 13: Tyrese Haliburton #0 of the Indiana Pacers reacts at the end of ... More the game against Oklahoma City Thunder during Game four of the 2025 NBA Finals on June 13, 2025 at Gainbridge Fieldhouse in Indianapolis, Indiana. (Photo by Mostafa Bassim/Anadolu via Getty Images) INDIANAPOLIS — Tyrese Haliburton sat at his locker, largely motionless. His team had just fumbled a win on the biggest stage, and his eyes wandered. Haliburton's Indiana Pacers led by four points with only three minutes to go in Game 4 of the 2025 NBA Finals. Yet those three minutes, among the biggest in Pacers history, were a disaster. The Oklahoma City Thunder outscored the Pacers 12-1 in that stretch to take the battle and even the best-of-seven set at 2-2. 'It's frustrating,' Haliburton said when asked to describe his emotions. They were obvious. 'You want to win that game, especially a game at home where, like you said, you have the lead late. But that's just not how the cookie crumbled today.' The Pacers are in the Finals for just the second time in franchise history. They've never won more than two games on this stage, yet they had an opportunity to do so on Friday night. That chance slipped through their fingers. Haliburton was staring at a blank white board, then down in his lap as he iced his legs postgame. He hid his emotions well, yet terribly at the same time. The series is far from over, but the weight of the emotion was clear. It's going to be hard for him, and his team, to forget that moment. A few stops here or a few baskets there was all Indiana needed. They did 94% of the work. The final six percent began with a bad omen as Shai Gilgeous-Alexander buried a three-point shot with 2:58 on the clock that cut the lead down to one point. The Pacers had been in control for much of the game, but the MVP was waking up with time ticking down. Gilgeous-Alexander would score on the next Thunder possession, too, giving OKC the lead for the first time of the second half. His offensive play would continue to be a major part of the story the rest of the way. But the Pacers will remember the end of the game not for their inability to stop a superstar, but rather their failure to execute their offensive identity. That's the end of the floor where the Pacers are supposed to be at their best. When they play with pace, pass the ball, and keep moving as players, they tend to score with ease. Even against the mighty Thunder defense, they've had success on the offensive end. Throughout Game 4, those principles were there. Indiana had just enough offensive flow to keep themselves ahead for 45 minutes of play. In the final minutes, they abandoned those core values. The ball stopped moving. Possessions turned into one or two-pass sequences followed by isolation attacks. It's a common late-game shift for teams looking to avoid turnovers, but it backfired. They couldn't score at all, and the one real action they ran resulted in a turnover and free point for Thunder wing Lu Dort. Their offensive process was a mess. The flow was gone. 'Kind of slowed it up, bogged it down and got a little stagnant,' the always reserved Andrew Nembhard said at his locker after the game. His one shot attempt late ended up being a drive past elite defender Alex Caruso that ended with a tough layup being missed over Thunder big man Chet Holmgren. On the other end of the floor, Indiana's defense abandoned them. From the fourth quarter of Game 3 until those final minutes of Game 4, it was great. OKC still hadn't reached 100 points before the meltdown started. But the Thunder turned to their stars, running actions involving Gilgeous-Alexander and Jalen Williams over and over again. They were clinical. Gilgeous-Alexander, the MVP, scored 15 points in the final 4:38 of play. Aaron Nesmith, one of Indiana's best defenders, fouled out trying to stop him. The Pacers couldn't get the Thunder to miss, and they mixed in their own miscues via turnovers and missed free throws. In the end, that 12-1 run was their undoing. Indiana Pacers forward Aaron Nesmith (23) looks to pass as Oklahoma City Thunder guard Aaron Wiggins ... More (21) defends during the first half of Game 4 of the NBA Finals basketball series, Friday, June 13, 2025, in Indianapolis. (AP Photo/Michael Conroy) A blown opportunity took poor play on both ends, and it happened on the biggest stage. The Pacers were right there, seconds from a commanding 3-1 lead. Instead, they have to feel agony and are going through a bitter two days of reflection. 'Yeah, a tough one,' Nembhard said after the 111-104 loss. 'But the good part about it is in two days we play again.' The final 2:58 was a painful stretch for a team that controlled so much of Games 3 and 4. They only have a split to show for it. Opportunities like this – the NBA Finals stage, at home, with a series and game lead – almost never come. The Pacers needed to be their best for 200 more seconds. But when it mattered most, they weren't. Throughout the playoffs, they had been. The Pacers clutch mastery has become signature, and they won Game 1 of the Finals by making the extraordinary routine once again. Entering Game 4, they were 9-1 in clutch games in this postseason. There was confidence they could do it again. Gainbridge Fieldhouse was electric, it was as loud as ever. But the fans didn't get the ending they'd grown used to. They got the opposite as Indiana froze. Now, the Pacers must regroup. They got in their own way, abandoning their offensive style and losing their defensive force. That's why the loss stung so deeply. 'This is a big disappointment,' Pacers head coach Rick Carlisle said. 'But there's three games left.' That last line is important. They've consistently responded to adversity, and if that trend holds, they'll be champions. But this is the hardest possible version of needing to respond. They not only have to do so on the court, but emotionally, too. They went from a euphoric high to a crushing low in minutes. That's what happens when you beat yourself. Recovering from that, especially in the bright lights of the NBA Finals, is a huge task. And OKC is a monster foe in their home arena, where Game 5 and a possible Game 7 would be played. The road ahead is daunting. Yet winning two more times and picking themselves up mentally is a task the Pacers are capable of. 'We've got to bounce back. I don't need to motivate these guys. I think they have a sense of where they are,' Carlisle said. 'But this kind of a challenge is going to have extreme highs and extreme lows. This is a low right now, and we're going to have to bounce back from it.' So as the stunned Pacers walked off the court and into the locker room, their thoughts were everywhere, just like Haliburton's vacant gaze. They were all thinking about the chance they just squandered. How quickly they can move on will define the rest of the 2025 NBA Finals.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store