16-05-2025
"The opportunity for a faster recovery really is present" - Expert suggests Jayson Tatum has potential for unprecedented Achilles tendon recovery
In the focal moments of Game 4, under the glaring lights of Madison Square Garden, Jayson Tatum pounced, then fell.
The Boston Celtics superstar forward, a six-time All-Star and four-time All-NBA member, crumpled to the hardwood, clutching his right leg in a silent scream. His 42 points on 16-for-28 shooting had been a masterpiece, a defiant brushstroke against a gutty New York Knicks defense.
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But with three minutes left in the fourth quarter, agony replaced artistry. Unable to bear weight on his foot, Tatum was carried off, the weight of a defending champion's season teetering alongside him. By Tuesday afternoon, the news broke: a ruptured right Achilles tendon, surgically repaired that same day.
A city held its breath, and a franchise recalibrated.
A surgical edge
Dr. Lou Soslowsky, founding director of the Penn Achilles Tendinopathy Center of Research Translation, speaks with the quiet authority of someone who has not only studied the Achilles tendon but felt its betrayal.
"You're going to get infiltration of biologic agents and cells that will create the beginnings of scar formation," Soslowsky told "Because this repair was within a day, those processes had only just begun, and with a surgical pair, the torn ends were put right back together before a lot of these adverse biologic effects occurred. And so the opportunity for a faster recovery really is present."
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The Celtics' announcement was clinical, devoid of a return timetable, yet heavy with hope. Tatum's surgery, performed with preternatural speed, was deemed a success. The injury, a specter that haunts athletes with its cruel arithmetic — months of rehab, uncertain outcomes — had been met with a rare opportunity: immediacy.
Tatum's case, Soslowsky explains, is a serendipitous convergence. The rupture, caught before scar tissue could muddy the repair, was stitched with careful speed and precision.
The speed of the surgery is no small thing. Achilles ruptures, often a death knell for athletic primes, trigger a cascade of biological chaos — cells swarm, scar tissue forms and the tendon's delicate architecture frays.
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Most athletes wait days, in rare cases even weeks, for surgery.
Tatum, 27, an NBA champion and Olympian, by contrast, was under the knife before time ticked too far.
"At some point in some months, we'll get a much better idea of whether they're going to try and get back next season or not," he said. "If you want to be conservative, one would say, well, it's probably a 12-month rehab anyway."
"Therefore, let's let him sit out and give him the best shot during the following season. On the other hand, if in a handful of months he's doing well, then there'll be the push and pull to say, we can get him back next season," Soslowsky added.
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Related: "I don't even know what he was thinking" - Former Lakers trainer recalls struggling to convince Kobe Bryant to leave the court after Achilles tear
The road ahead
The Celtics, now staring down a 3-2 series deficit, play Game 6 tomorrow night on the road, where they are 2-2 this postseason. Their future championship aspirations are leashed to the recovery speed of their franchise cornerstone. JT's 42-point eruption in Game 4 — 15 points in the third quarter alone, with a 60 percent field goal clip — had been a reminder of what he's capable of pulling off on the NBA playoffs stage.
At his age, Tatum is a supernova — he averaged 26.8 points, 8.7 rebounds and 6.0 assists in 72 games in the 2024-25 regular season. His playoff performance, peaking at 42 points with his team just minutes away from tying the Eastern Conference semifinals, was a clarion call of his indispensability — though Boston took Game 5 on its home floor, 127-102, and now seek to continue shifting the momentum.
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The tendon, repaired before inflammation could entrench, has a cleaner slate. Rehabilitation, a grueling odyssey of incremental gains, will test the Boston star's resolve.
Physical therapy often with gentle stretches, then progress to weight-bearing exercises, each step a negotiation between haste and caution. The Celtics' training staff, among the NBA's best, will monitor every metric — range of motion, tensile strength, pain thresholds.
The specter of a 12-month rehab looms, a conservative estimate rooted in the injury's history.
Kobe Bryant, felled by an Achilles tear in 2013, returned in eight months but was never the same.
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Kevin Durant, struck in 2019, took over a year and emerged a marvel, though not without struggle.
Tatum's youth — 27 years old, with a body less worn than those legends — could tilt the odds. So too does the surgery's celerity. A much earlier-than-average return — perhaps merely pie in the sky optimism — for Tatum, could be as soon as nine months, placing him back on the hardwood before the finish of the 2025-26 regular season.
"The fact that he did choose a surgeon — and there was availability to operate on him so quickly — gives him an excellent shot at an earlier-than-average, high-level athlete return," Soslowsky said.
In Boston, where banners hang like promises, fans will wait, their eyes fixed on a horizon where their star might rise again. The Achilles, once a harbinger of endings, will optimistically be a chapter, not a conclusion, in Tatum's climb to the peak of his abilities on the court.
Related: "Do I need to come home?" - Tatum's dad offered to leave his job because he was worried about his son's mental well-being after suffering a serious injury