Per the Boston Globe:
Jaylen Brown has made it clear over the years that he views himself as Jayson Tatum’s equal rather than his sidekick, and it would be understandable for his camp to push for the player option that Tatum.
This pretty much just confirms my greatest fear with Brown - that he considers himself to be Tatum's equal. This basically sets in stone for me the idea that these two guys will inevitably go down the Kobe/Shaq road where neither will ever be willing to accept that they are the #2 guy, and as long as they are on the same team they'll continue the nightly attempts to try to outplay/outshoot each other and will continue butting heads until they eventually reach the point where the relationship implodes and one of them demands a trade.
I don't like this at all.
For the last couple of years talent has not been the problem for the Celtics, it's been mentality/attitude. For a team to win a Championship everybody must know their role and embrace their role. I honestly believe that as long as we have Tatum and Brown both on this roster earning max money believe they are each the best player on the team, this team will continue to struggle with chemistry issues and struggle to win a title.
To me if I'm Brad, this mentality puts me instantly into "Trade Brown" mode. Though of course I wouldn't want to make this obvious (in order to not drive his trade value down), but I would be have a very open ear to any teams out there who are looking to trade major pieces (including Lillard) and I would be going into contract negotiations based on the expectation that Brown will end up getting traded at some point in the next year or so.
I love this. An all-nba guy SHOULD have supreme confidence, he should be driven to be the best.
Oh as far as Jaylen's career goes I absolutely agree that its a good thing that he feels this way. But as far as Celtics success goes it's a totally different story.
For years I've been watching Tatum and Brown playing, and feeling like I'm constantly watching two guys trying to one up each other to prove they are the #1 guy rather then just working together as two parts of a greater team. For a long time I've suspected that JB things he is the #1 guy and that he has been unwilling to accept the #2 role as a compliment to Tatum because he things he's "too good for that". This paragraph seems to just prove that point for me.
Per the Boston Globe:
Jaylen Brown has made it clear over the years that he views himself as Jayson Tatum’s equal rather than his sidekick, and it would be understandable for his camp to push for the player option that Tatum.
This pretty much just confirms my greatest fear with Brown - that he considers himself to be Tatum's equal. This basically sets in stone for me the idea that these two guys will inevitably go down the Kobe/Shaq road where neither will ever be willing to accept that they are the #2 guy, and as long as they are on the same team they'll continue the nightly attempts to try to outplay/outshoot each other and will continue butting heads until they eventually reach the point where the relationship implodes and one of them demands a trade.
I don't like this at all.
For the last couple of years talent has not been the problem for the Celtics, it's been mentality/attitude. For a team to win a Championship everybody must know their role and embrace their role. I honestly believe that as long as we have Tatum and Brown both on this roster earning max money believe they are each the best player on the team, this team will continue to struggle with chemistry issues and struggle to win a title.
To me if I'm Brad, this mentality puts me instantly into "Trade Brown" mode. Though of course I wouldn't want to make this obvious (in order to not drive his trade value down), but I would be have a very open ear to any teams out there who are looking to trade major pieces (including Lillard) and I would be going into contract negotiations based on the expectation that Brown will end up getting traded at some point in the next year or so.
I love this. An all-nba guy SHOULD have supreme confidence, he should be driven to be the best.
There is confidence and then there is someone who isn't in reality. Tatum is the best player on the team. The team plays better with Tatum. If Brown can't fit in around Tatum, then he needs to go. While the C's guys aren't as good as Lebron and Wade, Wade had the sense to realize that Lebron was better than he was and that the Heat would go as far as Lebron would take them, so Wade told Lebron it was his team, to stop deferring, and to take over. I don't know if they win 2 titles together without Wade doing that.
Exactly my point. You can never have two #1 guys on a team - it's a recipe for disaster. The only example I think of in past years where teams have win championships with two players who both think they are #1 was the Lakers with Kobe and Shaq - they weren't so far as winning 3 titles together from memory. But even that fell apart eventually, as both players insisted on being the Alpha and neither would accept being the #2, with the end result being a very public conflict that eventually ended in Shaq demanding a trade.
So i'm not going to say you CAN'T win a title with two guys who both thing they are number 1...but it's definitely a major hinderance and if it doesn't result in desaster from day one it almost certinaly will at some point later down the road.
In this league more often then not the teams that win are the teams where every play knows there roles, embraces thier role, and is willing to accept it. It was the willingness of KG and Ray to sacrifice t be the #2 / #2 guys that allowed the Celtics to win in 2008.
I understand the argument that if we trade Brown we won't get a player back who is on the same level as he is. That may well be true, and probably is. But getting a player back who is 85% or 90% of Jaylen Brown BUT is willing to accept and embrace that role as a #2 guy may well be better for the team's success.
A big part of why I like the Porzingis pickup so much is because from the interviews it is clear that Porzingis knows his place on the team- he knows this team belongs to Tatum and Brown, and that he is the third banana. And he's expressed his willingness to not only accept but embrace that role. That's the type of attitude you need from the top 5-7 guys if you want to have a serious shot at a title.
To be entirely honest, i find this take almost incomprehensible. I really don't get it. The c's have had a staggering amount of success over the Tatum/Brown era, they had the 2nd bets offense in the league last year, they have been really good with Tatum/Brown. So saying "i worry about team performance because of this attitude" just strikes me as being disproved by the actual team performance over the last few years.
I don't think there's any evidence that Jaylen thinking he's good at basketball has had ANY negative impact on the Celtics, at all. Tatum had the 7th highest USG rate in the league last year, how much can Brown possibly be taking away from him?
The Celitcs have seen a solid amount of success over the year because of their sheer level of talent. It's hard for a team with a roster as strong as the Celtics have had the past few years NOT to be successful.
But it's also a very well known fact that this team has had major difficulties making the most of their talent and playing with any sort of consistency as a team. This is hardly a secret - it's been well covered by just about every sports commentator out there that when it comes to this Celtics team, you just do not know what you're going to get from one day to the next.
For the first half of the season this was the most dominant team in basketball, bar none. It looked like finally, they had things together. Then second half they started to resort to their old ways - lots of ISO ball, lack of ball movement, lots of ugly losses against mediocre teams that they just shouldn't be losing to.
Then the playoffs come along. They struggled to get by the FAR inferior Hawks team. Then they needed major heroics from Tatum (to the tune of an all-time game 7 scoring record) to get a notoriously mentally weak Philly team. Then they went down 3-0 to an 8th seed Miami heat that barely even made the playoffs.
There's clearly something odd mentally with this team. They seem to get cocky when they think they have an easy win and end up getting slaughtered by bad teams, then when they are up against a wall and its truly do-or-die Tatum tends to step up and have monstrous performances that drag the team through.
When these guys go out and play the right way, they look like they can beat any team in the league by 30. But then they after they do that a couple of times they seem to get cocky and then revert back to ISO ball and start looking like a barely-playoff-worthy team again.
This was really at its worst last season. The previous year I didn't really have an issue with the Celtics - they were impacted by a bunch of injuries, Tatum didn't have a great shooting series, they lost in the finals in 6 games. I'm ok with that because they played consistently hard. This season they had bench depth, they were relatively healthy, they had the best roster in the NBA, and yet they were all over the place in the playoffs.
Maybe coching has some to do with that, but I also don't see any indication of good chemistry between Tatum and Brown. They seem to have very different personalities, very different approaches to political activism, I don't really ever see them talking or joking about in all the years they have been together. I've just had a constant vibe that the two of them just don't like each other and don't really get along, but they deal with it because they kinda have to. Brown always looks and sounds like he's got a chip on his shoulder and seems somewhat envious of the fact that Tatum has been elevated above him on the team and in the league (despite Brown being a year older and being with the Celtics longer). Brown is also constantly making comments complaining about Celtics fans, about people being ungrateful, etc.
I may well be reading too much into things and may be wrong on all of this, but to me personally I've been getting a vibe for a few years now (ever since Tatum beat JB to that first All-Star appearance) that JB is kinda ticked off with the fact that he's constantly in Tatum's shadow. Brown has been in the league longer and has been a Celtic longer. He's putting up spectacular numbers in his own right and has worked hard to make major improvements to his game every year, but somehow no matter what he does Tatum always managed to take his game one step further, and Brown still ends up stuck in his shadow. Then on top of that there's the whole thing with people trying to break the duo up (and its always Brown's name that is the one getting mentioned in the trade ideas).
I can only imagine that Brown is probably far less then 100% happy in Boston and he probably wants nothing more than to go to another team so he can finally step out of Tatum's shadow, be the #1 guy on his own team, and get some of the spotlight/recognition that he feels (quite fairly and reasonably) probably feels he deserves.
And I can't even blame him if he DOES feel this way, because I can only imagine if I were in his shoes I would feel the same way, and many others probably would too. I don't think there is any doubt that JB is good enough to be the #1 guy on a solid playoff team and that he probably deserves the opportunity to shot that he can be that guy. And I really think it's just a matter of time before he comes out and demands it...
Maybe i'm wrong. I hope I am. We will see I guess.