One rolled ankle away from this comment not mattering.
One of us is misremembering that game. I didn't see anything that made me think we'd win, even with a healthy Tatum.
Disagree on this. Tatum generally shows up to the biggest games. If anything, it showed us how this team would look if JB was our main guy. He’s an allstar and one of the best 1v1 scorers in the league but he can’t carry the load Tatum does. The handles, vision, and decision-making do him in
We got blown out, though, and Tatum still played. A healthy Tatum turns a 19 point loss into a win? To me, that's pretty hard to envision.
We had won 3 in a row and had momentum. An early game run might change this entire game and deflate Miami. I believe the ankle roll changed how this series was going to end.
Absolutely did. Obviously the entire game plan had to go out the window, because Tatum was going to be the center of that. Also under discussed is how White got going in the third and we made a charge, only for him to hyperextend his knee and leave early.
Things went on early in that series, which is why it went 7, and you never want to be in a game 7 you don’t need to be in because you’re always a rolled ankle away from losing. But if Tatum doesn’t roll that ankle, no one’s listening to Gabe Vincent, and he might have gotten a bit less money in free agency. He certainly didn’t earn his new salary in the finals.
I agree, and that series never should've gone that far. But it seems like every time I mention that the Cs are allowing a series to go longer than it should, the comment gets waved off like I don't know what I'm talking about. "Oh, they'll be fine," is the usual response I get. I guess "fine" means being eliminated from the playoffs.
But yeah, the Cs, especially, should end series as soon as possible because they have so many injury-prone players.
They're absolutely not "fine" if they can't close out a series quick. That Hawks series had no business going past 5. That 76ers series? What in the world. Why was the C's trailing 3-2 at one point and nearly lost Game 6 until Tatum woke up in the 4th Q.
All three of these series should not have gotten past 5 games if I'm being honest. Only teams that would've happened past 5 would be against the Knicks, Cavs, or Bucks.
How is that any different from last year’s team that kept going 7? Or a couple years earlier when we nearly gave up a 3-0 lead vs. Toronto in the bubble? Vincent says it was something “different” this year, but this has been the Celtics’ M.O. a few seasons, and sometimes it comes back to bite them. What have been our chief complaints about this team, for several years? 1) They give up 4th quarter leads because they stop scoring, and 2) They complain too much to the refs.
In the Heat series, they lost Game 1 because the Heat couldn’t miss. It’s the NBA, it happens. Maybe one might argue they left the Heat open too much, but the stats don’t really back that theory up. Game 2, 4th quarter meltdown. Game 3 Tony Brothers meltdown and they got blown out. Then they win Games 4-6, although they almost gave up Game 6 in the 4th again. Then Game 7 and Tatum’s ankle happened.
There was nothing especially different about how this series went that felt different in 2023 than other years. Nor how the Philly series went. The Celtics’ flaws are nothing new. They do need correcting, and perhaps the moves Stevens made this off-season will help in that regard. But Vincent’s comments are not especially enlightening, in that winning teams always see a “weakness” in the losing team, and a lot of these series could have gone the other way. Heck, the Celtics were arguably a Jimmy Butler drive rather than a pull-up 3 from losing to the Heat last year. And now since the Heat won this year when Tatum busted his ankle, things are suddenly terribly different? Nonsense.