After not being ready for the finals 2 years ago and last years atrocity, was it not warranted? They were much better than the teams they played and arguably shouldn?t have lost any games.
I think they?ll be a little more trusted next season.
It was not warranted. They had a new squad with a second year coach. People are pretending like they ran it back with the same squad.
Several of the primary players were the same?Tatum and Brown especially, but also White and Horford. Different (and better) supporting cast around those four this year, for sure, but the ultimate fortunes of this era of the Cs were always going to depend most on Tatum and Brown?could they ascend to another level? Could they grow enough, overcoming their youthful mistakes? Thankfully they did. But until they did that, I think it was perfectly reasonable (especially after last year's postseason) to be skeptical.
This is where I disagree. They were and still are young. In the court of public opinion, JB and JT had unreasonable expectations due to their early success in the playoffs. Watch Luka get the benefit of the doubt nationally because he's young after that defensive debacle. The expectation that young leaders win championships is nuts. Expecting Ant to win it this year would be crazy too.
But you're changing the argument now, from team composition (number of returning players) to Tatum and Brown's age. Those are separate issues/factors.
If you want to talk age, yes, they are still young, but an "older" young than most players: 1) It used to be that a 25-year-old was likely a third- or fourth-year player, whereas now a 25-year-old is often a sixth- or seventh-year player, thus having much more pro experience and (hopefully) maturity. 2) Tatum and Brown have been in the playoffs every year of their careers, and the Cs usually went far, including the ECF 2 of Tatum's first 3 years, and 3 of Brown's first 4. That's a ton of experience for a young age, and raises expectations sky-high, especially when it became clear that they wanted the reins of the team over Kyrie and Hayward. They were basically inviting a higher level of scrutiny. Reaching the NBA Finals in '22 was a logical "next step" for them, and they even took two games from a modern dynasty team ... but that made the following year's playoff failure more disappointing.
I agree about Ant, but this year was the first time he'd made it that far, so expecting a title (or Finals appearance) from him this season would have been unwarranted. And no one (as far as I know) expected Tatum and Brown to win a title, or even reach the ECF, their first few years, but I think they could've won a title in either of the last two years had they done a few things differently or learned certain things a bit sooner.
I'm not complaining, though. Boston is the best team right now, and very well could remain the best team for the next several years, and should get multiple titles. I will certainly give them the benefit of the doubt from this point forward, because they've proven themselves now.