Boston Exclusive: Jayson Tatum reveals secrets to benefit Celtics In Playoffs.

Boston Exclusive: Jayson Tatum reveals secrets to benefit Celtics In Playoffs.
Boston Exclusive: Jayson Tatum reveals secrets to benefit Celtics In Playoffs.

Boston Exclusive: Jayson Tatum reveals secrets to benefit Celtics In Playoffs.

Jayson Tatum reveals secrets to benefit Celtics In Playoffs.

Despite experiencing both highs and lows, like making it to the NBA Finals and losing to the Miami Heat, a No. 8 seed,

in the Eastern Conference finals while playing for the Boston Celtics, 26-year-old Jayson Tatum isn’t giving up.

With 10 games left before the playoffs, Boston has already secured the top seed in the East, making them the best club in the NBA right now (57-15).

However, the Tatum-led Celtics are no strangers to winning regular season games; they have participated in four conference finals series.

Tatum, though, thinks that Boston will gain in the long term by the difficult memories of their previous matches with LeBron James and Jimmy Butler.

“You know that the finest teacher is experience? Being so close and not being able to move beyond the hump for the past few years was clearly very difficult,

as Tatum said on Tuesday night’s NBA on TNT. Additionally, I believe that each member of our team is in the ideal stage of their career.

With the exception of Jrue Holiday, each of us has achieved our own goals and received compensation.

For the most part, now we are just attempting to get over that obstacle. And I believe we are the appropriate team with the right attitude to accomplish those goals.

It goes without saying that we still need to play the correct manner, stay healthy, and do it. However, our perspective is where it should be.

 

Boston Exclusive: Jayson Tatum reveals secrets to benefit Celtics In Playoffs.
Boston Exclusive: Jayson Tatum reveals secrets to benefit Celtics In Playoffs.

The early phases of Jaylen Brown’s and Jayson Tatum’s individual ascents to fame cleared the Celtics of any blame for Boston’s postseason misfortune during the

previous six years.

Boston has completely changed since Kristaps Porzingis and Holiday were added to the team’s roster during the offseason,

thanks to the leadership of the Celtics’ president of basketball operations, Brad Stevens. The team’s sacrifice-demanding style of play, led by Tatum and Brown,

has frequently allowed the supporting group to flourish. When two or more starters are sidelined, the squad remains unbeaten thanks to their excellent depth.

Most remarkably, though, is that the Celtics never relinquished the top seed after taking it back from the Philadelphia 76ers on November 14.

The mindset that has allowed the Celtics to comfortably stay atop the regular season mountaintop for several months was most recently questioned.

Arriving in Atlanta on Monday night with a nine-game winning run against a Hawks club without Trae Young, Boston forgot its history and became comfortable.

The Celtics scored 44 points in the first quarter,

but their lead shrank to just 44 points in the second half as they shot just 1 out of 15 from three-point range and lost a 30-point lead,

which was the team’s biggest deficit since the play-by-play era (since 1996–97). They lost 120–118, which was without a doubt their most egregious loss to date.

According to NBC Sports Boston, Tatum told reporters, “People think we never should lose and we was up a lot, and we kind of (expletive) the game up,

and we know that.” We all know that we didn’t do what it took to win, even though we are all adults and professionals.

And I believe it’s sometimes simpler to correct when you know that, if you play the proper cards and follow the appropriate procedures,

you typically know what will happen in the end.

Boston doesn’t have much to play for in the tail-end of an overall dominant campaign, but succumbing to poor habits certainly isn’t the way to go.

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