The 2022 NBA Finals is officially a best-of-three, with a pivotal Game 5 taking place Monday night at 9 p.m. ET at Chase Center. And the Boston Celtics face some significant questions entering the home stretch of the series, particularly as it relates to their duo of young stars.
After the Warriors rose up in the fourth quarter of Game 4, while the Celtics shrunk, now’s a good time to remind everyone that Jayson Tatum and Jaylen Brown are a little ahead of schedule. At 25 and 24 years old, they remain relatively young in the context of emerging star players on the championship stage.
If either of them can play better at the end of the series and pull off a title, one of them would certainly win the NBA Finals MVP award. Either one would become the youngest Finals MVP since Tony Parker won it for the Spurs at age 25 in 2007.
But the hope is that both Tatum and Brown become greater and more accomplished than Parker ever was. So if you want, you can go back to Tim Duncan in 1999 to find a star who won this early in his career.
If the Celtics want to win this NBA Finals, they’re going to need a lot more from their All-Star duo offensively, particularly late in games. So that’s the main thing to watch for in Game 5 on Monday night…
Can Tatum and Brown close?
BOSTON, MASSACHUSETTS – JUNE 10: Jaylen Brown #7 and Jayson Tatum #0 of the Boston Celtics talk over a play in the second quarter against the Golden State Warriors during Game Four of the 2022 NBA Finals at TD Garden on June 10, 2022 in Boston, Massachusetts. (Photo by Elsa/Getty Images)
Marcus Smart hit a three-pointer with 5:18 left in Game 4 last Friday night, putting the Celtics up four points. From that point on? Tatum and Brown went 0-for-3 from the field in those closing minutes. Brown also lost a pass to turn it over with 56 seconds left. Tatum was particularly bad, with just three points on 1-for-5 shooting in the quarter. Al Horford scored Boston’s only basket in the final five minutes with a late three, which came after the damage had been done.
If the Celtics want to keep up with Steph Curry late in these games, Tatum and Brown need to 1) be willing to take shots late in the first place, and 2) hit them when they need it. That much is obvious.
“We at times get a little disorganized and at crunch time get a little sped up,” Brown said Sunday, on the end of Game 4. “At times I do need to take the onus and get us more organized and get us more space and a little bit more composed. That’s a part of my growth as a basketball player and my maturity and things like that. Can’t put everything on the coaching staff. We’re on the floor. So at times, somebody has to get everybody square, get everybody level-headed and be a little bit more composed.
“But we just got to be better as a group overall in those moments and just take our time a little bit and just be a little bit more poised.”
Toucher and Rich | Previewing Game 5 of the NBA Finals
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It’s important for us all to realize that it wouldn’t be some epic disaster if Tatum and Brown don’t quite have the championship thing figured out just yet. This likely won’t be their final opportunity to play in the NBA Finals. And it’s not surprising that Curry looks better prepared for these moments than they do. Brown basically just acknowledged that he and the C’s are far behind the Warriors in the experience and team maturity department.
Tatum was asked Sunday if he puts a lot of pressure on himself to live up to the greats of the game. Overall, he hasn’t played to that standard over the course of the series. But his place in NBA history should not be anywhere near the top of his mind right now, and he says it isn’t.
“That’s all I really care about right now is winning,” Tatum said. “Whether you win or you don’t win, you guys will debate rankings or, you know, what does that matter for your legacy and things like that. That’s kind of not up to me. You know, in this moment, I’ve said it, I felt like every day, just trying to do what I can to impact winning by all costs.”
Tatum and Brown are learning on the fly what it takes to win it all, and their performance in fourth quarters going forward will show how much they’ve learned about themselves in a short time. And if they lose this series, there will still be a few more years to see if they can apply what they’ve learned and finish the job.
The window’s wide open. It’s a matter of how ready they are to step through right now.