Karalis: Jayson Tatum's decisive destruction of Washington shows how a superstar is supposed to play taken at TD Garden (Celtics)

Photo by Maddie Meyer/Getty Images

Jayson Tatum is a casually great basketball player. He’s not physically overpowering like Zion Williamson. He doesn’t have any one thing, like a Steph Curry jumper, that steals an opponent’s soul. 

He just hits the court, glides around, and uses his long arms and big strides to get to spots and hit shots. 

Sometimes that easy tempo with which he plays can become hypnotic. Sometimes it can also work against him. He has so many weapons to use that he almost becomes that person looking at a menu in a restaurant saying “I have no idea what I want.” It’s a paralysis of choice. And then he does what everyone does in those situations. 

He goes with the same old thing. 

Which is why it was almost surprising that Tatum spent the end fourth quarter attacking the rim instead of setting up fadeaways and side-step 3-pointers. He loves those shots, but when it came time to carry the Boston Celtics to a win they almost threw away, he put his head down and attacked. 

“I thought tonight that Jayson’s will shone through,” Brad Stevens said. “It’s been a tough stretch for Jayson, but this matters to him and he wants to win and he made big plays.”

Sometimes when players don’t have time to think, they react their way to something great. You might notice it when it’s an end-of-shot clock jumper that falls through for a guy on an 0-for-10 night; instead of thinking about his shot and trying to sort of aim it through, he just rises up and drills it. 

This, in a way, is what Jayson Tatum was facing down the stretch of this game. When the lack of time on the clock demanded an immediate “shoot it or drive it” response from Tatum, he just took what was there.

Six of Tatum’s 11 fourth-quarter points came in the final 43 seconds of the game, and all of them came at the rim.

“One time they ran me off the 3-point line, I had a clear path to the basket,” Tatum explained.

The Wizards, up five and focused on not giving up a triple, almost conceded Tatum’s layup. 

“And then the second time, if we had an open 3, we were going to take it. But we just wanted to get a quick score, hopefully foul, but then we got the turnover.” 

With 19.7 seconds left, Brad Stevens dipped into his Kyrie Irving playbook and got Tatum running downhill at Daniel Theis, who had caught the inbound pass. Tatum set up Bradley Beal, who was defending him, with a fake so he could catch the ball moving toward the 3-point line, and when he saw Robin Lopez come over, he read that there was no rim protector, so immediately made a beeline for the basket. 

He split the late challenge from two Wizards, deftly switched to his left hand, and laid it in as he fell and slid along the baseline. It was an elite finish to an elite play. In that 4.6 seconds, Tatum showed that flash of superstardom that brings thoughts of banners to the minds of Celtics fans. 




The slide might have been a little bit of
Red Auerbach’s
leprechauns at work. 


“That was some of the goofiest shit I've ever seen in my life,” Beal said after the game. “Slipped out of bounds, gave Tatum three layups at the end of the game.”


With no time to wipe up Tatum’s sweat, Beal lost his footing and gave Tatum that third layup. 


“We were just reading the defense and just trying to make a play,” Tatum said. The play involved blowing past his St. Louis buddy Beal, slipping past a hard-charging Rui Hachimura, and again flipping the ball softly over the rim and he hit the deck. 


Boston had the lead.
Kemba Walker
flexed and roared at the prone Tatum. For the first time in a long time, the Celtics were making good things happen down the stretch.


“JT made sure we got a basket,” Walker said “He just made some tough layups but that's what great players do.”


It’s a good thing Tatum’s shoulders are a bit broader than they were his rookie year because games like this show much of the load he’s going to have to carry on them if this Celtics team is going to get where it wants to go. Without his tag team partner
Jaylen Brown
in this game, it was on Tatum to finish off the comeback. 


Without time to run through his menu of shots, Tatum simply, confidently, and quickly dismantled a Washington Wizards team that had been feeling themselves as of late. It shows that decisive Tatum is the best Tatum. 


Tatum may be worn down. He might still be feeling some of the effects of COVID-19. But if has designs on winning rings, raising banners, and, perhaps someday, his number into the rafters, he simply has to play this way more often.


“He's a special talent,” Beal said. “I'm pissed off he actually got to get going against us. He's been struggling a few times going into the game tonight. But he always picks up his energy when he plays me, so in that regard, I was happy for him, just from a fan aspect of being able to get himself going and get out of his little slump.”

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