Jayson Tatum ‘Thrilled’ for Co-Star’s Conference MVP Award, Says ESPN’s Burke.

ESPN analyst Doris Burke does not believe that Jayson Tatum is upset that Jaylen Brown won the Larry Bird Eastern Conference Finals MVP trophy. But she also believes the loss to his Boston Celtics co-star for the individual award motivates him.

 

“I’ve never understood and pushed back as hard as my opportunity would allow on the narratives surrounding this young man,” Burke said of Tatum in a conference call with select media, including Heavy Sports on Monday, June 3. “He’s 26 years old. He’s played, I believe, 102 playoff games with Jaylen Brown. They have achieved an incredible measure of success at 26 and 27 years old.

 

“And I do not believe that it’s mutually exclusive that he can be thrilled that Jaylen Brown was named the Eastern Conference Finals MVP and still has a level of personal ambition. That’s what pushes that young man to greatness.”

Brown narrowly defeated his more illustrious teammate for the Larry Bird trophy, 5-4.

 

Burke, who voted for Brown, said it was a close call.

 

“I don’t believe for one single second [Tatum] was upset that Jaylen won that award. I don’t believe it. And I was a voter, and I can tell you how razor-thin that margin was, and I would not have been wrong if I voted for Jayson Tatum the Eastern Conference MVP. That’s how close that was,” Burke said.

nouncer, Mike Breen, and former NBA player JJ Redick.

 

How the Narrative Started

The narrative that there is tension between the Celtics stars started with Brown’s postgame remark after receiving the award following the Celtics sweep of the Indiana Pacers.

 

“I wasn’t expecting that at all,” Brown said after averaging 29.8 points, 5.0 rebounds, 3.0 assists and 2.0 steals on a 52/37/66 shooting split. “You know I never win [expletive].”

Get Up” host Mike Greenberg asserted on the ESPN show’s May 29 episode that “there was a lot of chatter online — to whatever degree this is important or relevant — to Jayson Tatum’s reaction.” Video footage of Brown hoisting his MVP trophy showed a smiling Tatum celebrating with his teammates. But, Greenberg said, “You did not seem to think [the joy] was mirrored” in Tatum, leading to a panel discussion of the Celtics’ need to navigate the teammates’ power dynamic to win an NBA title

Tatum led the Celtics in scoring (30.3) and rebounding (10.3) and finished second in assists (6.3) but could not beat Brown in shooting efficiency, shooting just 31% from the 3-point range and 46% from the field.

 

Tatum and Brown share a 62-40 record together in the playoffs and have led the Celtics to the Eastern Conference Finals five times. However, this is only their second NBA Finals appearance but seemingly their best shot after a dominant regular season and postseason run so far.

With homecourt advantage, the Celtics are -244 favorites to win the series opener on Thursday, June 6, at TD G

arden, per lucky block.

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *