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Imago

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Imago

The Boston Celtics torched Madison Square Garden after crushing the Knicks 115-93 in Game 3, breathing life back into the series. Tatum stuffed the stat sheet (22/9/7), Pritchard erupted for a team-high 23 off the bench, and Boston’s offense clicked with 23 assists. After getting punched in the mouth at home, they answered with a dominant wire-to-wire win. Now it’s a fight. However, to analysts, the winning stats don’t scream “perfection.” Their approach to scoring points has been widely criticized. Especially after they missed 15 on 60 attempts, contributing to the Game 1 loss.

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The Boston Celtics were able to score 20 of 40 attempts from beyond the arc in Game 3, though. However, to the legends, or even an average viewer, those stats are not impressive. Their offense feels overly reliant on numbers and lacks game feel. With players launching threes regardless of rhythm or context. Their game lately lacks adaptability, toughness, and real-time awareness, and to no one’s surprise, it is reflecting in the series. It’s like when the shots fall, it works, and when they don’t, there’s no plan B. The complaint is that they just played robotic, one-dimensional basketball without any balance or grit.

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feelings into wordsDan Patrick Show, “They take a lot of threes early, and they take it throughout the game,” “And when they’re going, because you got multiple guys who shoot threes and shoot it well, but if you never build a rhythm getting to the basket, getting to the free throw line, to the midrange gam that’s kinda where there was a hole for the Celtics of the night.” 

If you think that Ray is the only legend to notice and criticize the Boston Celtics’ habit, you’re wrong. Even Gilbert Arenas had a similar take on the issue. While comparing the old school grit to today’s playing styles, he called out the teams that overly rely on long-range shooting. On

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Gil’s Arena, he said, “Sixties had no threes. They averaged about 120, and you’re telling me you’re shooting 50, 60 threes, and you’re talking about scores 105, and I’m just, we old school just hating.” He highlighted the irony that, despite technological “evolution” in offense, modern teams end up scoring fewer points than ones in the past eras.
The message from both legends is clear. The Celtics’ current strategy might deliver wins, but it’s unstable. When shots are falling, they dominate. But when they’re not, there’s no backup plan. Their concern isn’t about one game; it’s about sustainability. Boston’s reliance on volume threes may work today, but with a lack of diversity, it can be a risky path forward for the franchise.

Boston Celtics’ blue-eyed boy breaks silence on recent struggles

Jayson Tatum’s recent playoff struggles had fans and critics talking. Especially after his rough start in the Celtics-Knicks series. Shooting just 28.6% in Games 1 and 2 wasn’t his usual standard, and he didn’t shy away from admitting it publicly. He owned up to it, saying, “I take responsibility for us not being able to get a shot up at the end of the game,” which shows a lot of maturity. Especially in a league where most stars would just brush off the criticism.

However, like a star, he bounced back in Game 3 with a solid 22-point performance. Proving he can adjust under pressure. What’s interesting is how he kept it real afterward. He acknowledged that even though he gets a ton of praise, it is not easy being “that guy”. He said, “You understand what comes with being that guy, right? I live a great life, I ain’t gonna lie. It’s a lot of, I make a lot of money, I take care of my family, I’ve been able to experience a lot of things. But you also have to accept what comes with that, right?” It’s not hard to understand the pressure that the stars have to withstand in order to meet the expectations.

The best part? His strong mindset. “I get a lot of praise, I get a lot of credit, I get a lot of accolades. But, I’m not perfect, and there’s times where I’ve needed to play better, I’ve needed to do more. And that’s what comes with being that guy. So just understanding that and it’s not that people don’t just criticize me.” He talked about being imperfect, and that’s the kind of attitude you need from your best player in the playoffs. The Boston Celtics are lucky to have a guy who takes accountability and doesn’t fold under pressure. If he keeps this up, they’ve got a real shot—but it all starts with Tatum playing like the superstar he is.

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Shourima Mishra

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Shourima Mishra is a Basketball Writer at EssentiallySports, recruited through the outlet’s Young Talent Hunt to join the fast-paced WNBA desk. With a knack for decoding coaching systems and the rhythm of in-game adjustments, she reports on how strategy and chemistry shape outcomes beyond the scoreboard. Her work stands out for its clear editorial sharpness, honed in a digital-first newsroom where speed and precision walk hand in hand. Before stepping into sports journalism, Shourima built her voice through debating, Model UN leadership, and an early focus on communication-driven roles, a background that fuels her confident, analytical style today. On the WNBA beat, she cuts past surface storylines and digs into the tactical shifts reshaping the women’s game, giving readers fresh insight into a league that continues to redefine basketball itself.

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Md Saba Ahmed

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