What the Kings did was pretty smart and simple. On every pick-and-roll, they sent two players at Jayson Tatum to make sure the drive was impossible and that he had to get rid of the ball.
The entire defensive scheme was to slow down Tatum and force the rest of the Celtics team to beat them 4-on-3—and they weren’t able to. Also, Jayson Tatum’s 8 turnovers show that the Celtics’ franchise player couldn’t find his teammates either.
#7 – Jaylen in the middle
The Celtics forward started early by attacking Keon Ellis—who has been one of the best defensive players this season—and Jaylen Brown just went at him as if he were a regular mismatch.
Jaylen Brown used his broad shoulders to find some room in the Kings’ crowded paint. Thanks to that, he was able to make 8 out of his 12 attempts in the paint. His post-up and drives are still improving—he is becoming really good and efficient, even when the shot doesn’t fall.
Yet, his jump-shot volume could be smaller in a game like this, where he seems unstoppable, but nothing is going in from long range.
#8 – Porzingis post-up struggle
Since Porzingis came back from injury, he doesn’t seem as comfortable in the post-up as he was last season. The opposing teams also seem okay leaving only one man on him, stopping the double-teams that used to slow him down. This creates less space for his teammates and forces him to take tough shots.
Last season, Porzingis was generating 1.31 points per post-up, but now it’s down to 1.17. It’s still very good in the league, but it shows that teams have adapted to the Celtics’ post-up offense around the big man.
#9 – Bad execution on offense in the 4th
The offensive execution in the fourth quarter was the low point of the night. The Celtics couldn’t find any open shots or good positions for Jayson Tatum, who ended up with 0 field-goal attempts in the last quarter.
He wasn’t the only one struggling late in the game. Jaylen Brown drove here but instead took a difficult shot at the rim while Derrick White was standing alone, free in the corner.
After a pick-and-pop situation, Kristaps Porzingis was able to fake Malik Monk from three and decided to drive. He drove into a crowded paint but took the difficult shot anyway and almost missed the rim.
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Everyone seemed to be struggling last night, and the connection between the players seemed off—both on offense and defense.
#10 – DeRozan in the 4th
Contrary to the Celtics, DeMar DeRozan woke up in the fourth quarter, scoring 12 points over 12 minutes and delivering 4 assists. He owned the court in last night’s fourth quarter, seeing everything and scoring above everyone. On one play, he anticipated Jaylen Brown’s gamble and punished it with a pass to the open man:
His post-up and driving game were impossible to stop one-on-one for the Celtics players, and DeRozan scored just as easily on Payton Pritchard as he did on Jayson Tatum.
While the Celtics were collapsing in the most important moment of the game, DeRozan rose above it all and gave the Kings their sixth win in a row.