NBA fans questioned Celtics president Brad Stevens’ weak reasoning for bringing back Joe Mazzulla

What a flimsy way of endorsing the Celtics’ coaching situation.

In the aftermath of their latest disappointing playoff run, the Boston Celtics have many questions to answer this offseason. First on the list is probably All-NBA guard Jaylen Brown’s future, who is in line for a supermax contract. Second is the future of head coach Joe Mazzulla.

On Thursday, team president Brad Stevens answered the latter note definitively: Mazzulla will return to roam the Celtics’ sideline next season. And for someone with the successful and smart reputation of Stevens, his logic behind Mazzulla’s return seemed so cliche.

In fact, it was a little weak for a franchise with the pedigree of the Celtics and the current talent they have on their roster. This squad should be in line for the NBA title every season. They don’t necessarily have time to waste with a still-developing 34-year-old coach:

There’s a lot to unpack in that answer, but I think what sticks out to me most is “We share results here.”

Who is “we” to Stevens? You can argue the Celtics’ players faltered in their seven-game Eastern Conference Finals loss to the Miami Heat. Even still, I’m pretty confident a more experienced coach weathers the storm and has Boston in the NBA Finals right now. Deflecting blame from Mazzulla, regardless of his inexperience, and giving him a vote of confidence doesn’t say much of how Stevens and the Celtics feel about him.

If anything, they just missed out on more qualified leaders like Monty Williams and Nick Nurse in Philadelphia and now have to ride out Mazzulla’s tenure with one of the NBA’s best teams on paper.

I don’t buy this Mazzulla endorsement from Stevens, and neither did NBA fans.