Micah Shrewsberry knows he can always call Brad Stevens or Matt Painter for some advice

Penn State introduced Micah Shrewsberry as its next men’s basketball coach. Shrewsberry thanked those who helped him along the way.

Penn State formally introduced new men’s head basketball coach Micah Shrewsberry to the public on Tuesday with an introductory press conference. Shrewsberry touched on a number of topics as he gets settled in for his first head coaching job in the Big Ten and showed he understood the challenges facing the program he now takes over.

Fortunately for Shrewsberry, he feels as prepared as you can get for the task at hand. In his press conference on Tuesday, Shrewsberry thanked those who helped to get him to where he is now, including two of his most recent bosses, Boston Celtics head coach Brad Stevens and Purdue head coach Matt Painter.

“I couldn’t say enough about those two guys as friends, as people, before bosses,” Shrewsberry said as he gave thanks to Stevens and Painter. “They never treated me as a boss and as an employee. It was always as a great man.”

That kind of working relationship is a characteristic that should be expected of Shrewsberry with his new staff, as well as his players. It is only a small glimpse into Shrewsberry as a head coach, but that kind of understanding of how strong relationships can be should carry an encouraging message to the Penn State basketball program and its fans moving forward.

“I have to be myself but they taught me how to run a successful program,” Shrewsberry said.

Shrewsberry has indeed been on some successful programs with Stevens and Painter. Shrewsberry was on the Purdue staff for the Boilermakers’ 2019 Big Ten championship regular season. With Stevens, Shrewsberry was on the Butler coaching staff that took the Bulldogs to back-to-back national championship game appearances in 2010 and 2011.

What Celtics coach Brad Stevens had to say about new Penn State basketball coach Micah Shrewsberry

The relationships Shrewsberry has with both Stevens and Painter have been well documented already, and both coaches have offered their best wishes to their former assistant and friend as Shrewsberry becomes the head coach of the Nittany Lions. It will be comforting to know that if Shrewsberry does run into a problem, help may only be a phone call away.

“I have worked for two of the best coaches you could ever be around and work for in a short amount of time in those two guys. I’m forever grateful for their friendships. They still take my calls to this day.”

Yes, that includes Painter, who continues to be the head coach of one of the programs Penn State hopes to challenge down the line.

“Coach Painter is in our league and he’s still trying to help me with the struggles that I go through in these last nine days,” Shrewsberry said. “I know I have those two guys to reach out to.”

Penn State basketball is quite a rebuilding project, so Shrewsberry may need to make a few phone calls.

[lawrence-related id=1070,1018,382,368]

Follow Nittany Lions Wire on Twitter @NittanyLionWire.

Like Nittany Lions Wire on Facebook.

Despite recent losses, former assistant Micah Shrewsberry says Brad Stevens is happy

While fans may be fretting over recent losses, former Celtics assistant Micah Shrewsberry says his former boss and current friend Brad Stevens is happy with the team.

Even with the recent spate of losses, Boston Celtics head coach Brad Stevens is happy, according to his former assistant coach Micah Shrewsberry.

The former Celtics assistant, now a Purdue Men’s Basketball assistant coach, has a long and deep tie to the Zionsville native, having served as his assistant at Butler before Stevens departed the college ranks to join Boston in 2013.

After six seasons with the Celtics, Shrewsberry moved on to Purdue, but the two Indiana natives have stayed close since.

After watching the disaster that was the 2018-19 season take its toll on the former Butler coach (who blamed himself for much of the turbulence derailing a highly-anticipated season), Shrewsberry believes this iteration of the Celtics has inpired a decidedly different feeling in his friend.

“I think he’s thrilled with how they’re playing, but how they’re going about handling their business is the biggest point,” Shrewsberry said (via the Boston Globe’s Adam Himmelsbach).

“He just looks and sounds happier. He always used to talk about the teams that make Boston proud, and I think that’s what this group is kind of doing. They bring it every single night, and even the nights they’re not at their best, they fight back into it. That’s the kind of fighter’s mentality that I think Brad wants his groups to play with, and it looks like that’s what they’re doing.”

“That’s who they are this year,” he added.

It’s been a long journey since the former Boston assistant picked up fellow Butler basketball alum Gordon Hayward from the airport as he first joined the team in 2017, only to see the injury to his ankle moments into his Celtics tenure derail much of Boston’s plans.

So, seeing Hayward returning to form has been lifting Shrewsbury’s spirits as well, in the sort of way a wrong made whole again tends to.

“I didn’t want that to be his experience in Boston, because in my mind it was going to be such a great experience for him, coming to Boston and being a focal point and having a great career there,” Shrewsberry explained.

“[Hayward’s] a guy Boston fans would love, the way he plays, and he didn’t get that experience his first two years. Now the way he started the season he was really determined to have a great year. I was kind of floored by his start, and so happy for him. He looks so confident again.”

The evolution of the Jay Team has been another point of joy for both Shrewsberry and Stevens. Fourth-year wing Jaylen Brown and third-year swingman Jayson Tatum are finally coming into their own in a way that’s been hard to miss, even for assistant collegiate coaches with their own teams and schedules to worry about.

“For Jaylen, each year how he handles the ball and how he handles situations has gotten so much better,” the Purdue assistant offered when discussing the Georgia native’s leaps in key areas to expanding his game.

“He’s becoming so skilled with the ball where you just trust him. Early on he’d do stuff and you’d be like, ‘Uh, I don’t know what’s going to happen here.’ But more often than not now, good plays are happening because now he’s seeing the floor, he’s handling it. He’s not trying to score all the time.”

“He’s setting guys up as well,” noted the Indianapolis native. “That part of his game is really flourishing.”

Boston’s most celebrated Duke product is making strides as well, according to Shrewsberry, who feels Tatum’s hiccups with accuracy are a product of growing his game and taking on a bigger role.

“It’s fun to see him step up in those moments where they need a big shot or a big play, and he’s stepping into that moment,” said Shrewsberry. “He’s just going to continue to grow in that role.”

With the team going all-in on their youth movement, it’s been a pleasant surprise to most fans and analysts alike just how well the duo has bounced back from the issues which plagued last season during which both showed little growth as prospects.

The increased willingness of both to grow their game in ways which compliment the roster construction, passing often and well for Brown and playing a more diverse offensive game for Tatum has paid dividends for the team more generally.

“With those guys, you don’t know what their ceiling is,” gushed Shrewsberry.

“What you thought they’d be at a certain point in time, now they’ve moved it to a totally different level, and how they keep growing from here, the potential for those two is limitless,” added the 43-year old assistant.

“They’re 23 [Brown] and 21 [Tatum]. They can be as good as they want to be, because they keep growing at such a quick rate,” said Shrewsberry, alluding to the pair’s rapid growth over the course of a still-young season.

It’s easy to get negative when the wins slow down after a sip from the cup of enjoyable Celtics basketball. But Boston’s fanbase, thirsty for wins, would do well to take a page from Shrewsberry’s friend and former boss to go neither too high nor too low.

The season is long, and the roster — despite some painful losses — is doing very well in the present, practically bursting with promise.

No wonder Brad Stevens is happy.