Jayson Tatum said nobody was happier than Joe Mazzula about his ‘tough’ Olympics experience

Joe Mazzulla was happy Jayson Tatum didn’t win Finals MVP too.

Welcome to Layup Lines, For the Win’s basketball newsletter. Subscribe here to get it delivered to your inbox every Monday, Wednesday and Friday. Have feedback for the Layup Lines Crew? Leave your questions, comments and concerns through this brief reader survey. Now, here’s Prince J. Grimes.

The world’s greatest athletes draw motivation from just about anything, big or small. We know that. So it shouldn’t have been a surprise Tuesday to hear Jayson Tatum say he’ll use his experience in this summer’s Olympics as motivation for the upcoming season.

Being benched in two of five games as a recent NBA champion and All-NBA First Team player isn’t a perceived slight. It’s a slight. Intentional or not.

“Motivation? I guess you could say that if you want to simplify,” Tatum told reporters at Celtics media day. “In real time it was tough.”

What he said next, though, was a little surprising to hear.

“I talk to Joe [Mazzulla] a lot. Joe was probably the happiest person in the world that I didn’t win Finals MVP and that I didn’t play in two of the games in the Olympics,” Tatum said. “So, that was odd. But if you know Joe, it makes sense.”

I don’t know Joe. Aside from what he chooses to share with reporters. Like how he watches The Town entirely too much and how he’s probably put more thought into robbing a bank than the average person has. But even the little tidbits we get from the Boston Celtics head coach are enough to understand why he would take joy in his players facing difficult challenges.

This is the same man who was “excited” about a borderline dirty play against Tatum in April, because he wanted to see how his team responded. Mazzulla obviously believes these little obstacles make players better. He would be more disappointed if Tatum didn’t draw motivation from not winning Finals MVP and not being a part of the Olympic rotation.

How far that motivation actually goes remains to be seen. Tatum has been working on fixing his jump shot, which could make the 26-year-old a more lethal player than he already is. So, he’s clearly not resting on his laurels. But he also doesn’t have much to complain about. As Tatum said himself, he won a championship, signed the biggest contract in NBA history and landed the cover of NBA 2K25. Life is good.

Veteran sports writer Frank Isola made that very point Wednesday on SiriusXM’s NBA channel.

“Did I need any extra motivation coming into the season. No. I’m not going to give anybody in particular credit that they’re motivating me to come into the season,” Tatum said.

Motivated or not, the Celtics are the best team in the NBA. They’re +300 favorites at BetMGM to repeat as champions. If they simply play up to the level they’re capable and stay healthy, they’ll be right there in the mix for a title at the end. Tatum can’t manufacture the type of motivation players who haven’t won can.

That’s likely why Mazzulla was happy. Because he knows players that more recently come up short, like Joel Embiid, Paul George, Giannis Antetokounmpo, Damian Lillard, Jalen Brunson, Tyrese Haliburton and Donovan Mitchell, are extra motivated. And now they’re hunting the Celtics. Boston can’t afford to let up now.


JJ Redick’s Lakers starting 5

Jayne Kamin-Oncea-USA TODAY Sports

JJ Redick was on a recent episode of The Lowe Post podcast with Zach Lowe, and he revealed what his starting lineup is going to be for the Los Angeles Lakers when the season starts.

It’ll be LeBron James, Anthony Davis, Austin Reaves, D’Angelo Russell and Rui Hachimura.

Surprisingly, it’s a lineup former Lakers coach Darvin Ham didn’t play at all during the first half of the 2023-24 season. But as FTW’s Bryan Kalbrosky wrote, it was a very effective lineup once he did come around to it:

“As noted by Redick, the five players mentioned above went “23-10” during their games together last season.

When he was head coach of the Lakers, per Basketball-Reference.com, Ham did not play this five-man group until January 21. That realization somehow took until more than halfway through the season.

But starting from when this group began playing together, it became one of the best high-volume five-man lineups in the league.

Los Angeles has outscored opponents by 9.46 points per 100 possessions in the 547 minutes that this unit has played alongside one another, via PBPStats. It is a data-backed group that performs well on both sides of the ball.”

Sometimes good coaching is just a matter of doing the simple things, like sticking with what works. Good on Redick for doing just that to get things started.

Time will tell if he’s able to make the necessary adjustments when things aren’t working as well.


Shootaround

LeBron James has already viciously scored on Bronny during a Lakers scrimmage

Kamala Harris going on the ‘All the Smoke’ podcast has NBA fans cracking all the jokes

Jaylen Brown arrogantly singled out the Pistons with a flex about his leadership style

—  DiJonai Carrington wins 2024 WNBA Most Improved Player

Stephen Curry, Jayson Tatum lead odds for Celtics-Warriors NBA Finals MVP

A look at the odds for Finals MVP between the Celtics and Warriors.

The Golden State Warriors are in the NBA Finals for the sixth time in eight years, seeking their fourth title in that span. However, the players voted most valuable from their previous runs are out of the picture. That means if Golden State wins it all, they’ll likely have a third different NBA Finals MVP in a short span. Oddsmakers like that player to be Stephen Curry.

Curry has the shortest odds to win NBA Finals MVP at +100 on Tipico Sportsbook. It’s one of the final pieces missing from his legendary career, and it can’t be assumed he’ll get another shot to win it.

With zero games of NBA Finals experience, the Boston Celtics are led by Jayson Tatum, who has the second shortest odds at +175. After Tatum, the odds get a lot longer for anyone else, though Jaylen Brown gives Boston players two of the top three shortest odds.

Odds for NBA Finals MVP
  • Stephen Curry +100
  • Jayson Tatum +175
  • Jaylen Brown +1200
  • Klay Thompson +1500
  • Draymond Green +1500
  • Marcus Smart +3000
  • Andrew Wiggins +3000
  • Jordan Poole +3000
  • Al Horford +8000
  • Kevon Looney +10000
  • Robert Williams +20000
  • Grant Williams +30000
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Stephen Curry is betting favorite for NBA Finals MVP, and this might be his best shot at winning it

Curry won’t get a better opportunity than this.

The Eastern Conference Finals hasn’t ended yet, but you can already put your bets in for who will win MVP of the NBA Finals. Now that the Golden State Warriors have secured their spot in the championship, Stephen Curry has emerged as the favorite to win the award at +100 odds on Tipico Sportsbook.

It’s been an elusive award for Curry, who has two regular season MVPs to his name but has yet to win the Finals MVP in five previous trips. While he was easily the best player on the Warriors during their first championship run, in 2014-15, the award went to Andre Iguodala. And Kevin Durant won MVP of their next two championships. In the years Golden State lost, LeBron James and Kawhi Leonard won.

However, Curry, who was named the inaugural Western Conference Finals MVP after Thursday’s win, has his best opportunity ahead of him.

Boston Celtics All-Stars Jayson Tatum (+185) and Jayen Brown (+900) have the second and third best Finals MVP odds, followed by Klay Thompson and Draymond Green at +1300 apiece. Jimmy Butler has the best odds of any Miami Heat player at +2000, though that could potentially shorten if Miami forces a Game 7 on Friday.

Regardless of which team from the East advances, this might be the first time Curry has a legitimate argument as the best player in the series. Though he was the league MVP and betting favorite in 2015, James was already a champion and still widely considered the NBA’s top dog — and he played like it both years, gaining Finals MVP buzz in a loss.

Little did we know at the time, that would be Curry’s best shot at winning it until now. The Warriors lost in 2016, Durant came over from OKC and Curry wasn’t their best player anymore. And once Durant and Klay Thompson went down in 2019, the Warriors didn’t stand a chance against Leonard and the Toronto Raptors.

Now, Curry is the top dog again. If the Celtics advance, there’s a case to be made for Tatum as the best player in the series, but he simply doesn’t have the same experience on this stage. Same can be said for Butler. No one on either Eastern Conference team has Curry’s combination of skill and Finals experience. And both teams would be an underdog to the Warriors, who have -145 odds to win it all.

That puts Curry, 34, in the driver seat for NBA Finals MVP, the last piece missing from his legendary career. And because the Warriors are no longer the young upstarts, there’s no guarantee he’ll get another shot. Now is the time.

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How many of Boston’s players have been named Finals MVP – and who were they?

Can you name the players — and better yet, the seasons — Boston had a player named Finals MVP?

Even though the award was created in 1969, the final year of the Boston Celtics’ golden era of championships in the 1960s (and despite winning the title, they didn’t have a player win the award), only their rival Los Angeles Lakers can lay claim to more NBA Finals Most Valuable Player (MVP) awards since it was first created.

Since that year, the Celtics have had one of their players named Finals MVP six times total among five total players, one particular superstar getting the nod in two separate Finals Platform. Who are the players, and when are the seasons when they won it?

Make your guesses and scroll down to see how you did.

2020 Lakers were created in LeBron’s image, after a patient wait

LeBron James arriving in Los Angeles was even met with skepticism from some Lakers fans, but there is no doubt the title team was led by him.

LeBron James led the Los Angeles Lakers to a championship and has now earned the adoration of Lakers fans. But it wasn’t always easy for everyone. Eventually, LeBron created a championship team in his image by also realizing that he could let go of some things he would have otherwise felt the need to control. It was through learning from his past experiences that he was able to lead the most dominant championship team he has ever been a part of. But before, we talk about this season, I want to take it back to just before LeBron joined the Lakers.

I’m far from a regular at All-Star Weekend, but the 2018 All-Star Weekend in Los Angeles, only a few months before LeBron would eventually join the Lakers, felt too important to pass up. And I had to get around, so I would ride in ride-shares, with the discussion often turning to All-Star weekend, before I would eventually bring up LeBron and the Lakers. I was already editing this site and the prospect of LeBron in Los Angeles, particularly after Kyrie Irving left Cleveland, was always in my LeBron Thought Process. I had also gone to an UNINTERRUPTED event during the weekend and frankly, all of the signs that he was going to be a Laker were there to see for all who were there. So I would often ask Lakers fans when I met them what they thought about adding LeBron. Most were stoked, but many were skeptical. The most skeptical of them all drove me in a ride-share, which stuck with me much more than any of the Cool Kid Conversations you can have at places like All-Star Weekend.

The passionate Laker fan behind the wheel, taking me back to my friend’s place in Playa Del Rey, insisted that above all else, he did not want LeBron James to be on one-year contracts like he was with the Cavaliers. He needed LeBron to commit to the Lakers and stop putting his thirst for personal power above the team. Upon arrival, he signed a 4-year deal, taking a first step in letting go of some of his power but laying the foundation for a more stable work environment.

But that goodwill with Lakers faithful was quickly erased as it became clear the young Lakers were soon to be the pieces to bring in LeBron’s preferred running mate, Anthony Davis. That move, was, in fact, for the goodwill of the franchise, but it hurt. In between, LeBron had to acquiesce some power to the Lakers brand, Jeanie Buss, Linda Rambis, and eventually, Rob Pelinka and Frank Vogel.

Rather than extract power in an adversarial fashion, LeBron and Rich Paul built bridges. LeBron organized a team mini-camp in Las Vegas before training camp, helping create the bonds that would be fortified when they were locked inside various Ritz-Carlton’s in China, watching decals featuring them get torn down while they were watching. Back in November, Danny Green said the team’s trip to China helped create a unity that he had not experienced before in his career.

Klutch, too, built bridges with the Lakers family. During the stoppage, Klutch hired agent Omar Wilkes to run their Basketball Division as Rich Paul moved to be the CEO of the company. It is likely no coincidence that Wilkes is the son of 80s Lakers Legend Jamaal Wilkes. Nobody wins when the family feuds, which is something both Klutch and the Lakers had to learn over the years. It’s something the Clippers are still learning.

LeBron’s leadership, after being a somewhat distant mentor to the younger Lakers last season, helped create the most dominant champion he has ever been on. When you look at the defense, playoff record, and the duo of LeBron and Anthony Davis, LeBron has never been a part of a team that was this good. And perhaps as a reflection of his own growth, LeBron created the most dominant team he’s ever been on.

In Miami, the Big 3 aura was inescapable and while they were together, it was always filled with immense pressure and an exploding social media age. In Cleveland, the Cavaliers era was defined by cliques. And while there were definitely groups who hung together or did different things, LeBron helped cultivate a culture in which everyone was together more often than not. It resulted in his best team.

With the 2019-20 Lakers, LeBron would organize team meals, a page he took from San Antonio’s Gregg Popovich. LeBron’s group chat messages to the squad have become detail fodder for every writer in the bubble and the Madden tournament was not only a great piece of content but a competition that the Lakers could all participate in to keep them occupied while they were quarantined with each other for the first 2 months of their stay.

In terms of accomplishments, the 2016 Championship over the Golden State Warriors after going down 3-1 will never be topped. But in terms of which team was the most dominant? The 2020 Lakers, in large part to the excellence of LeBron’s moves, both ones he influenced and ones he let happen naturally by simply letting things play out, were his best team yet.

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LeBron James wins 2020 NBA Finals MVP after Game 6 win: ‘I want my damn respect’

Los Angeles Lakers leader LeBron James won his 4th championship and his 4th NBA Finals MVP award.

LeBron James led the Los Angeles Lakers to a Game 6 blowout victory and had a triple-double in the closeout game, on his way to a 4th NBA Championship and eventually a 4th NBA Finals MVP award on Sunday night.

In closeout games in the bubble, LeBron averaged 34.2 points, 12.8 rebounds, 8.8 assists while shooting 64% from the field and 45% from the 3-point line. After winning the award, LeBron said that he wanted respect for the franchise, his teammates, Rob Pelinka, Frank Vogel, and of course, he wanted “his damn respect.”

Of course, in all of the games that the Lakers won in the series, LeBron James had a great deal of help. Anthony Davis and Kentavious Caldwell-Pope were them most consistent contributors on the Lakers all bubble long, but Rajon Rondo had a huge game in Game 6 to help get the Lakers over the hump. But through it all, LeBron was the leader for the Lakers from Game 1of the season all the way to the end of this playoff run.

Now the Lakers are champions. Anthony Davis has won his first title, Danny  Green has won his fourth championship, while Rondo wins his 2nd championship, and Dwight Howard added a championship to his hall of fame career as well.

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