Why Jayson Tatum proved he’s heading toward superstardom despite shooting struggles in Game 1

Those dimes, though.

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Hey! Charles Curtis here to talk some hoops, and I’m the happiest that Game 1 of the NBA Finals was a close one (despite the final score). It means we’re probably in for an incredible rest of the series of back-and-forth hoops.

The thing I took away from Thursday was to readdress something I wrote literally a month ago for this very newsletter.

I declared — and continue to say — that Jayson Tatum isn’t quite a superstar yet, but he’s right there, about to perhaps take the leap that will propel him into the conversation about best NBA players right now.

And in Game 1 of the Finals, we saw him struggle to shoot. He hit just 3-of-17 attempts, not great for the player who’s supposed to be the 1A to Jaylen Brown’s 1B (or is it the other way around?).

But then there were the 13 assists, a sign that he knew that he needed to help out a different way when he shot just wasn’t falling. And Al Horford noticed (via NBC Sports):

“His playmaking has gotten better steadily. Tonight it was just brilliant. Offensively he didn’t really get it going scoring-wise, but then he was finding guys. He was reading the defense. It just shows his growth.”

That pretty much sealed it for me. It’s a great point from a player who knows brilliance when he sees it, and I’m ready to change my mind, at least heading into next season, maybe even in the next game.

A leap is coming from Tatum, it’s just a matter of when, not if.

The Tip-Off

Some NBA goodness from around the USA TODAY Sports network.

(Photo by Ezra Shaw/Getty Images)

There’s an interesting trend going on with betting on the spread in the NBA Finals, as our Prince Grimes noted after the Celtics won:

Since 2005, teams that get 40% or less of the bets wagered in a Finals matchup have gone 14-7 against the spread, according to a tweet from BetMGM’s John Ewing. So basically, people who have bet against the whichever side the public heavily favors during the NBA Finals have won more than 66% of the time.

Want to take a guess at what happened Thursday? Yep. It’s a good idea to bet against the public right now!

Shootaround

 (Photo by Thearon W. Henderson/Getty Images) 

— Al Horford hit a Dray-like flex and blew a kiss after Game 1. What a night for him! He currently leads my NBA Finals MVP rankings.

— Meet Jeremy Sochan, the most “versatile” and “disruptive” prospect in the 2022 NBA Draft.

— Patrick Beverley has thoughts on what happened in Game 1

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