Paul Pierce a Hall of Famer for the Celtics, and Jayson Tatum working out together

All-NBA forward Jayson Tatum, the rising star of the Boston Celtics, was recently seen working out with Celtics Hall of Fame legend Paul Pierce at the team’s practice facilities at Auerbach Center. Is the St. Louis native picking up tips from the champion small forward who carried the team to a title in 2008 with the help of Kevin Garnett and Ray Allen?

Tatum’s respect for the game’s past and his willingness to learn from veterans like Pierce show clues about his coachability and dedication to winning. Tatum’s playing style and Pierce’s are not too far apart, with the Duke alum ripe to pick up some of the old man game that made The Truth such a terror to guard.

The hosts of the CLNS Media “A-List” podcast recently weighed in on Tatum and Pierce working out together on a recent episode.

Take a look at the clip embedded above to hear what they had to say about Taco Jay getting ready for the 2023-24 season with Pierce.

There has been a fair amount of sticker shock over star Boston Celtics forward Jaylen Brown’s recent supermax contract extension, but some analysts are also concerned about how the deal will age.

Count among them Bleacher Report’s Zach Buckley, who recently rated the Georgia native as likely to be the fifth-worst deal in the NBA based on “everything from age and talent to injury history and remaining contract terms.”

For Buckley, Brown’s contract “could get a little rough, particularly if he never makes the ball-handling and playmaking improvements he’d need to crack the league’s top 10. … Even if he clears that threshold at some point, he could be entering the early stages of his decline by the 2026-27 campaign.”

“If his stats start to dip, though, his salary will keep climbing regardless,” he adds. “His average salary for the final three seasons of his pact sits north of $61 million. That kind of coin should only be attached to a no-brainer superstar. Brown just hasn’t hit that tier

So, he probably needs to elevate his game in order to justify his pay rate,” suggests Buckley. “Yet, even maintaining his present level could be tricky as he enters his 30s for the final two seasons of his new deal.”

“Boston may not feel buyer’s remorse, but the swingman could still rank among the league’s most overpaid players in three years

 

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