basketball

NBA playoffs 2026: The scariest takeaway in the East? Boston's Jayson Tatum is 'still just trying to ramp up'

By Ben RohrbachYahoo Sports

The Celtics star dominated in his first playoff game since returning from his Achilles injury — and he's still getting better.

BOSTON — As recently as the start of February, Jayson Tatum wasn’t sure he was going to return this season. He was focused on attacking his rehab from a torn right Achilles tendon in May, hanging around the team, just trying to feel a part of the Boston Celtics, even if he couldn’t take the floor until the NBA’s 2026-27 campaign. A side effect to the injury: Tatum lost his confidence — not only in his right leg, but in his ability to return to the player he was, a perennial candidate for the NBA’s MVP.

He would gain a little of it back each time he hit a rehab benchmark two weeks early. Then, a funny thing happened in the next step of his rehab: On Feb. 10, it was time to play a live basketball game for the first time, scrimmaging against the Maine Celtics.

It was only then he thought, “Oh, I might come back this year. ” He asked his teammates after each session, “How did I look? ” And they would remind him, in one form or another, that he is Jayson Tatum, and they are the Boston Celtics, and together they have enjoyed more success than most any other team of their era.

“The confidence that they instilled in me was impactful,” said Tatum. “He needed us,” added Celtics head coach Joe Mazzulla. “And we needed him.