Hartford Courant (Sunday)

Team can’t afford to have Tatum struggle

- By Karen Guregian

BOSTON — The Celtics needed a heroic performanc­e from Jayson Tatum, their resident superstar and All-NBA first-teamer, in order to seize control of their NBA Finals series with the Warriors.

They needed the type of performanc­e Steph Curry (43 points, 10 in the fourth quarter) delivered, allowing the Warriors to tie the series heading back to San Francisco for Game 5.

Only Tatum didn’t match that cape-on, put-the-team-on-your-back, rise-to-theoccasio­n type of effort Golden State got from their veteran star.

Clinging to a five-point lead with 7:32 to go in the game, Tatum wasn’t the closer the Celtics desperatel­y needed on the floor. He wasn’t the same player who took down the Milwaukee Bucks in Game 6 of that series with a brilliant 46-point effort.

Instead, he struggled down the stretch and couldn’t come through during crunch time.

Of his 23 points, only three came in the fourth quarter, as Tatum connected on just one of five attempts. Shooting 8-for23 overall in what could have been a killshot type of game up 2-1 in the series isn’t going to get the job done.

Neither is having a Marcus Smart 3-point launch party with the game on the line as both Tatum and Jaylen Brown remained silent leaving others to try and win the game.

Celtics head coach Ime Udoka had taken both Tatum and Brown aside following a time out at that crucial juncture in the fourth quarter with the team up by five, to maybe try and light a fire under his two stars.

Or maybe he once again suggested they stop playing like A-holes, as he did to the group in Game 3.

Whether Udoka went to the insult, or propped them both up, it didn’t work with the C’s being outscored 21-6 from that point on.

Tatum just couldn’t find the proper balance or rhythm between shooting and passing. And that was how it was much of the time in the Celtics’ 107-97 loss to the Warriors, with the series now tied 2-all.

“Him being the player he is, these are the moments where he has to come alive and figure it out,” said Smart, who had 18 points. “He will. We don’t know when it is, but we’re sure it’s going to happen soon, we’re ready for it, and we’re here to back him up.”

Tatum can’t come alive soon enough, especially with two of the remaining

three games — if it goes that far — out west.

Along with his 11 rebounds and 6 assists, Tatum also committed six of the team’s 16 turnovers, the latter being a sign of his indecision at times.

“Give them credit, they’re a great team. They’re playing well. They got a game plan, things like that,” Tatum said following the loss. “But it’s on me. I got to be better. I know I’m impacting the game in other ways, but I got to be more efficient, shoot the ball better, finish at the rim better.

“I take accountabi­lity for that. I just look forward to Monday. Leave this one behind us. Learn from it, watch the film, things like that, but everybody probably feels like they got to be better, myself included. Just go get it on Monday.”

The C’s led by five at the half, trailed by one after the third quarter, quickly took a lead in the fourth, and just couldn’t keep it together. The offense was stagnant, losing the ball movement that’s made them so successful.

Udoka was asked about Tatum’s struggles at the rim, and harkened back to a familiar theme with his star.

“At times he’s looking for fouls. They are a team that loads up in certain games,” Udoka said. “He’s finding the outlets. Shooting over two, three guys. That’s the balance of being aggressive and picking your spots and doing what he’s done in previous games, which is kicked it out and got wide-open looks.

“That’s the ongoing theme so to speak, him getting to the basket, being a scorer as well as a playmaker. They do a good job with their rotations. Sometimes hunting fouls instead of going to finish. I’ve seen that in a few games so far.”

 ?? STEVEN SENNE/AP ?? Celtics forward Jayson Tatum reacts during the fourth quarter of Game 4 of the NBA Finals against the Warriors on Friday in Boston.
STEVEN SENNE/AP Celtics forward Jayson Tatum reacts during the fourth quarter of Game 4 of the NBA Finals against the Warriors on Friday in Boston.

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