While all eyes are on Jayson Tatum’s recovery from a ruptured Achilles, his fellow Boston Celtics star is dealing with an injury worth watching this offseason as well.
Jaylen Brown played through a partially torn meniscus in his right knee for a good chunk of the season and into the playoffs. It’s an issue Celtics president of basketball operations Brad Stevens said Brown dealt with “for a while.”
Now the question becomes will Brown need surgery to repair his knee or will rest in the offseason be enough? Brown recently said he’s still weighing his options.
“l got a lot of doctors I gotta get evaluated with — see the potential for surgery versus no surgery, wait to speak to the (Celtics) organization,” Brown told CelticsBlog’s Noa Dalzell at a 741 event this past Saturday. “For now, it’s just rest and recovery. I’m taking a step back from a long season. Mentally, it was a lot of stuff going on.”
Boston’s second-round exit to the New York Knicks is the earliest the Celtics have been kicked out of the playoffs since 2021 — when Brown was sidelined with torn ligaments in his wrist. Since then, Brown played in 266 regular-season games and another 74 playoff contests, the miles taking its toll.
Story continues below advertisement
The longer offseason than what was expected for the Celtics should do Brown good on the health-front. He usually attacks the offseason with strenuous workouts, like the ones he does under water, going viral.
But Brown may need to take a different approach this summer due to his knee.
“Right now, I’m decompressing emotionally,” Brown said. “And then in a week or so, I pick up the pieces. I see what the direction is for myself, my health, and the organization. And, whatever the outcome is, I’m excited.”