Jayson Tatum’s absence fuels Celtics’ grit ahead of do-or-die Game 6 vs Knicks
Global Desk May 17, 2025 12:22 PM
Synopsis

Boston Celtics star Jayson Tatum is out for the season after Achilles surgery, but his return to the locker room has ignited fresh determination in his teammates. As the Celtics fight to force a Game 7 against the New York Knicks, their leader’s presence still looms large over the series

Jayson Tatum reunites with teammates after Achilles surgery, inspiring Celtics ahead of crucial Game 6 vs New York Knicks at Madison Square Garden (Image via Getty Images)
The Boston Celtics will take the court at Madison Square Garden on Friday night, May 16 and are not just playing for survival but for something far deeper. With their season on the line in Game 6 against the New York Knicks, the defending NBA champions are now drawing inspiration from a teammate who can no longer lace up alongside them.

Jayson Tatum, the face of the Celtics franchise, was released from a New York hospital Thursday, May 15 after undergoing season-ending surgery to repair a ruptured right Achilles tendon. The injury occurred late in Boston’s 121 to 113 Game 4 loss to the Knicks, a moment that turned a tightly contested playoff series into an emotional battle for the team.

Also read: Jayson Tatum’s leg injury rattles Celtics, NBA title hopes wobble

The 27-year-old All-Star reunited with his teammates for the first time since being carried off the court, visiting them at their hotel in Manhattan. Though he won’t play another minute this season, Tatum's emotional presence has added renewed purpose to Boston's desperate playoff push.

A personal visit sparks teamwide motivation
Tatum’s reunion with the Celtics was more than a morale boost, it was a powerful reminder of the bond that carries this team beyond basketball.

“It sucks to see someone go down like that who doesn’t deserve it,” said Celtics guard Sam Hauser. “But he wouldn’t want more than us to just keep winning. We saw him yesterday. He seems to be in good spirits.”

For the Celtics, the visit helped reframe the moment. The locker room was no longer just missing their best scorer. It was witnessing a friend, a brother, going through something deeply personal, and fighting through it with strength.

Celtics guard Payton Pritchard emphasized that Tatum’s visit had nothing to do with playbooks or strategy.

“We didn’t talk about basketball at all. That stuff is bigger than basketball now,” Pritchard said. “It’s seeing how he is as a person, how he’s dealing with stuff.”

Also read: Michael Jordan’s mysterious NBA return sparks intrigue as his new role remains cloaked in uncertainty

Boston’s resilience tested by Knicks in pivotal Game 6
As Game 6 tips off, Boston faces the monumental task of climbing out of a 3 to 1 series hole, a feat achieved by only 13 teams in NBA history. But the Celtics are no strangers to adversity. With Tatum sidelined, head coach Joe Mazzulla and the rest of the squad are turning to their depth and grit to push this series back to Boston for a deciding Game 7 on Monday.

Tatum’s recovery is expected to take about nine months, echoing the timeline Kevin Durant faced after his Achilles tear during the 2019 NBA Finals. While Tatum’s journey back will be long, it’s clear the Celtics are determined to extend their postseason as long as possible, with him still very much in the center of it all.

Celtics channel pain into Playoff fight
The Celtics know what’s at stake. But instead of viewing their current position as a death sentence, they are using it as fuel. Tatum’s physical absence has created an emotional presence that looms large.

Boston’s performance in Game 6 could be remembered not just for basketball tactics or stat sheets, but for the human will behind the run. If they force Game 7, it won’t just be a comeback, it’ll be a tribute.
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