
The Cleveland Cavaliers were supposed to rule the Eastern Conference this season, while the Boston Celtics had a decimated roster. After Jaylen Brown had a triple-double in a 117-115 Celtics victory, Boston is 2-0 against Cleveland and only a half-game back in the standings.
Boston has lost Jrue Holiday, Kristaps Porzingis, Al Horford and Luke Kornet from their 2024 title team, while Jayson Tatum is out with an Achilles tear. The other Celtics are stepping up, with Payton Pritchard putting up 42 points Sunday.
Even after all their personnel losses, the Celtics have the NBA's No. 5 offense based on offensive rating. Much of that is due to Brown, who is averaging 28.4 points, the best mark of his career. His three-point shooting is up to 34.7 percent (32.4 percent last season), and he's shooting nearly 50 percent overall.
The key is, he'll adjust his game to what the Celtics need. Brown's shot wasn't falling Sunday, as he was 3-of-13 from the field. So Brown got to the foul line for 16 free throws, and distributed the ball, finishing with 11 assists. In the fourth quarter, he had three assists and zero field-goal attempts. He also crashed the boards, grabbing seven rebounds in the first quarter as the Celtics hung with the Cavaliers by out-rebounding them.
One other smart move? Getting the ball to Pritchard, who had 15 points in the final quarter while holding off a frantic Cavs comeback. He was 4-of-5 from the field and made all six of his free throws in the final two minutes.
Payton Pritchard lit up the scoreboard in the Celtics' road W in Cleveland!
— NBA (@NBA) December 1, 2025
☘️ 42 PTS
☘️ 6 3PM
It's the second 40-PT game of Pritchard's career! pic.twitter.com/lVORGng1mP
Last season, the Cavaliers had the league's top offensive rating. This year, they're 14th. The biggest reason is that they're not making shots.
Cleveland's three-point percentage has dipped from 38.3 percent to 35.4 percent, and its overall field-goal percentage dropped from 49.1 percent to 46 percent. Those numbers are both in the bottom half of the NBA, and the Cavs are the fifth-worst free-throw shooting team in the league (75.7 percent).
What's changed? One is the unavailability of their best outside shooter, Darius Garland, who played only his seventh game of the season Sunday after a toe injury sidelined him for months.
Starting small forward Max Strus has been injured all season long after shooting 38.9 percent from deep last season. His replacement, De'Andre Hunter, scored eight points and was -31 against the Celtics in a two-point loss. He's shooting only 33 percent on threes. The team also misses departed super-sub Ty Jerome, who shot 43.9 percent on threes and finished third in the Sixth Man of the Year voting.
As a result, Donovan Mitchell is carrying the offense by himself, averaging 29.9 points and sinking more than four three-pointers a game, both career highs. But it's a heavy load on Mitchell, compared to last season's more egalitarian offense.
Maybe Cleveland just needs to get their roster healthy to get its offense together. But the undermanned Celtics have hardly missed a beat on the offensive end, and that's why they're nipping at the Cavaliers' heels in the East.
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