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We’re not here to sell you a gallon of green Kool-Aid. The Boston Celtics’ 2025-26 season will feature more bumps in the road than recent years and the margin for error for this talent-depleted team is razor thin, especially as Jayson Tatum rehabs from Achilles surgery.

But one thing is certain: The Celtics are approaching the obvious uncertainty ahead with remarkable vigor and an utter refusal to put a ceiling on what’s to come. 

In an offseason where it would be very easy to get discouraged — both by Tatum’s injury and a talent drain forced upon a team by a restricted new collective bargaining agreement — the Celtics remain unfailingly positive. All that matters is putting one good day after the next.

Where will that lead this team? We won’t suspect to know for sure. But we do believe the 2025-26 season will be far more enjoyable than most seem to be predicting (though we’ll also relent that there are obvious weak spots in Boston’s overhauled depth chart and an injury to any member of the remaining championship core could change the outlook of the season in a hurry).

Good luck trying to get anyone inside the Auerbach Center to buy into a so-called “gap” year. While the team endured painful-yet-inevitable changes in order to open avenues toward building the next championship-caliber roster, those in green universally refuse to put a ceiling on what’s possible for the 2025-26 squad.

“I said this when I was coaching all the time, I never put a ceiling on any team,” Celtics president of basketball operations Brad Stevens said in July. “We were fortunate to have a number of teams there, as we led up to this kind of [championship] window, that were really fun, and that I thought never really cared about ceilings and had a chip on their shoulders. I expected this team will, too. 

“The last time that Jaylen Brown was on a team that was doubted was a long time ago. The last time that Payton Pritchard’s been on a team that was doubted — he probably hasn’t been. I mean, you go down the list, Derrick White and all these guys. I’m excited to see what this team has in store. I know [coach] Joe [Mazzulla is] excited.”

For his part, Pritchard was adamant when we talked last week that the expectations in Boston have not changed.

“We’re definitely trying to be a playoff team. We’re trying to win a championship,” said Pritchard. “It’s not even about playoffs; we have one standard in Boston and it’s to win a championship. Everybody in that locker room will have the goal of competing for a championship. And we will do everything in our power necessary to go for that. That’s what [fans] should know.”

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We’ve spent a lot of this offseason thinking about the radical shift in expectations for these Celtics. A championship-or-bust mentality is inevitable for a team with 18 banners hanging above its court, but it also made it hard to savor the small wins along the way. Every bump in the road hit like plane turbulence while you sometimes had to remind yourself to savor the little victories. 

One of our favorite seasons covering this team was the magical 2016-17 campaign when Isaiah Thomas thrust himself into the MVP conversation while carrying a hard-playing, mentally-strong group straight to the Eastern Conference Finals. Watching that team exceed expectations — with Thomas routinely making fourth-quarter magic — made that season almost as endearing as some of the championship seasons.

Can history repeat itself with this group? If you’re looking at Boston’s frontcourt depth chart after the summer changes and scoffing, we get it. But we’re strangely excited to simply see where this goes.

This season is going to answer a whole bunch of questions about individual players and who will be key pieces to Banner 19. Instead of fretting who’s not on the floor, it’s OK if you simply want to embrace who is. Whatever ceiling you perceive for Jaylen Brown or Derrick White or Pritchard, that might just change during the 2025-26 season.

And then there’s Tatum.

We subscribe strongly to the notion that you don’t even consider putting Tatum back on the court until he is at full health. And given the history of Achilles injuries, it’s easy to suspect Tatum probably wouldn’t return until the start of the 2026-27 season.

But we also know Tatum is a maniac who has relentlessly attacked the first three months of his rehab. The Celtics put him in the best position to expedite his recovery by getting him into surgery just hours after the devastating injury. Spend even a little bit of time reading about the rehab of NFL running back Cam Akers, and it’s hard not to envision Tatum potentially ramping up activities early in calendar year 2026.

Again, that’s not to suggest the team ought to consider bringing him back expeditiously. But we believe the major parties involved when they suggest that there is no timeline, and that they will simply cross each medical bridge as they cross them.

The Indiana Pacers were quick to rule out Tyrese Haliburton for the 2025-26 season after a torn Achilles in the NBA Finals. The Celtics have resisted doing the same with Tatum. Our read is that Boston chose that approach so as to not put a ceiling on what’s possible.

If Tatum is hell-bent on attacking his rehab — even if just for the possibility of returning quicker than most who have navigated the same injury — then whey take away any bit of hope? The focus right now is on putting one good day in front of another. 

If the season goes sideways and the Celtics are not as competitive with this new-look roster, then maybe that allows Tatum and Co. to take a longer view on his return. If Boston exceeds expectations and plays beyond mid-April, then the player, front office, and medical staff can assess the value in an earlier return. 

After Tatum made an appearance at a community event in Providence on Thursday, Celtics team president Rich Gotham offered the latest glimpse into that no-ceilings mentality when asked about the possibility of Tatum attempting to return this season.

“[Tatum is] going to do everything he can to put us in a position to make a decision,” said Gotham.

Even that reads like Celtics catnip. The “Jay Watch” on its own will help navigate the season. Tatum’s eventual return offers hope of a brighter future regardless of how the 2025-26 season plays out. 

The Celtics have spent much of the summer getting their finances in order. The departures of championship pieces like Kristaps Porzingis, Jrue Holiday, Luke Kornet, and (presumably soon) Al Horford, have not been easy for fans to endure. The team could shed even more money in a quest to get below the tax. Splurging to build a championship roster is a heck of a lot more fun than shedding to avoid the tax and aprons.

It’s on Stevens and his front office staff to put this team in position to start adding again soon. Having to navigate some of these financial pain points in a season where Tatum will miss time makes it slightly easier to endure.

But our advice is not to get too hung up on the big picture. Embrace the steps on the journey back to being a title contender. Embrace Tatum’s progress. Embrace the possibility that players like Brown, White, and Pritchard will get every opportunity to show their full potential. 

The Celtics are not putting a ceiling on this year’s team. They’re just focused on each day. We’ll see where that takes them.

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