NBA Finals MVP caps truly unique year for Jaylen Brown
After winning Eastern Conference Finals MVP a few weeks ago, Jaylen Brown was named NBA Finals MVP on Monday night.
A year ago, much of the conversation around Boston Celtics forward Jaylen Brown surrounded his ability to lift the team in big games, after Jayson Tatum rolled his ankle in Game 7 of the Eastern Conference Finals against the Miami Heat. In Tatum’s absence Brown struggled shooting 8-of-23 with eight turnovers and a team-worst minus-17 rating. That led to questions about Brown’s status as a big game player.
Fast forward a year and those questions have been answered. Emphatically.
Three weeks ago Brown, 27, stood on the stage at Gainbridge Fieldhouse in Indianapolis, Indiana as he was named Eastern Conference Finals MVP. On Monday night he completed the set, as he was named 2024 NBA Finals MVP after the Celtics’ Game 5 win over the Mavericks at TD Garden.
In the Finals, Brown averaged 20.8 points, 5.4 rebounds, and five assists per game over the five games. He hit a number of big shots – highlighted by his elbow jumper to seal Game 3 – and spent much of the series defending the NBA’s leading scorer in Luka Doncic. In the closeout game Brown scored 21 points while adding eight rebounds and six assists with two steals.
Despite that individual effort, Brown was quick to give the credit to his teammates. “I share this with my brothers and my partner in crime, Jayson Tatum,” Brown said on the stage after the game. “He was with me the whole way. So, we share this s–t together.”
Tatum returned the favor postgame. “First of all, congrats to him. Well-deserved. Extremely happy for him. This is a hell of an accomplishment,” he told reporters. “it was great to see him have that moment and share that moment with him. I’m extremely happy for him. Well-deserved. That was big-time. He earned that.”
Brown also said he feels he doesn’t need to use this award (as well as the championship) as ‘vindication’ for getting snubbed from some individual awards this year – namely the All-NBA teams.
“If you would have asked me that maybe a year ago, I would probably say yeah [it’s vindication]. But just at the point I got to right now, it feels great. But any of the personal awards, it is what it is,” Brown explained.
The one area Brown did get personal was when talking about the Finals MVP Trophy’s namesake, Celtics legend Bill Russell. Brown and Russell were close from the time Brown was drafted in 2016 until Russell’s passing in the summer of 2022.
“To be honest, I can’t even put it into words. Just Bill Russell and what he’s meant for me through my Boston journey, and his spirit. Everything that he stood for,” Brown said. “For this to be the Bill Russell MVP Award, it just – I’ve got nothing, man. I don’t even know what to say. It’s unreal.”
This wraps up what was quite the year for Brown. Following the Celtics’ elimination last year he signed a supermax deal of five years, $304 million making him the highest-paid player in NBA history. He went on to start a career-high 70 games and make his third All-Star game, and then of course star during the Celtics’ run to Banner 18.
However, Brown recognizes that may not be enough to garner wider recognition at an elite player in the public eye.
“Yeah, the doubters, they may be quiet now, but they will be back,” Brown said after the game. “They will be back next year with something to say. I’ll embrace that moment the same and get after it yet again.”
As of Monday night, the book is closed on Brown’s 2023-2024 season. The only question he has left to answer – can he match or exceed it next year?