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Steve Kerr’s decision to not play Jayson Tatum in two of the United States wins in the Olympics caused a bit of an uproar, with several former Celtics stars criticizing the coach.
Kevin Garnett, however, has a different take on the matter. The Basketball Hall of Famer believes that it’s a good thing that Tatum didn’t get as much run as expected in the Olympics it allowed him to get a bit of rest after winning an NBA title.
“One of the harder years that I had personally was when you play in the Olympics,” Garnett said in an episode of his podcast, “KG Certified.” “Not only that, but Jayson Tatum has won the NBA Championship in the Olympic year, which is probably the most difficult to do, right? Not only does Jayson not have a summer of relaxing, rejuvenating himself, and getting ready for another year, but you’ve got to lock in when you [play] for Team USA. It’s serious business.”
Even though Tatum is only 26, he’s logged a lot of minutes already in his NBA career due to his durability and Boston’s deep playoff runs. He led the Celtics in total minutes this past season, logging 2,645 minutes in the regular season (16th-most in the NBA) and 768 in the postseason. As of March, he had played 1,455 minutes more than anyone else in the NBA since he was drafted in 2017, according to Boston Sports Info.
Garnett can somewhat relate to Tatum in that regard. He played all but 11 regular-season games in his first five seasons in the league (averaging 36.9 minutes per game) before playing for USA Basketball in the 2000 Summer Olympics. The Sydney Games were also played in September of that year, giving the players on that team less time to rest between the end of the Olympics and the start of the NBA season.
Garnett ended up having a fine year following the Olympics, finishing fifth in MVP voting in the 2000-01 season. But unlike Tatum, Garnett wasn’t coming off a title run, getting eliminated in the first round of the playoffs in the season prior.
Still, Garnett has somewhat of an idea of how fatigued Tatum might be after a long year of basketball.
“It was great that he didn’t have to play a lot of minutes,” Garnett said. “He’s coming off the Finals. I know [Derrick White] and [Jrue] Holiday were there, but to play big minutes [for] the USA, I’m glad they didn’t need Jayson Tatum. I’m glad he got to actually rest and chill.”
With Tatum coming off a title run, Garnett speculated that the Celtics star might have had a dialogue with USA Basketball about having a lesser load with the team.
“When he was getting these DNPs, I bet you that there was a conversation with him and Grant Hill or with management about coming on the team and being able to rest,” Garnett said. “When you win, you get a shortened [offseason]. Everybody else gets four, five months off and you probably get two, 2.5? And then it’s right back in the lab.”
Tatum had an excused tardiness to the team’s camp in Las Vegas in early July, arriving a couple of days late for an undisclosed reason. But he seemed a bit surprised by not playing in the two games against Serbia and logging the second-fewest minutes on the team during the Olympics.
“It was a tough personal experience on the court, but I’m not going to make any decision off emotions,” Tatum told reporters following Team USA’s win over France in the gold medal game if he’d return to the team for the 2028 Olympics. “If you asked me right now if I was going to play in 2028 – it is four years from now and I [would have] to take time and think about that. So I’m not going to make any decision based off how this experience was or how I felt individually.”
Regardless, Tatum’s summer marked just the 10th time that a player has won an NBA title and an Olympic gold medal in the same year (with Holiday and White accounting for two of those occasions). So far, only Michael Jordan (1992-93), Scottie Pippen (1992-93, 1996-97), and LeBron James (2012-13) were the only players to repeat as NBA champions in the following year.
As Tatum, Holiday, and White look to join that company, Garnett is happy that the Celtics’ top star got to save some miles. He also liked how Tatum approached the situation, too.
“I can only imagine how difficult that was for him,” Garnett said. “But shout out to JT, man. I don’t think you heard him bickering. I didn’t hear any echoes about him being unhappy or anything like that. I just think he was trying to get through it and micromanage it.”
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Beyond Garrett Crochet and Roman Anthony on Opening Day, and Wilyer Abreu, in general, not much is going right for the Boston Red Sox in the first games of the 2026 season.
After dropping the last two games of their opening series in Cincinnati, the underwhelming road trip moved on to Houston, where two Red Sox offseason pitching additions were hit hard in their team debuts and Boston lost its most lopsided game yet to the Astros, 8-1, on Monday night.
Left-hander Ranger Suárez lasted 4 1/3 innings and allowed four earned runs on seven hits, one walk and three strikeouts. He gave up home runs to Yordan Alvarez and Brice Matthews.
“There was some good,” manager Alex Cora told reporters of Suárez, “and there were some things that we’ve got to work (on).”
Suarez, whose five-year, $130 million contract is the fourth-richest for a pitcher in franchise history, is coming off a peculiar spring training in which he missed a significant portion of camp due to the World Baseball Classic, but ultimately only pitched once in Team Venezuela’s championship run. He told reporters health wasn’t a factor in Monday’s performance.
“Obviously it wasn’t the result that we all wanted, but physically I felt good,” Suárez said via team translator.
Johan Oviedo, acquired from the Pittsburgh Pirates in December, relieved Suárez but the Astros kept scoring. Yainer Diaz plated Houston’s fifth run with a sacrifice fly in the sixth. Jose Altuve took Oviedo deep on the first pitch of the bottom of the seventh, and Christian Walker’s double high off the wall made it 7-1, before Altuve homered off Oviedo again in the eighth.
“The little man (Altuve) got him,” Cora said. “That’s what he does.”
While the Astros blasted Suárez and Oviedo, Lance McCullers Jr. made mincemeat of the Boston bats. Over seven practically-perfect innings, he yielded just one earned run on four hits, one walk and nine strikeouts.
McCullers retired the first seven Red Sox batters before allowing a baserunner. He faced the minimum three batters per inning until one out in the seventh, because the first two Boston batters to reach – Carlos Narváez and Wilyer Abreu on one-out singles in the third and fifth innings, respectively – immediately became part of inning-ending double plays.
“He was really good,” Cora said of McCullers. “We didn’t put pressure on him early on. … And then when we had him on the ropes, he went to his breaking ball.”
Anthony’s fourth-inning flyout was Boston’s only hard-hit ball with a positive launch angle until the top of the seventh, when the Red Sox briefly broke through and ensured they would at least avoid being shut out.
With one out in the seventh, Trevor Story lined a ball to left and dove into second with a swim move that flipped him over and sent Altuve rolling away from the bag. On his back with his right hand on the base and his legs in the air, Story, who was initially called out, immediately began gesturing emphatically with his left hand. Upon review, the veteran shortstop was safe at second with a double.
Jarren Duran joined Story on the bases with a walk, and though Willson Contreras’ force-out sent Story back to the dugout, Abreu’s ground-rule double brought Duran home to score. Pinch-hitting for Caleb Durbin, who is now 0 for 14 to begin his Red Sox career, Masataka Yoshida forced McCullers to throw eight pitches before he struck out to end the inning.
Marcelo Mayer led off the eighth with a walk against Astros reliever Ryan Weiss, but the Red Sox rally bid ended there. Weiss retired the next six Boston batters.
The Red Sox tallied just four hits, two walks and struck out 12 times. Four games into the MLB season they’ve struck out 41 times, ninth-most in the majors, and scored 11 runs, tied for fourth-fewest.
Tech entrepreneur Paul English knows that ponying up $1 million will make just about anyone pay attention.
He saw it firsthand in 2017 when he proposed kick-starting a Martin Luther King memorial to then-mayor Marty Walsh. The end result: The Embrace, a memorial on the Boston Common honoring King and wife Coretta Scott King that was finished in 2023.
Now, English is trying to work some of that million-dollar magic with a new mayor, Michelle Wu. And this time, it’s to help Boston Public Schools. (English is a proud Boston Latin School alum.) On Thursday, English joined Wu, schools superintendent Mary Skipper, and UMass Boston chancellor Marcelo Suárez-Orozco at the Eliot K-8 Innovation Upper School to announce his latest venture: $1 million to train 25 teachers, one at each BPS high school, this summer in AI. The teachers would share what they learned with students in their respective schools.
It started out with a seemingly innocuous question, posed last year by Boston magazine to 21 prominent local leaders: If you were mayor of Boston, what’s the one thing you would do to improve the city?
For English, the answer was simple: ensure every kid who graduates BPS is proficient in AI. After the article was published, English said he heard from colleagues in the tech scene, from as far away as California, that he was on to something.
So he drafted a conceptual AI proficiency plan and reached out to Wu about it in January, agreeing to donate $1 million to get it going.
The next step is drawing up the curriculum for the teachers who will attend the sessions at UMass Boston, where English founded an AI center. Toward that end, English is working with Ellen Rubin at Glasswings Ventures to establish an advisory board of industry experts. Topics will include AI ethics, hallucinations, and using AI to improve the classroom experience.
Meanwhile, English said he’s reaching out to OpenAI and to Anthropic to ask them to donate computing resources. “If I were them, it’s a no brainer,” English said. “Boston’s the first [major] city in the country to do this. Why wouldn’t they be on the ground floor.”
It’s the latest example of how English is trying to give back to the community where he grew up. He made most of his millions through the sale of travel firm Kayak to Booking Holdings in 2013, and is currently developing consumer apps with his Boston Venture Studio.
A million-dollar pledge is a sign to be taken seriously. It helped open the doors with Walsh, and he believes it did so with Wu as well.
“It’s not an extraordinary amount of money,” English said. “But in the big picture, they pay attention.”
This is an installment of our weekly Bold Types column about the movers and shakers on Boston’s business scene.
Jon Chesto can be reached at jon.chesto@globe.com. Follow him @jonchesto.
Getty
CHARLOTTE, NORTH CAROLINA – NOVEMBER 01: Jayson Tatum #0 of the Boston Celtics reacts in the first quarter during their game against the Charlotte Hornets at Spectrum Center on November 01, 2024 in Charlotte, North Carolina. NOTE TO USER: User expressly acknowledges and agrees that, by downloading and or using this photograph, User is consenting to the terms and conditions of the Getty Images License Agreement. (Photo by Jacob Kupferman/Getty Images)
On Sunday night, the Boston Celtics played the Charlotte Hornets in North Carolina.
The Celtics won by a score of 114-99.


GettyFOXBOROUGH, MASSACHUSETTS – MARCH 26: Jayson Tatum, player of Boston Celtics looks on prior to the international friendly match between Brazil and France at Gillette Stadium on March 26, 2026 in Foxborough, Massachusetts. (Photo by Michael Owens/Getty Images)
Jayson Tatum finished the win with 32 points, five rebounds, eight assists and one block while shooting 12/23 from the field and 5/10 from three-point range in 31 minutes of playing time.
Tatum also made history during the game.
Celtics Stats wrote: “Jayson Tatum scored his 14,000th career point tonight at Charlotte, becoming the ninth player in franchise history to reach that mark.”


GettyBOSTON, MASSACHUSETTS – MARCH 06: Jayson Tatum #0 of the Boston Celtics looks on during the second quarter at TD Garden on March 06, 2026 in Boston, Massachusetts. (Photo by Maddie Meyer/Getty Images)
Tatum is now averaging 20.9 points, 9.1 rebounds, 4.2 assists and 1.1 steals per contest while shooting 39.9% from the field and 32.3% from three-point range in 11 games this season.
Celtics Stats added: “Jayson Tatum recorded a season-high 32 points tonight at Charlotte. It marked his 16th career game with at least 30 points without committing a turnover – the most in franchise history.”


GettyCHARLOTTE, NORTH CAROLINA – NOVEMBER 02: Jayson Tatum #0 of the Boston Celtics dunks against the Charlotte Hornets during the second half of the game at Spectrum Center on November 02, 2024 in Charlotte, North Carolina. (Photo by Grant Halverson/Getty Images)


GettyDETROIT, MICHIGAN – OCTOBER 26: Jayson Tatum #0 of the Boston Celtics looks on against the Detroit Pistons during the second quarter at Little Caesars Arena on October 26, 2025 in Detroit, Michigan. (Photo by Nic Antaya/Getty Images)
With their win over the Hornets, the Celtics improved to 50-24 in 74 games, which has them as the second seed in the Eastern Conference.
They are in the middle of a three-game winning streak (and have won seven out of their last ten).
On the road, the Celtics have gone 24-13.
Following the Hornets, they will play their next game on Monday night when they visit the Atlanta Hawks at State Farm Arena in Georgia.


GettyBOSTON, MASSACHUSETTS – MARCH 08: Jaylen Brown #7 of the Boston Celtics talks with head coach Joe Mazzulla during the second half against the Los Angeles Lakers at TD Garden on March 08, 2025 in Boston, Massachusetts. The Boston Celtics defeated the Los Angeles Lakers 111-101. (Photo by Elsa/Getty Images)
With Tatum playing like himself, the Celtics will have a real chance to win their second title in three years.
They are coming off a year where they lost to Jalen Brunson and the New York Knicks in the second round of the 2025 NBA playoffs.


GettyCHARLOTTE, NORTH CAROLINA – MARCH 26: (R-L) LaMelo Ball #1 talks with Moussa Diabate #14 of the Charlotte Hornets in the second half against the New York Knicks during their game at Spectrum Center on March 26, 2026 in Charlotte, North Carolina. (Photo by Jacob Kupferman/Getty Images)
The Hornets dropped to 39-36 in 75 games, which has them as the 10th seed in the Eastern Conference.
They are in the middle of a two-game losing skid (but have won seven out of ten).
Ben Stinar Ben Stinar has been covering the NBA for over seven years.
He has written for OnSI, Forbes, Amico Hoops, The Big Lead and had a podcast with former All-Star Jameer Nelson. More about Ben Stinar
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