Celtics Eliminated: What’s Next After Historic 3-1 Collapse?

BOSTON, MASSACHUSETTS - APRIL 28: Jayson Tatum #0 of the Boston Celtics looks on during the second half of Game Five of the First Round of the NBA Eastern Conference Playoff at TD Garden on April 28, 2026 in Boston, Massachusetts. 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 Maddie Meyer/Getty Images)

The Boston Celtics walked off the TD Garden floor on Saturday night as a team that had run out of time. A season that produced 56 wins, unexpected championship contention, and one of the most remarkable injury comebacks in recent memory ended with a Game 7 loss to the seventh-seeded Philadelphia 76ers.

It was not supposed to end this way.

Boston made franchise history in the worst possible way, becoming the first Celtics team to let a 3-1 advantage slip entirely. They had home court, the better seed, and every reason to believe the series was still theirs to close.

Instead, the final week became a slow unraveling. Saturday’s 109-100 loss did not create Boston’s problems as much as expose them.

Jayson Tatum’s Injury Scare Changed Everything

Game 7 tilted before Boston ever took its first shot.

Jayson Tatum‘s name landed on the injury report late, listed with left knee stiffness. Not long after, Boston’s entire Game 7 plan changed. The player who had made one of the fastest returns from a ruptured Achilles tendon in recent memory was no longer part of the equation.

He would watch the most important game of the year from the bench.

Joe Mazzulla went with a drastically different starting lineup. Jaylen Brown and Derrick White anchored the group. Around them, Mazzulla turned to Ron Harper Jr., Baylor Scheierman, and Luka Garza to fill out the five, with Neemias Queta and Sam Hauser sliding to the bench.

Philadelphia responded with a dominant first quarter.

What followed deserved more than the outcome it received. Boston clawed back into the game, took a brief second-quarter lead, and cut the deficit to one with just under four minutes remaining. Without Tatum, they nearly pulled it off.

They did not. The offense went cold at the worst possible moment. Philadelphia held on. The season ended.

GettyBOSTON, MASSACHUSETTS – MAY 02: Jayson Tatum #0 of the Boston Celtics watches from the bench during the third quarter of a game against the Philadelphia 76ers in Game Seven of the First Round of the NBA Eastern Conference Playoffs at TD Garden on May 02, 2026 in Boston, Massachusetts. (Photo by Maddie Meyer/Getty Images)

What Went Wrong Across the Series

The Game 7 collapse did not happen in isolation. The seeds were planted across the final three games of the series, and they grew from the same root problems.

Joel Embiid was the series-defining factor from the moment he returned in Game 4. Joe Mazzulla said so himself.

Boston never found a consistent answer for him. He finished Game 7 with 34 points and 12 rebounds, and across the three games following his return he was a physical presence the Celtics simply could not contain.

The three-point shooting that carried Boston through the regular season disappeared entirely across the final three games. When the threes stopped falling, the offense had no alternative. It devolved into isolation basketball, with Brown and Tatum shouldering possessions individually rather than moving the ball through the system that made Boston so difficult to defend during the regular season.

The adjustments came too late. Joe Mazzulla stuck with his big lineup through the series’ most difficult stretches, and the bench depth that had been one of Boston’s defining strengths all season was largely absent until the damage was already done.

By the time the right pieces were getting meaningful minutes, the series had already shifted. Nick Nurse found answers after falling 3-1. Boston never fully found the counter.

Tyrese Maxey was relentless throughout. He finished Game 7 with 30 points, 11 rebounds, and 7 assists, and was a consistent problem across the series that Boston’s defense never adequately solved.

GettyBOSTON, MASSACHUSETTS – MAY 02: Joel Embiid #21 of the Philadelphia 76ers looks on during the fourth quarter of a game against the Boston Celtics in Game Seven of the First Round of the NBA Eastern Conference Playoffs at TD Garden on May 02, 2026 in Boston, Massachusetts. (Photo by Maddie Meyer/Getty Images)

What Comes Next for the Celtics

The offseason begins now, and it arrives with real questions attached.

Tatum’s injury scare means his health will be watched closely, but this does not need to be framed as an offseason crisis. He returned from a ruptured Achilles tendon faster than almost anyone expected, and the Celtics appeared to take a cautious approach when knee stiffness surfaced before Game 7. Until more details emerge, there is some uncertainty. But the expectation is that Tatum should be healthy for next season

Brown had an MVP-caliber season. He carried this team through months without Tatum and averaged close to 30 points per game while doing it. His future in Boston should not be in question. But the supporting cast around him and Tatum will face scrutiny.

Vucevic’s fit never materialized the way Boston hoped. The rotation questions that surfaced in this series will need honest answers before next season begins.

While we’ll likely see some new faces in Boston next season, the core is still worth believing in. Tatum and Brown are still one of the league’s most formidable duos when healthy. Payton Pritchard showed in Game 4 what he is capable of at his best. White delivered when it mattered most in Game 7. Young players like Hugo Gonzalez and Jordan Walsh took meaningful steps this season.

GettyPHILADELPHIA, PENNSYLVANIA – APRIL 26: Jayson Tatum #0 celebrates a basket with Jaylen Brown #7 and Sam Hauser #30 of the Boston Celtics during the second half of game four of the Eastern Conference first round playoffs against the Philadelphia 76ers at Xfinity Mobile Arena on April 26, 2026 in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. (Photo by Emilee Chinn/Getty Images)

Final Word for the Celtics

The Celtics won 56 games, got their franchise star back from one of the worst injuries in sports, and pushed a Game 7 to the final minutes without him.

That is not nothing.

It is also not enough. Not with a 3-1 lead. Not at home. Not as the second seed against the seventh.

The collapse will be picked apart all summer. Tatum’s health. The adjustments that came too late. Mazzulla’s decisions when the series turned. Still, the foundation has not disappeared with the final buzzer. The ceiling is still there.

This ending will sit with Boston for a while, and it should. But painful endings have shaped this core before. Banner 18 did not arrive without scars, and this one now becomes part of the next version of the Celtics.

Boston has been here before. How will it respond?

0 Comments

Celtics Eliminated: What’s Next After Historic 3-1 Collapse?

Notify of
0 Comments
Follow this thread
Inline Feedbacks
View all comments
0
Would love your thoughts, please commentx
()
x