The Boston Celtics lost a decisive Game 7 to the Philadelphia 76ers after blowing a 3-1 series lead. Despite high expectations and a strong season, injuries and missed opportunities led to their playoff exit.
Key points
Celtics blew a 3-1 lead in the playoffs
Lost Game 7 at home to the 76ers
Injuries to Jayson Tatum impacted performance
High expectations were not met
Future roster decisions are now critical
Boston CelticsPhiladelphia 76ersJayson TatumJaylen Brown
BOSTON, MASSACHUSETTS - MAY 02: Jaylen Brown #7 of the Boston Celtics looks on during the second 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. 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) | Getty Images
BOSTON, MASSACHUSETTS - MAY 02: Jaylen Brown #7 of the Boston Celtics looks on during the second 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. 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) | Getty Images
Iâve now written a sappy Boston Celtics playoff retrospective four times in the last five years. They range from completely overblown metaphor (I think I called the Miami Heat a history-repeating killer-basketball robot-wizard Sea Cucumber once) to about the meaning of life. Weâre not doing any of that this time.
The Celtics blew a 3-1 lead to the Philadelphia 76ers, lost a heartbreaking Game 7 at home and Iâm not particularly happy about it. But I shall resist the impulse to wax poetic about this teamâs spiritual place in the space-time continuum because we have books to balance. The Celtics, particularly, have to attend to some . But we will, out of the goodness of our hearts, quickly
Basketball is a cruel sport because it is always reduced to its simplest variable. You play somewhere between 82 and 100 games, thousands of minutes, months of physical toil and deal with pressure most of us could not imagine, all for a chance to *attempt* a shot to *maybe* win it all. The Celtics had three good looks to take the lead down by one in the fourth quarter of Game 7, and they missed all three.
The Celtics fought tooth and nail all season for that chance. They entered the season with too many varied expectations for me to generalize, but I can say with total accuracy that I called for the team to before the season, a foot I will gladly put in my mouth â nothing I had seen from him so far suggested he had this MVP-level campaign in him. I likewise had no reason to expect could be a legit, NBA-caliber starting center, nor belief that could be more than a glorified three-point specialist. I was wrong on every count.
In that way, the Celtics were playing with house money in the casino of my brain. returned from injury and things looked like sunshine and lollipops. Expectations change, and they were dubbed âthe favorites in the Eastâ after playing above their heads for five straight months and adding back their captain. But Tatum got hurt again, missed Game 7, and âthe favorites in the Eastâ blew a 3-1 lead to the team they used to own. I could chop that long ways, short ways, diagonally or even cut off the crust; no matter how I slice it, thatâs embarrassing.
First item of bookkeeping: this is a big series for the âwhen healthyâ brigade of NBA media, because âwhen healthy,â the 76ers were a better team than the Celtics. I even I didnât say it ⊠all that *seriously*, I admit, but I did say it!
I wouldnât necessarily consider myself part of the âwhen healthyâ brigade, but I tilt towards that group; âoh (insert player or team) will never be healthyâ isnât a particularly interesting line of logical reasoning. Itâs an unfalsifiable claim that assumes medical information you do not have that can be used to invalidate any hopes and dreams at any time. You could say, âoh will never stay healthyâ as a reason for thinking is the leagueâs most valuable young player but itâs a super bad-faith argument. The same goes for saying the 76ers have no chance to make the NBA Finals â if and are just⊠chillinâ? They totally could.
But the Celtics were favored fairly heavily in the series and went up 3-1. Yes, Embiidâs status was heavily unknown, and books probably would have had it closer if they knew he would look almost like MVP Embiid for half the series. But itâs also not like Embiid just parachuted in and said âokay, itâs MVP Embiid time.â Bostonâs deficiencies had more to do with how well he played than some random black swan event, and his quality was the reason the 3-1 lead didnât hold.
That leads us to business item number two: the Celtics are not a small team, but they lack defensive size and rim protection. Queta and are extremely limited interior defenders who could not stay out of foul trouble, and the Celtics wound up doubling Embiid on most possessions in Game 7 with Jaylen Brown as his primary defender. Credit to Nick Nurse (who took a gamble bringing him back from injury when it felt like and had found something in the series) for realizing Embiid could run the Celtics over like a Mack truck if he could just get out there.
Shoring up that interior defense is priority one, two and three for the Celtics this offseason. Another big, , will be coming off the books to the delight of all Celtics fans, and his arrival via trading accomplished the Celticsâ single goal coming into the season: get under the luxury tax. Now, they will actually have some flexibility, regular roster-building resources and a few sizable trade exceptions to use.
I could explain all the extension candidates, team options, mid-level exceptions, the works, but I canât explain it better than ESPNâs Bobby Marks â a legit wizard with this stuff â so you should . What I can do is ask some hard questions, oneâs Boston will have to answer through all the financials you can read about at your leisure.
**Question 1: How much longer will Jayson Tatum, and Jaylen Brown form the nucleus of this roster?** I feel reasonably certain that, unless he demands a trade, Tatum will be on the Celtics for his entire career. Those other two I simply donât know. White is 32, and Brown just showed heâs at his best when Tatum isnât on the court â that statement will be resisted by certain dogmatic elements in Celtics nation, but it is demonstrably true. I love Jaylen Brown. But he and Tatum have already won a championship together, and I wouldnât necessarily blame Jaylen if he wanted to be the bus driver for more than half a season on his own team.
**Question 2: How much are Payton Pritchard and Neemias Queta worth?** Both are extension eligible, and Pritchard in particular is making an absolute pittance relative to his value as a scorer. Still, the Celtics will get real expensive, real quick if they shell out major dollar bills for two potentially replaceable pieces that were critical *this year* â it is worth wondering if they *should* be critical, or if Pritchard is better as a change-of-pace microwave off the bench rather than someone to close with.
**Question 3: Which bench spark plugs are keepers?** Calling a âfan favoriteâ is the understatement of the decade, but he has a long way to go as an offensive player. Same goes for , who is a bit more sophisticated as a scorer but looked *lost* in the postseason. If you keep both of them, whatâs up with and ? How about Garza, who is already behind Queta even when everyone knows the big rotation needs an upgrade?
Beyond âget a center,â which is truer than true, those are the main things to think about this offseason. Thankfully for my sanity, I have achieved galactic levels of trust in Brad Stevens, the Celticsâ former head coach and now President of Basketball Operations, and essentially give him carte blanche to do what must be done. We done here? Oh, I guess I see one more thing on the meeting agenda before we go get lunch at Cava.
When your team gets bounced from the playoffs in the internet age, one is exposed to a range of reactions; some silver-lings, some apocalyptic doomsday preppers, some coach-firers, even some screenshot-takers, but I find it best to think of all reactions in binary: they are either *your* reaction, or *someone elseâs* reaction. The vast majority of them are just forms of coping, and provided they donât delve into any unsavory territory, all reactions are valid and should be allowed to marinate before we decide whoâs right and whoâs wrong. Even the haters, fans of other teams, have earned their moment to hate.
My reaction, which expresses merely my view and no one elseâs, is this: the 2025-26 Boston Celtics overachieved so much that it set them up to underachieve. Among the many discussions of their failure in the series, that is a wholly unique accomplishment.
Q&A
What led to the Boston Celtics' loss in Game 7 against the Philadelphia 76ers?
The Celtics lost Game 7 after blowing a 3-1 series lead, missing crucial shots in the fourth quarter.
How did injuries impact the Celtics during the playoffs?
Injuries to key players, including Jayson Tatum, significantly affected the Celtics' performance in the playoffs.
What were the expectations for the Celtics entering the 2026 NBA playoffs?
The Celtics were considered favorites in the East after a strong season, but their playoff performance fell short of expectations.
What does the Celtics' playoff exit mean for their future?
The Celtics' early exit raises questions about their roster and strategy moving forward, especially regarding key players like Jaylen Brown.
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