Game Recap
BOSTON 120-112, and yeah, the whistle was the story whether anyone liked it or not.
And it was Jaylen Brown cashing in.
Four nights after raising eyebrows about officiating, Brown marched to the stripe a career-high 21 times and buried 19 of them, stacking up 41 points as the Celtics leaned on him late to put away the Suns at TD Garden. Not subtle. Not quiet either.
“Ironic,” Brown said, half-smiling after. He knew exactly how it looked.
Boston needed every bit of it. Phoenix hung around most of the night, traded runs, kept the three-point volume steady. But when it tightened in the fourth, the Celtics stopped messing around. They gave Brown the ball and cleared out.
He went downhill. Again. And again.
Phoenix couldn’t keep him in front, couldn’t avoid contact, and definitely couldn’t avoid the whistle.
Key Performances
Jaylen Brown finally gets the calls
This is the part Brown’s been waiting on all season.
He’s said it plenty, he’s not a foul-bait guy, not hunting cheap stuff, just taking hits and expecting something for it. Most nights? Shrugs from the refs. Tuesday? Different story.
Brown erupted for 18 in the fourth quarter alone, living in the paint, punishing switches, dragging help defenders into bad spots. The Suns tried bigger bodies. Tried quicker ones. Didn’t matter.
He looked like a pure bucket-getter with a whistle attached. That’s a scary combo.
And yeah, he earned most of them. Took contact, stayed balanced, finished through traffic. Old-school stuff.
Suns’ stars keep pace… until they don’t
Phoenix wasn’t awful offensively. Far from it.
Devin Booker had stretches where he looked ready to steal it midrange cooking, probing the pick-and-roll, chirping at officials between possessions. You could see it building.
But the flow kept getting yanked.
Every time the Suns looked ready to string together stops, another whistle. Another trip. Another reset.
That’s not an excuse. But it’s part of it.
Turning Point
Why did the Suns lose control late?
Tie game energy early in the fourth. Crowd buzzing. Possessions tightening.
Then Brown flipped it.
He attacked three straight trips got to the line twice, finished through contact once and Boston suddenly had breathing room. Not a knockout punch, but enough to tilt the floor.
Phoenix started pressing. Quick shots. A couple empty possessions. And Boston’s defense, quietly solid most of the night, clamped the perimeter just enough.
That was it. No dramatic dagger. Just pressure and whistles stacking up.
Postgame Tension
Suns coach calls it out
Suns head coach Jordan Ott didn’t dance around it.
“That’s a lot of free throws for one player,” he said. Flat. No fluff.
He kept going.
“There’s contact on both ends. Then you get a foul called 85 feet from the rim. Those are killers.”
Booker didn’t need a quote his reactions during the game said plenty. Hands up, head shakes, long conversations with officials. The usual stuff when a scorer feels like he’s not getting the same deal.
Phoenix’s gripe wasn’t just volume. It was consistency. Same bumps, different outcomes. That’s what had them heated walking out.
Bigger Picture
So… was Brown right all along?
Funny how this works.
Days after questioning the whistle, Brown gets the friendliest night of his season. Or maybe just the most deserved one, depending who you ask.
If this version sticks aggressive, decisive, getting calls – Boston’s offense gets a lot simpler late in games. No overthinking. Just give it to No. 7 and let him bully his way to points.
For one night, at least, it looked easy.
For Phoenix, it looked exhausting.