Boston Celtics select a candidate similar to Trayce Jackson-Davis in the B/R mock draft.

Miami Heat v Boston CelticsWith the No. 30 pick in the 2024 NBA draft, Bleacher Report’s Jonathan Wasserman projects the Boston Celtics to select Dayton’s DaRon Holmes II, a Trayce Jackson-Davis-type prospect whose standout offensive attributes come with some defensive shortcomings.

“DaRon Holmes II enters this predraft process with more momentum than he had last year,” Wasserman prefaced before saying, “Improved range, handles/body control attacking the basket and passing have raised his draft stock, and he’s coming off a 23-point, 11-rebound, three-assist, four-stock game with a pair of threes against Arizona in the NCAA tournament.

“There still seems to be some reluctance from scouts who question his defensive fit and how translatable his shot and face-up game are. But the believers out there do sound high on Holmes, and it’s sounding possible that one of them could use a first-round pick to get him.”

Boston Celtics could find better fits with first-round selection

When you have a draft choice at the end of the first round, you’re most likely looking for the best fit over the best talent available. The latter strategy is typically reserved for rebuilding teams in need of a nearly clean slate, not a contending team like the Cs that may be coming off an NBA Championship run by the time the draft rolls around in late June.

With that in mind, Holmes’ fit with the Celtics isn’t ideal considering the question marks surrounding his defense. Boston could conceivably bring back both Luke Kornet, a classic rim protector who lacks the sort of grit a starting caliber center needs but who can swat shots away with his seven-foot-plus frame, and Xavier Tillman, a shorter big man who doesn’t have the verticality to be a shot-blocker but makes up for it in the physicality department. If they don’t, though, they’ll need to find someone who prioritizes the less glamorous side of the floor.

Holmes isn’t that. While having a gifted scorer would be nice, it isn’t all that necessary considering how many points the starting five, plus Payton Pritchard and Sam Hauser, generates.Miami Heat v Boston Celtics

The Boston Celtics — all of us, really — are way too familiar with “Heat Culture.”

The moniker has appeared in endless soundbites, tee shirts, and even Miami’s latest city-edition jersey. It exudes a lineage of toughness passed down by the franchise’s longstanding architect, Pat Riley, and his protege, Erik Spoelstra.

Everyone who plays for the franchise must buy into the team-first mentality. Hard-nosed defense and physicality are staples of every Heat team—it’s why Udanis Haslem had a roster spot for way too long. I’m confident the coaching staff could pluck five guys playing soccer on South Beach and get them running matchup zone in no time.

They make teams play how they least want to, and Boston has crumpled at the challenge. The talent disparity between the squads has always been apparent, but the Heats’ mental edge has been the most glaring advantage. Without Jimmy Butler and with the injection of Kristaps Porzingis and Jrue Holiday, it feels like this prior edge is almost rendered useless.

Miami isn’t going to roll over. Even though they were down 30 points in the fourth quarter of Game 1, they were still throwing haymakers, trying to claw themselves back to within striking distance. A fighting spirit is admirable, but sometimes it can go too far.

With under a minute to go, Jayson Tatum went up to corral a rebound and got bodychecked by Caleb Martin. Tatum crashed to the floor in a heap and avoided serious injury, but the play drew heavy scrutiny.

“Heat Culture” might’ve gone too far, and as former Celtic Brian Scalabrine expressed after the game, it seemed intentionally dirty.

“I’m not trying to start anything here, but Erik Spoelstra called a timeout with 1:30 down 16,” Scalabrine said. “30 seconds later, the Martin undercutting Tatum on the rebound play happens. Why is he calling a timeout in that spot, and why is that play happening right after? That looked shady to me. I think Martin should get suspended for that.”

Boston Celtics need to play their game regardless of what Heat doMiami Heat v Boston Celtics

It’s hard to fathom that Spoelstra ordered Martin to rough up the Celtics superstar. He’s not that kind of coach. His style revolves around relationships, and no matter how much animosity is in the air, most players in 2024 would not be okay with intentionally injuring one of their opponents.

Was the play utterly careless? Yes. Caleb Martin wasn’t remotely close to getting to the ball. But that’s playoff hoops. Incidents like this happen because guys are so amped up and are just trying to swing momentum.

At the same time, this is what the Heat want. Even though Jayson Tatum swiftly got up and walked to the free-throw line after the altercation, this is making headlines. Anything that can cloud Boston’s judgment is a win for Miami.

The Celtics have to stay focused. This is their year. Everything is breaking in their favor. They can’t prolong this series and let any frustrations creep in. It has to be different this time. Nothing would send a louder statement than a definitive sweep.

That’s Celtic culture.

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