Jaylen Brown’s third triple-double of the season—23 points, 15 rebounds, 13 assists—propelled Boston to a 121-110 rout of Golden State without Stephen Curry, exposing the Warriors’ 6-11 record when their superstar sits and turning Kristaps Porziņģis’ debut into a footnote.
The Golden State Warriors rolled out red-carpet treatment for Kristaps Porziņģis, but Jaylen Brown stole the show, authoring the most complete game of his career to spearhead a 30-point Boston blitz that ended 121-110 inside Chase Center.
Brown’s line—23 points, a career-best 15 rebounds (all defensive), and a new personal high 13 assists—marked his fifth career triple-double and third this season, pushing the Celtics to seven wins in their last eight outings. The Warriors, now 6-11 when Stephen Curry watches in street clothes, dropped their fourth game in five tries despite 18 from De’Anthony Melton and 17 each from rookies Will Richard and Gui Santos.
Inside the Numbers: Brown’s Masterclass
- Only Jayson Tatum and Luka Dončić have more triple-doubles this season.
- Boston’s plus-19 rebound margin (58-39) ties its season high.
- The Celtics’ 74 first-half points are the most allowed by Golden State at home all year.
Porziņģis, acquired at the trade deadline after a detour through Atlanta, logged 12 points in 20 minutes and was repeatedly targeted in high pick-and-roll sequences that produced 11 Boston scores during a decisive 17-2 second-quarter surge. The 7-foot-2 Latvian’s presence failed to mask a defense that has now surrendered 115+ in four straight.
Curry Void Goes Viral
Without Curry nursing a knee contusion, Golden State’s offensive rating plummeted to 106.7, nearly 11 points below its season average according to NBA tracking data. The Warriors shot 38% from deep—respectable until you notice Boston canned 21 triples at a 45% clip, fueled by Payton Pritchard’s 26-point detonation (6-of-9 from three).
Coach Steve Kerr experimented with dual-rookie back-courts and even a Draymond Green-centered small-ball five, but none slowed Brown, who recorded five first-quarter buckets, then dissected the zone with skip passes that set up four corner threes in the third.
Golden State trimmed a 30-point deficit to 12 on Gary Payton II’s transition dunk with 6:00 left, prompting a 30-second Celtics timeout. Pritchard answered immediately with consecutive triples, extinguishing any comeback oxygen and sealing Boston’s sixth road victory by double digits.
What It Means Going Forward
The result tightens Boston’s grip on the Eastern Conference’s No. 2 seed, one game behind Cleveland, while pushing the Warriors to the brink of the play-in tournament out West. More importantly, it crystallizes Boston’s identity: when Brown orchestrates, the Celtics morph from dangerous to devastating.
Expect Golden State to ramp up trade chatter ahead of Thursday’s buzzer—front-office whispers already link them to perimeter reinforcements to survive Curry-less minutes. Meanwhile, Boston heads to Los Angeles Sunday with momentum, chemistry, and a suddenly unguardable secondary creator.
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