

Mazzulla - the youngest coach in the NBA at 34 - was fiery in response to the notion that he'd been outcoached by Philadelphia's future Hall of Fame coach Doc Rivers in Game 1.

"What, no one wants to ask about the adjustments we made from Game 1 to Game 2?" Mazzulla snapped as he walked off the podium following the Celtics' 34-point win. He was involved in a way head coaches and veteran assistants usually aren't with players.Īnd so the players and staff members who know him well weren't surprised when he fired back at critics. It also meant that, away from the gym, he was in the card games and the board games and, perhaps most intensely, the ping pong games.

His job in Boston was mostly player development, which meant hours of one-on-one work after practices and before games that created bonds. How the ultra-competitive Joe Mazzulla is challenging the doubters - and what it means for the Celticsīoston Celtics players couldn't help but give each other knowing smiles this week when first-year coach Joe Mazzulla had his drop-the-mic moment.įor three years, Mazzulla was one of those assistant coaches who built deep relationships with players. You have reached a degraded version of because you're using an unsupported version of Internet Explorer.įor a complete experience, please upgrade or use a supported browser
