After all the public workouts and hinting that he might return in February, NBA on Prime’s Chris Haynes reports that “Jayson Tatum is now re-evaluating his situation and is up in the air if he’s going
to return at all this season.
Haynes said that “it was always a forgone conclusion that Jayson Tatum was going to try to give it a go and return at some point during the season after suffering that Achilles tear,” but hints now to “a couple of factors” to why he’s reached this impasse despite getting close to a comeback.
Earlier this week, he appeared on The Pivot podcast with Ryan Clark, Channing Crowder, and Fred Taylor and was already casting some doubt in suiting up for 2025-2026.
“That’s something I contemplate every day. More so about the team, if or when I do come back this season, they would have played 50 some odd games without me so they have an identity this year or things they’ve felt that has clicked for them and it’s been successful,” Tatum said. “So, there’s a thought in my head that is like, how does that work? How does that look with me integrating myself off an injury…and it is a thought like ‘damn, do I come back or should I wait?’ In the last two weeks or so, I contemplate every single day.”
Over a week ago in Detroit, CelticsBlog’s Noa Dalzell watched Tatum’s public 45-minute workout and noted:
Throughout the workout, Celtics assistant coach Tony Dobbins guarded Tatum pretty aggressively, while Craig Luschenat, the team’s head of player development, directed traffic. Dobbins guarded Tatum with an undeniable level of physicality — hand-checking him, and poking the ball out of his hands at times. (For reference, Dobbins was named the French League’s best defender three times in his EuroLeague basketball career — and while he wasn’t going all out, he was certainly upping the pressure).
Steve Tchiengang, one of the Celtics’ player enhancement coaches, partook in drills as a screener and passer, as did Tatum’s former Duke University teammate, Celtics assistant coach Amile Jefferson. Tatum’s trainer, Nick Sang, took the floor to watch.
The NBA is currently heading towards the trade deadline on February 5th and the Celtics have over a week off for All-Star Weekend from February 9th to 18th. That time could serve as a good reflection point for Tatum with twenty-eight games to go in the regular season and the team knowing a little more about themselves whether Brad Stevens makes some moves or not. The team has been clear that the decision to return starts with Tatum, so as the late great Johnny Most once said, “we wait for it with bated breath.”








