Jaylen Brown isn’t taking the Celtics’ first-round exit quietly. After Boston blew a 3-1 series lead to the Philadelphia 76ers – one of the more stunning collapses in recent playoff memory – Brown took to Twitch to lay the blame squarely at the feet of NBA referees.
Not just bad officiating. A conspiracy.
Brown claimed on the livestream that refs had a deliberate agenda against him personally, and he says he has the receipts.
“They clearly had an agenda, maybe because I spoke so critical on them in the regular season.”
He didn’t stop at suspicion, either. Brown says he actually spoke with referees who confirmed it – telling him there was a directive to call fouls every time he raised his hands.
“I actually spoke to some refs and they told me there’s an agenda going on each game every time Jaylen puts his hands up just call it.”
That’s a significant claim. If accurate, it would represent a serious breach of officiating integrity in the league. The NBA has not commented publicly on the allegations.
Brown Says This Was His Favorite Season
What raised eyebrows just as much, though, was something else Brown said during the stream – that this was his favorite season of his NBA career.
That’s a complicated thing to say.
On one hand, with Jayson Tatum missing 65 games, Brown shouldered the offensive load and showed he could carry a team night after night. By individual standards, it was arguably his strongest year. On the other hand, Boston won a championship two seasons ago – a run where Brown took home Finals MVP. Calling this season more memorable than that one is the kind of comment that tends to follow a player around.
The Brown-Tatum dynamic has been a topic in Boston for years. Both players have long been viewed as alpha personalities who each see themselves as the team’s top option – and Brown’s comments, intentional or not, do little to quiet that narrative. Saying your best season is the one where your co-star missed most of the year reads a certain way, regardless of intent.
Whether Brown’s officiating claims gain any traction remains to be seen. The league rarely acknowledges referee misconduct publicly, and allegations of coordinated targeting would be nearly impossible to prove through official channels. For now, it’s a statement that adds another complicated chapter to what’s been an already turbulent offseason start for the Celtics.
