J.R. Smith has never been shy about saying the quiet part out loud, and his latest Celtics take is the kind that instantly splits the conversation into two rooms: the locker room and the outside world.
Smith argued that Jaylen Brown, not Jayson Tatum, has “always” been the Celtics’ leader in the ways that matter most inside the organization.
“It’s his team for the players… for everybody else in the media from the outside, it’s Jayson Tatum’s team,” Smith said, before adding, “internally Jaylen Brown is the leader of that team, 100% on and off the court.”
J.R. Smith says it has always been Jaylen Brown’s team over Jayson Tatum:
“It’s always been his team. It’s his team for the players I’m pretty sure it’s his team, for everybody else in the media from the outside, it’s Jayson Tatum team. That’s what they want it to look like,… https://t.co/p9rFF32z6b pic.twitter.com/Kyq5NHd5IO
— NBA Courtside (@NBA__Courtside) March 4, 2026
Smith’s framing doesn’t deny Tatum’s status as a franchise centerpiece; it challenges the default narrative of how leadership is assigned. From the outside, the league often markets teams through a single face, usually the most consistent scorer, the most visible All-NBA résumé, the cleanest “superstar” silhouette. Inside a locker room, leadership can look different: who sets the tone in practice, who speaks when things go sideways, who holds teammates accountable, who absorbs friction so others can focus.
Brown has built a strong case for that kind of internal gravity over the years, including his role in Boston’s championship run and the credibility that comes with delivering on the biggest stage. But Smith’s point is less about awards and more about dynamics, how a team actually moves day to day, and how the people in it perceive who’s driving the culture.
Whether fans agree or not, the quote lands because it touches a real truth about contenders: the “best player” label and the “leader” label don’t always sit on the same shoulders. And in Boston, Smith is betting that the people closest to the Celtics see Brown as the heartbeat, even if the broader NBA conversation keeps calling it Tatum’s team.
