Jaylen Brown appeared on the hit online show 'Hot Ones' with Sean Evans, where the reigning Finals MVP gave a phenomenal comparison about guarding the Dallas Mavericks' backcourt of Luka Doncic and Kyrie Irving being similar to listening to music, and how one has to study the beat, cadences, and rhythm of offensive players to maximize their success on defense.
“There's a rhythm and a cadence to how people play. Certain guys play to a certain beat, a certain cadence, a certain style. if you know their style, you can time what they're going to do next because you know their rhythm and the BPM they play at."
"Luka (Doncic) has a unique rhythm. It’s almost so slow that it’s hard to time. Kyrie has a unique rhythm as well, very one-of-one. His moves and cadences are very hard to time. He's got a lot of counters, he can pivot off both feet, he can shoot with both hands, and he can drive in both directions, which makes his rhythm a lot harder to track.
"Some guys only go right, some guys only go left, and some guys have two moves that they go to. So, I look at basketball as poetry in motion, which is music. Everybody is playing their own song. Everybody samples from different artists. If you want to stop them you gotta study their rhythm, you gotta learn when their beat is about to drop.”
Brown is speaking from experience as he won the 2024 Finals MVP by beating Doncic and Irving's Mavericks in the Finals. While Luka still had his share of offensive success despite being the focal point of the Celtics' defensive scheme, his averages of 29.2 points, 8.8 rebounds, and 5.6 assists on 47.2% from the field weren't enough as the Mavs only scored more than 100 points in one of their five Finals matchups.
Brown was instrumental in limiting Kyrie's success, as Irving averaged just 19.8 points, 3.0 rebounds, and 5.0 assists on 41.4% from the field after being a lethal scorer for most of the season and the Playoffs.
The Boston Celtics set their defense up perfectly to attack these two players and limit everyone else, but the high defensive IQ of players like Brown, Jayson Tatum, Jrue Holiday, and Derrick White is what makes performances like that possible.
They'll hope to bring back another NBA Championship to Boston this season, provided somebody else doesn't break down their rhythm and cadence this season.