How Celtics’ Jayson Tatum Felt About Not Making All-NBA Team

'I know I should've made it'

Jayson Tatum believes he was robbed of one of the NBA’s highest honors.

Tatum was not named to any of the league’s three All-NBA teams for the 2020-21 season. The Boston Celtics star posted a better campaign across the board than he did in the 2019-20 season when he was an All-NBA third-teamer, but the honor somehow eluded Tatum this time around.

The snub was met with significant financial ramifications, too, as Tatum missed out on $33 million (!) by not being recognized as an All-NBA player. But the lost payday, as he explained on the “Beyond The Press” podcast, wasn’t the reason Tatum was most upset about his omission.

“I know I should’ve made it,” Tatum said, as transcribed by WEEI. “Just, I guess, with the season I had. I mean, $33 million is a lot. Obviously that would make anybody feel some type of way. I wasn’t necessarily upset about losing the money. I just felt like the way I was playing, everything I did, I thought it should’ve been a no-brainer. I think I was more frustrated with that.”

Tatum also believes there should be some clarification about the voting process.

“I think what they do need to change is, it’s kind of opinion-based,” Tatum said. “A bunch of media members get to vote. What’s the criteria? Is there a certain amount of games you need to play? Should you be in playoff contention? Is there a certain amount of points you should average depending on your position? I think there should be something like that in place, because I think if you just allow people to just vote and there’s nothing set in place like, ‘You gotta play this many games,’ or whatever it may be, I think that would help it out a lot. But I know nobody’s necessarily gonna feel bad for me and Donovan (Mitchell) because we still get paid a lot of money. But I think it’s more that I just felt like I deserved to make it, not necessarily money.”

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Tatum clearly is miffed about the snub, and his new head coach wants it to be that way. Ime Udoka is hoping to see the two-time All-Star play with a chip on his shoulder in his fifth NBA season.