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Team USA's Steve Kerr explains why Jayson Tatum didn't play in 2024 Paris Olympics opener vs. Serbia

'He'll make his mark,' the Warriors coach said of the Celtics star


  • Jul 28 2024
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 Team USA's Steve Kerr explains why Jayson Tatum didn't play in 2024 Paris Olympics opener vs. Serbia
Team USA's Steve Kerr explains why Jayson Tatum didn't play in 2024 Paris Olympics opener vs. Serbia
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In Team USA's first game of the 2024 Paris Olympics, Jayson Tatum was not in the rotation. The Boston Celtics star played zero minutes in the United States' 110-84 win against Serbia on Sunday.

"I went with the combinations that made sense," coach Steve Kerr told reporters, via the Boston Globe's Gary Washburn. "That was for tonight. He handled it well. He'll make his mark."

Tatum, who made the All-NBA First Team and led the Celtics to a championship this past season, logged an average of 17.6 minutes in the Team USA's five exhibition games leading up to the Olympics. The biggest difference between those games and the Olympic opener, though, was that Kevin Durant didn't play in the friendlies. Durant, who returned from a calf injury against Serbia, effectively took Tatum's spot in the rotation. Kerr told reporters that the DNP-CD was mostly a result of getting Durant in the mix, per the Globe's Adam Himmelsbach.

Kerr could have tinkered with the rotation in order to keep Tatum in it, but elected not to do so. The decision to bring Durant off the bench signaled that he wanted to keep the starting five -- Stephen Curry, Jrue Holiday, Devin Booker, LeBron James and Joel Embiid -- intact. Going smaller could be an option going forward, but wouldn't have made much sense against Nikola Jokic's team.

Asked if he was sick, as both Joel Embiid and Anthony Davis had to miss recent practices due to illness, Tatum said, "No, I'm good," per the Globe.

It is a bit weird that Tatum wound up not playing at all, no matter the context. It is worth noting, though, that Tyrese Haliburton, another All-NBA player, has not played since the first half of the United States' tune-up game against South Sudan last week. For the last two-and-a-half games, Derrick White has run point with the second unit and Haliburton has sat on the sideline. If Kerr's coaching staff is not going to play everybody in every game, then one or two great players will be left out.

Ahead of Team USA's upcoming games against South Sudan (Wednesday, 3 p.m. ET) and Puerto Rico (next Sunday, 11:15 a.m. ET), the broader question about the rotation is how rigid Kerr will be. If Durant is inserted to the starting lineup, who is taken out? What ripple effects will that have on the bench? Kerr has not exclusively made hockey-style substitutions this summer, but he has clearly tried to construct a consistent first unit and a second unit so that the two respective groups could build chemistry. The simplest way to keep some continuity on Sunday was to put Durant in Tatum's place, but that doesn't mean the coaching staff would have landed on this particular rotation in any other circumstance.

For the next three days, Kerr can experiment with different lineup combinations in practice. Don't be surprised if the substitution pattern looks meaningfully different against South Sudan, and don't be surprised if this ends up being Tatum's only DNP-CD.

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