Payton Pritchard experienced a complete 180 turn last season with the Boston Celtics, which ended with a celebratory Banner 18 duck boat parade in June.
It began when Pritchard and the Celtics agreed on a four-year, $30 million contract weeks ahead of Opening Night. Boston stood by Pritchard after the undersized guard logged a career-low 13.4 minutes as the afterthought of the team’s reserve unit in 2022-23, and it paid off tremendously. Pritchard appeared in each of Boston’s 82 games in the regular season, averaging a career-high in points (9.6), rebounds (3.2), assists (3.4) and shooting from the field (46.8%) while also logging a Celtics-best assist-to-turnover ratio (4.6). Yet, the 26-year-old isn’t content heading into the upcoming season.
“Obviously, I’m already working this summer,” Pritchard told Evan Turner on the “Point Forward” podcast. “… I’m trying to make a jump. I think for me, I’ve always been a person that’s never been a goal setter trying to win these awards or anything like that because that’s out of my control. For me, if I can make a jump in certain areas, offensively and become even more efficient in different parts of the game. My coaches have talked about it, being able to shoot off the dribble at a higher clip — like step-backs and stuff.”
Pritchard’s minutes took a slight decline in the postseason, averaging 18.7 as opposed to 22.3 in the regular season, however, the Oregon product still found ways to contribute. In Game 1 of the Eastern Conference semifinals, Pritchard buried a deep buzzer-beating three to give the Celtics a 92-77 lead over the Cleveland Cavaliers to begin the fourth quarter. In Game 5 of the NBA Finals — the series clincher — Pritchard sunk a half-court buzzer-beater to end the first half against the Dallas Mavericks, which shifted the momentum Boston’s way en route to its record-setting 18th title.
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It was undeniably Pritchard’s best NBA season to date, and for more reasons than one, but that isn’t stopping him from uncovering new ways to improve or take inspiration from a few fellow guards from Boston’s championship roster.
“Defensively, just figuring out a way to even make more of a impact as far as kind of being more of a pest, even though I am on-ball,” Pritchard explained to Turner. “But learning how to take charges at a higher rate. Some of that stuff goes down to watching film and I also got two dudes who do it in their own right in (Jrue Holiday and Derrick White). For me, that’s the standard. That’s the standard I’m trying to get to.”
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