Boston Celtics head coach Joe Mazzulla offered one of his most candid — and funny — remarks yet about Jayson Tatum’s recovery from a ruptured Achilles tendon. After Tatum finished a vigorous public workout in front of media members during a Celtics shootaround, reporters pressed Mazzulla on what the progress meant. Instead of a typical medical update, Mazzulla joked, “I failed medical school.” His quick line drew laughs while underscoring the uncertainty surrounding Tatum’s timeline back to game action.
Tatum’s injury came last season during the playoffs, and it forced him to sit out the majority of the 2025–26 campaign. Yet he has shown glimpses of progress with explosive drills and even dunks at recent workouts. He posted videos earlier in the season of him dunking just 150 days after the injury, a sign that his rehab has been faster than usual for such a serious injury.
Jayson Tatum getting a full workout in at Celtics shootaround here in Detroit. pic.twitter.com/Lyu4Vne4hp
— Adam Himmelsbach (@AdamHimmelsbach) January 19, 2026
What Happened During the Workout
At the Seaholm High School facility in Birmingham, Michigan, Tatum went through one of his most extensive workouts since the injury. Media members on the scene watched him dunk and move with fluidity unusual for a player still months into rehab. Social posts captured the moment and highlighted his improving athleticism.
The Celtics remain cautious. Tatum’s rehab is a slow, monitored process with no official return date yet. Boston leadership wants him fully ready before he sees game minutes. In that context, Mazzulla’s comment wasn’t just a joke — it was a refusal to speculate on a timeline.
Jayson Tatum dunk!
This is by far his most extensive workout in front of media since the injury pic.twitter.com/kAFbXTQgJi
— Noa Dalzell 🏀 (@NoaDalzell) January 19, 2026
Celtics Stay Competitive Without Tatum
Even without their star forward, the Celtics have won enough games to sit comfortably in the upper tier of the Eastern Conference. Boston entered Monday’s schedule as the No. 2 seed, proving their depth matters whether Tatum plays or not.
Teammates have recognized Tatum’s work ethic and progress. Guard Derrick White said watching Tatum improve “has been amazing” and that seeing him around the team motivates everyone.

















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