
Boston Celtics star Jaylen Brown is losing his patience with ESPN’s Stephen A. Smith.
On Sunday night, Brown took to his FCHWPO Twitch channel to address Smith directly over comments the $40 million talking head made about Brown’s post-Game 7 livestream. And it only took three words to get a feel for where Brown’s response was heading.
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“F*ck Stephen A,” Brown said during his Twitch stream Sunday night.
Smith spoke critically of Brown on ESPN’s “First Take” after Boston surrendered a 3-1 first-round series lead to the Philadelphia 76ers, primarily focusing on the 2024 NBA champion’s comments that the year, despite its finish, was his “favorite.”
“This is why, respectfully, a lot of people say, ‘f*ck Stephen A,’” Brown said. “Because this is the type of stuff he does, and then he doesn’t recognize it. But he’s creating a narrative saying that the reason why I’m saying that I had my favorite season is because, selfishly, I had a best-performing year — not the fact that we outproved expectations. Not the fact that everybody expected us to be nothing, and we had to fight, and we showed up, and we competed every single day, and had to fight for every victory.
“Not the joy of watching our teammates grow, or not the growth of watching guys who are unproven start to solidify themselves as well through leadership, through chemistry. He maybe doesn’t understand that because maybe he’s never had to fight for nothing in his life. Maybe anytime adversity has hit, he’s rolled over, or he’s gave in.”
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Smith immediately jumped on the airwaves of the worldwide leader in sports to vocalize his interpretation of Brown’s comments, portraying him as a selfish teammate. Brown averaged a career-high 28.7 points as Boston’s primary scorer this past season and finished sixth in the league’s Most Valuable Player voting, behind Shai Gilgeous-Alexander, Nikola Jokić, Victor Wembanyama, Luka Dončić, and Cade Cunningham.
It was the first time Brown had ever received MVP votes, but, as the five-time All-Star reiterated, that wasn’t the motivating factor behind calling this past season his favorite.
Boston Celtics star Jaylen Brown speaking to his online audience during Sunday night’s Twitch stream.
Brown also took issue with Smith’s remarks that he should “be quiet” unless he’s “trying to get traded” from Boston.
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“Did he just say I need to be quiet? Be quiet for who? Man, f*ck Stephen A. Stephen A, Stephen B, Stephen C. My offer still stands. You want me to be quiet and stop streaming. Well, I want you to be quiet and get off these networks because you’re not using your platform to do real journalism. You’re using your platform to use clickbait.”
Once Smith’s ESPN commentary hit Brown’s radar, he offered the longtime personality to stop streaming under the condition that Smith retire. Brown, most notably in recent years, isn’t the only NBA star Smith has clashed with from his multi-million-dollar throne. Last year, Los Angeles Lakers star LeBron James took issue and confronted Smith courtside at Crypto.com Arena after Smith used Bronny James’ struggles as an NBA player benefiting from nepotism to challenge LeBron’s abilities as a father.
Smith ran with that incident like a Taylor Swift summer tour to drive social media engagement and ESPN segments long past the expiration date, encapsulating the broader issue athletes have raised with members of the media and the current landscape.
Smith continued toeing the line and moving the goal posts, speaking with what appeared to be rift-creating undertones by highlighting Tatum’s appearance on “First Take” while questioning why he never joined his running mate Brown on his Twitch channel. Brown caught that right away and called it out, questioning why the face of ESPN, rather than breaking down the game and his performance specifically, was instead fixated on speculating about the relationship between Brown and Tatum.
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That especially rubbed Brown the wrong way.
“That last statement took the cake,” Brown responded. “Like, you’re talking about JT coming on my stream. What did that have to do with anything? It’s the same conversation we had before. You’re supposed to be doing journalism. You’re supposed to be talking about the game and sports — my performance. Cool. We blew a 3-1 lead. I understand, I can take accountability for that. That’s fine. But when you start bringing this other stuff up, and you don’t see how that line is getting crossed, when you talk about other people’s families, and you talk about other people’s character, and you talk about other people’s personal lives, etc., and you cross that line, and you don’t think somebody gonna cross that line back? Boy, you crazy as hell.”
For years, Smith and ESPN have moved away from traditional sports coverage — and its standards — leaning instead on hot-take fodder by using the biggest teams and athletes for debates, most of which aren’t rooted in anything beyond social media chatter. Smith has been a central figure in that shift, frequently using athletes such as Brown to drive viewership for clips in a way similar to a YouTuber, while pushing most of journalism’s rules of thumb to the side.
In 2024, before Brown and the Celtics won the NBA Finals, Smith stated that Brown was “not liked” among his NBA peers due to issues with his ego and attitude. Brown responded on X, calling for Smith to “state (his) source,” before the two later had a sit-down interview to clear things up.
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“You ain’t nothing but a cozy fire in a burning down house,” Brown added.
Brown doubled down on his offer to Smith and the proposal of removing him from his seat to restore “integrity” within journalism as a whole.
“Tell this motherf*cker to retire, because he’s the face of clickbait media,” Brown said. “And maybe with his retirement, we can spark a movement to get the rest of these motherf*ckers outta here or to also have some type of — forget journalistic integrity — actual integrity.”
