
MILWAUKEE -- Five years ago to the day of Game 1 of the Eastern Conference Semifinals matchup between the Celtics and the Bucks, a high school teacher told a young Jaylen Brown that he wouldn't amount to much.
He finished with 19 points on 8-of-14 attempts and was asked about the old tweet Monday afternoon at the Fiserv Forum prior to Celtics shootaround.
"When somebody says something like that, you never really forget it. Something like that, you're not going to," Brown said. "I don't really want to get into what happened because I'm going to leave it in the past where it belongs. But it's true. In Georgia, the education system isn't the best so I don't really put too much blame on the teachers. It is what it is.
"You got one teacher that handles 35 kids in one class -- it's tough. There's a lot of teachers that go through stuff then take a lot of crap all day. So who knows what had been going through with mine that day when she said that. I let it be in the past, I'm going to use it as motivation but I wasn't trying to draw any attention to myself. I had no idea it would turn out to be what it was."
Although Brown declined to share what led to his former teacher saying such a thing to him, he does hope that his story can be an inspiration to youngsters that are currently growing up in the same kind of environment he had to come out of.
"If kids look at it the right way in terms of anybody says anything that tries to put them down or shoot their dreams down and it motivated them to get to where they are, I salute that," Brown said. "But I had no intention of it doing what it did."
"I tweeted it when I was 17-years-old, five years ago," Brown said. "It was crazy to this day because I guess I would be getting out of jail tomorrow, according to the tweet. I'll leave it in the past where it belongs but it's definitely a pretty cool moment to be where I am now.
"Five years ago, who would have thought? Especially, where I come from and a lot of people come from communities worse and better. Everybody has aspirations and dreams to get to where they belong and I'm happy I'm here playing basketball with the Celtics."