Derrick White Play v. Heat Amazes Jaylen Brown: 'Don’t know how the hell he did that'

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Clutch plays can happen at any point in a game, even a game a team leads by 27 and wins by 19.
Like, for example, late in the second quarter of the Boston Celtics 147-129 win, when Miami had gone on a little bit of a run to get within 15 with about three minutes to go. If Miami was able to build on that momentum, the had enough time to cut the lead to single digits and head into the locker room feeling good about themselves at halftime.
Derrick White was not going to let that happen.
Ayo Derrick White is legit incredible
— NikNBA🏀 (@NIKNBAYT) April 2, 2026
Great pass getting JB the oop before the buzzer but then notices there are open Heat players on the other end
Immediately hustles back and stops what would’ve been an open layup
His impact needs to be studied pic.twitter.com/dcx5Zveg55
White fueled an 8-0 Boston run with two layups and a pretty alley oop to Jaylen Brown to send the Celtics into halftime up 23 and Miami into the locker room hanging their heads.
But the last 10 seconds of that stretch was peak Derrick White.
The Celtics got a stop with 6.7 seconds to play. White filled the slot in transition, got a pass from Sam Hauser, and then fired a touch-pass alley oop to Brown for a lay up with 1.5 on the clock.
But instead of just celebrating, White turned and sprinted back up the court, somehow getting back in time to challenge Pelle Larson at the rim and force a miss. In 6.7 seconds of play, and less than 10 seconds of real time, White went from one baseline to the next and back to assist on two points and prevent two by Miami.
“I don’t know how the hell he did that, but that was impressive to make the play,” Brown said. “I look and then I'm thinking that Larson has a wide open layup, and then D White comes flying out of nowhere. That's impressive.”
That's an understatement.
The Celtics didn’t need White’s offense in this game because Brown and Jayson Tatum played to their elite standard. White scored just six points on four shots, but his defense was, as usual, out of this world. To borrow from one of Joe Mazzulla’s favorite phrases, White is giving the game what it needs.
“It was a great play,” Mazzulla said. “He only took four shots, but … you have to have the humility on both sides of an entire team. Those other guys had it going, and you need a group of guys that understand that, but have to compete at all the other stuff. And I think that play was Derrick’s.”
Awards season is around the corner, and there's no doubt White will get recognized for his defensive abilities. Just how deep that recognition goes will be interesting to see, but the guys on the floor who have the best view of what he does know he needs to be in all the defensive conversations.
“That's First-Team All-Defense type stuff,” Brown said. “Those are Defensive Player of the Year type plays. And Derrick, his timing is just unbelievable for a guard. His timing is just amazing, how he can just, his feel, to be able to get those blocks and stuff like that is special. So that was great.”

John Karalis is a 20-year veteran of Celtics coverage and was nominated for NSMA's Massachusetts Sportswriter of the Year in 2019. He has hosted the Locked On Celtics podcast since 2016 and has written two books about the Celtics. John was born and raised in Pawtucket, RI. He graduated from Shea High School in Pawtucket, where he played football, soccer, baseball, and basketball and was captain of the baseball and basketball teams. John graduated from Emerson College in Boston with a Bachelor of Science degree in Broadcast Journalism and was a member of their Gold Key Honor Society. He was a four-year starter and two-year captain of the Men’s Basketball team, and remains one of the school's top all-time scorers, and Emerson's all-time leading rebounder. He is also the first Emerson College player to play professional basketball (Greece). John started his career in television, producing and creating shows since 1997. He spent nine years at WBZ, launching two different news and lifestyle shows before ascending to Executive Producer and Managing Editor. He then went to New York, where he was a producer and reporter until 2018. John is one of Boston’s original Celtics bloggers, creating RedsArmy.com in 2006. In 2018, John joined the Celtics beat full-time for MassLive.com and then went to Boston Sports Journal in 2021, where he covered the Celtics for five years. He has hosted the Locked On Celtics podcast since 2016, and it currently ranks as the #1 Boston Celtics podcast on iTunes and Spotify rankings. He is also one of the co-hosts of the Locked on NBA podcast.
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