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Jaylen Brown gives unfortunate reality check to Trae Young’s No. 1 seed in the East dreams

Photo by Sam Hodde/Getty Images
Photo by Sam Hodde/Getty Images
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Jaylen Brown had a blunt reality check ready after Trae Young floated the idea of the Washington Wizards shocking the Eastern Conference next season.

Young’s confidence is not new, but this version came with a different edge. After moving to Washington, he is now trying to drag a rebuilding perception into something much bigger, and he clearly believes the doubt has gone too far.

The Wizards have young pieces and a fresh star voice, but calling out a No. 1 seed dream is always going to invite reaction from players who know how quickly the NBA conversation can shift.

Trae Young #3 of the Washington Wizards waits during a timeout during the second quarter against the Cleveland Cavaliers at Rocket Arena.
Photo by Jason Miller/Getty Images

Trae Young says the Washington Wizards are being slept on in Eastern Conference

NBA on ESPN shared Trae Young’s comments about feeling more overlooked than at any point in his career.

“This is the most slept on I’ve been in my whole life. … Imagine the Wizards as the No. 1 team in the East next year. What are people going to be saying?” Young asked.

Young’s point was built around the idea that people are judging Washington through old expectations. He has talked like a player entering his prime who believes the Wizards can move faster than the outside world expects.

That confidence makes sense from his perspective. A lead guard with his scoring and playmaking can change a team’s ceiling quickly, especially if Washington’s young core takes a real step.

Jaylen Brown warns Trae Young about Washington Wizards goalposts

Jaylen Brown responded to the clip with a short message that carried a familiar warning about NBA narratives.

“They’re [going to] move the bar,” Brown tweeted.

Brown’s meaning was simple. Even if Young does lift the Wizards higher than expected, the reaction may not be pure praise. The conversation could quickly turn from doubting Washington to asking why they did not do even more.

That is the unfortunate reality check for Young’s No. 1 seed dream. Being slept on gives a player fuel, but proving people wrong often creates a new standard instead of ending the debate.

Brown knows that cycle well from Boston, where deep playoff runs and elite regular seasons did not always stop criticism.

For Young, the challenge is not only making Washington relevant, but doing enough that the bar cannot keep moving out of reach.