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    Tom Carroll
    Tom Carroll
    Nov 3, 2025, 05:15
    Updated at: Nov 3, 2025, 05:15

    Everything you need to know for the Boston Celtics' home game against the Utah Jazz on November 3, 2025: where to watch, stream info, TV channel, and live updates.

    On Monday at TD Garden, the Celtics (3-4) will play host to one of the NBA’s worst teams in the Utah Jazz (2-4).

    Coming off a bad loss on Saturday to the Rockets (3-2), Boston is being given a nice bounce-back spot with Utah coming to town, seemingly stuck in that NBA no man’s land of trying to be bad enough to land the top pick while simultaneously being too feisty to actually secure the requisite ping pong balls.

    While their record might be similar, the expectations are not. Utah should-and-will finish towards the bottom of the Western Conference, while Boston is hoping to tread water as a top five team in the East while Jayson Tatum potentially misses the entire 2025-26 season rehabbing from Achilles surgery from May.

    How to Watch Celtics vs. Jazz

    Utah Jazz at Boston Celtics Information

    Game Date: November 3, 2025
    Game Time: 07:30 PM ET
    TV Channel: NBC Sports Boston (Boston) & KJZZ-TV and Jazz+ (Utah)
    Radio: 98.5 The Sports Hub (Boston) & KSL 97.5 FM (Utah)
    Location: TD Garden, Boston, MA
    Live Stream: Fubo & NBA League Pass

    Mar 10, 2025; Boston, Massachusetts, USA; Boston Celtics guard Jaylen Brown (7) controls the ball while Utah Jazz center Walker Kessler (24) defends during the first half at TD Garden. (Bob DeChiara/Imagn Images)

    Missed Saturday night’s loss against the Rockets? Here were some takeaways:

    1. Most People Say They Saw This Coming…

    Over an 82-game NBA grind, some defeats are practically built into the schedule. They’re not necessarily about who the opponent is, but about when the matchup falls.

    Saturday night’s meeting with the Rockets fit that mold for Boston. The Celtics were playing the second half of a road-home back-to-back after a down-to-the-wire contest against the 76ers (4-1), their third game in four nights and sixth in nine. Houston, meanwhile, had been idle for two days and had played two fewer games.

    “It obviously wasn’t our night. The Rockets played well. Good team. Well coached. They were prepared. And it just wasn’t our night tonight,” Mazzulla said postgame. “That happens over the course of the season, and so it’ll be more important about how we respond on Monday at shootaround and into the game on Monday night.”

    Nov 1, 2025; Boston, Massachusetts, USA; Houston Rockets forward Kevin Durant (7) and Boston Celtics guard Derrick White (9) talk after a game at TD Garden. (Paul Rutherford/Imagn Images)

    2. Fast Start for Houston

    The Rockets raced out to a 13-point lead after one quarter and never let Boston close within single digits.

    Seven Houston players scored in double figures, led by Durant’s 26 points on 8 of 11 shooting (72.7%). As a team, the Rockets shot 42 of 77 from the field (54.5%), and an astonishing 19 of 29 from three (65.5%) - a striking performance against a Celtics defense that entered the night holding opponents to an NBA-worst 41.1% shooting.

    That 65.5% clip from three was the first time in franchise history an opponent has hit over 60% from deep against Boston on at least 25 attempts. In total, nine different Rockets shot 50% or better.

    The Celtics, on the other hand, managed to shoot only 40 of 103 overall (38.8%), and were 14 of 44 from long range (31.8%). It marked just the 26th time, including playoffs, that Boston has shot below 40% during Mazzulla’s 304-game tenure.

    Nov 1, 2025; Boston, Massachusetts, USA; Houston Rockets forward Kevin Durant (7) drives to the basket during the second half against the Boston Celtics at TD Garden. (Paul Rutherford/Imagn Images)

    3. Outmanned, Outsized, Outworked.

    There wasn’t much more to it.

    Even aside from the scheduling disadvantage, Houston’s size and athleticism was overwhelming.

    On opening night, the Rockets’ starting lineup of Amen Thompson, Jabari Smith Jr., Kevin Durant, Alperen Sengun, and Steven Adams averaged 82.2 inches in height - the tallest starting five in a season opener since that stat began being tracked in 1970.

    For Saturday’s rematch, Josh Okogie at 6-foot-4 filled in for Adams, but Houston still started three players taller than any Celtic, each an elite athlete. The result was predictable: a 53–36 rebounding disparity and 11 blocked shots.

    This, of course, is not an isolated issue for Boston. Rebounding has been a problem for this team in the early part of the season. That’s going to happen when you lose Al Horford, Kristaps Porzingis, Luke Kornet and (yes) Jayson Tatum from your frontcourt from one season to the next. And while I think center Neemias Queta is improving, he still has a long way to go.

    Nov 1, 2025; Boston, Massachusetts, USA; Houston Rockets forward Kevin Durant (7) defends Boston Celtics forward Jaylen Brown (7) during the first half at TD Garden. (Paul Rutherford/Imagn Images)

    4. Loss In-Context

    The bright side for Boston is that the schedule finally lightens up after a brutal open to the 2025-26 regular season. And while a 27-point defeat is never easy to swallow, a 3–4 record isn’t disastrous given the circumstances.

    The Celtics have already faced four opponents that finished in the top six of their respective conferences last season - Cleveland (3-3), New York (2-3) and Detroit (4-2) in the East, plus Houston in the West. Cleveland, New York, and Houston each won 50 games a year ago.

    And make no mistake about it - despite a season from hell in 2024-25, Philadelphia is no slouch either. And they’ve faced them twice!

    Considering that level of competition, plus a brutal opening stretch featuring seven games in 11 days and two back-to-backs in different cities, Boston has weathered the storm reasonably well.

    Aside from the Houston blowout, the Celtics have been competitive in every game, showing flashes of potential even while adapting to major roster changes and a new system. If they can build on those glimpses as the schedule eases, consistency should follow — and the tough early lessons could pay off later in the season.

    Nov 1, 2025; Boston, Massachusetts, USA; Boston Celtics head coach Joe Mazzulla reacts during the first half against the Houston Rockets at TD Garden. (Paul Rutherford/Imagn Images)

    Tom Carroll is a contributor for Roundtable, with boots-on-the-ground coverage of all things Boston sports. He's a senior digital content producer for WEEI.com, and a native of Lincoln, RI.