Brad Stevens has spent most of this offseason with the spotlight fixed on the Jaylen Brown trade, but the Celtics president has quietly done some of his sharpest work away from the headline-grabbing move.
The biggest reason? Boston has stacked up a few contracts that look like real bargains before the season even starts. Mitchell Robinson and Neemias Queta are at the center of that conversation, and both are drawing praise for the value they could deliver relative to what the Celtics are paying.
Robinson, one of the better big men available on the market, landed on the favorable side of Steph Noh’s contract-value model from The Sporting News. Queta graded out even better, finishing at plus-96.7, the highest mark on the list. Robinson peaked at plus-23.7.
Noh described the framework this way:
“Here's how some of the most prominent signings of the summer grade out in my salary model that translates expected impact --> dollar value. Green is a good contract, red is bad.”
“Most contracts have been either good or neutral-ish, with one notable exception: pic.twitter.com/UcGrRFhCJW
- Steph Noh (@StephNoh) July 6, 2026”
For Boston, the takeaway is simple: the team appears to have locked in its frontcourt for the near future without paying top-dollar to do it. With Queta and Robinson expected to soak up most of the minutes, and Luka Garza still in the mix, the Celtics are set up to get a lot of production from a group that doesn’t come with a massive price tag.
That’s especially encouraging because Boston already had reason to believe in what Queta and Robinson could bring together. A projection like this only sharpens that confidence, especially when the numbers suggest the Celtics are getting more than they’re paying for.
Ron Harper Jr. belongs in that same conversation too. He also picked up a new deal this offseason after finally breaking through in the NBA, including a strong showing in Boston’s regular season finale against Orlando and a handful of other notable performances.
He’s not expected to produce that kind of output every night, but there’s enough talent there to think he could grow into a useful rotation piece. And for about $3 million per year over the next four years, that’s the kind of bet teams are happy to make if it turns into a real playoff contributor.
So while Stevens will keep hearing it over the Brown-for-Paul George swap, the Celtics executive has also shown a clear knack for finding value where it matters. The front office may be taking heat for the big trade, but on the margins, it’s been doing the kind of work that can quietly shape a contender.
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