The Celtics have officially added rookie free agents Milos Uzan and Tucker DeVries to the roster, turning the Exhibit 10 agreements they reached with both players last month into official signings.
Both players went undrafted before landing with Boston, and both are now listed on the team’s official roster.
Uzan arrives after a four-year college run that began with two seasons at Oklahoma and finished with two at Houston. The 6-foot-4 combo guard was a full-time starter for the Cougars, appearing in 77 games and averaging 11.3 points, 4.1 assists and 2.9 rebounds in 32.2 minutes per game while shooting .416/.377/.763. He has also put up 8.0 points, 5.0 assists and 4.3 rebounds across three Summer League games for Boston.
DeVries, a 6-foot-7 guard/forward, was a two-time Missouri Valley Conference Player of the Year in three seasons at Drake before following his father and head coach Darian DeVries to West Virginia in 2024/25. An injury limited him to eight games there, and he then moved on to Indiana in 2025/26.
In his lone season with the Hoosiers, he averaged 13.7 points, 5.3 rebounds, 3.3 assists and 1.1 steals in 34.2 minutes over 32 appearances. In two Summer League games in Las Vegas, he has averaged 11.0 points and shot .400 from three-point range in 19.6 minutes per contest.
An Exhibit 10 contract is a non-guaranteed minimum-salary deal that can be converted to a two-way contract before the regular season starts. If a player on an Exhibit 10 is waived and then spends at least 60 days with the team’s G League affiliate, he can earn a bonus of up to $91K.
Boston now has 17 players under contract: 14 on standard deals, two on Exhibit 10 contracts and one on a two-way.
In Other News...
Celtics Fans May Feel Very Different About That Jaylen Brown Trade Now
When Boston moved Jaylen Brown to Philadelphia for Paul George and draft picks, it was the kind of deal that immediately invited second-guessing. Brown had been a centerpiece in Boston, and any swap built around an older star and future assets was always going to be judged by how the next few seasons played out rather than by the initial reaction alone.
Now the long view looks even more complicated for Celtics fans, because the leagues latest scrutiny around Kawhi Leonard has only added to the sense that star-player trades can turn on factors no one sees coming. Bostons return from Philadelphia includes a pick that could carry real weight down the line, and the value of any future asset in this kind of deal often depends on how quickly a contenders window shifts. [Read more 🡒]
Brad Stevens Somehow Changed The Red Sox Mood In Boston
The Celtics blockbuster move involving Jaylen Brown and Paul George landed at just about the same time the Red Sox started heating up, and in a city that lives and breathes its sports moods, the timing has been impossible to ignore. There is no real connection between the two, of course, but Boston has a long memory for coincidences that feel bigger than they are, especially when one teams headline seems to line up with anothers surge.
Since that trade, the Red Sox have kept winning, turning the kind of random overlap fans joke about into a small running story around town. The streak has stretched long enough to make the calendar feel like part of the narrative, with Bostons baseball team carrying the positive energy all the way to the break and leaving the kind of lingering question sports fans love to ask, even when they know better. [Read more 🡒]
Celtics May Be Seeing Dillon Mitchell Answer His Biggest Red Flag
Dillon Mitchell arrived in Boston with one obvious question hanging over his game, and Summer League has offered the Celtics at least a promising early answer. The second-round picks shooting was a concern after a rough three-point showing in college, but his jumper has looked smoother in Las Vegas, with Bostons coaching staff working alongside him to clean up the mechanics and give him a more reliable base to build on.
Mitchell has also played with more confidence, which matters just as much for a young wing trying to carve out a role. The Celtics have made his development a priority since the draft, and Mitchell has embraced the process, knowing the path forward is about repetition, comfort and proving the shot can hold up when the games get real. [Read more 🡒]
