The Celtics may have Jaylen Brown on the market, but that does not mean they are approaching any deal like a seller in a hurry.
Boston’s stance is clear enough: if Brown is moving, the return has to look like a franchise-altering haul. The bar is high because Brown is Brown, and the Celtics are still trying to stay in title contention. That means game-changers, draft capital and the kind of package that makes sense for a top-10 player entering his prime.
Yahoo Sports’ Kelly Iko floated one possible framework between Boston and Portland that fits under the CBA, though it feels a long way from the kind of return the Celtics would ideally want. In Iko’s words: "Technically, (a Brown) addition of that magnitude is possible even without including Morant in a deal; a package of Jrue Holiday, Shaedon Sharpe and Sidy Cissoko works under the CBA, and the Blazers have six first-round picks through 2030," Iko wrote.
Holiday is the obvious draw in that group, and a reunion with him would not be shocking. But if Boston were to go that route, it would also eliminate any need for an Anfernee Simons reunion.
Sharpe brings athletic scoring, but not the sort of established production that changes the whole shape of a trade. Cissoko adds another piece, yet the package still feels light if the Celtics are truly treating Brown like the centerpiece he is.
The draft haul is where Portland starts to separate itself from other possible suitors. The Blazers can offer six first-round picks through 2030, plus pick swaps with Milwaukee, Orlando’s first-round pick in 2028, and Boston’s own picks on top of most of their own. That kind of flexibility gives them a real opening if they decide to press hard.
Even so, Boston may simply use Portland’s ability to pile up picks as leverage against other teams. If the Trail Blazers can put that much draft capital on the table, the Celtics can point to it and try to squeeze more out of everyone else.
There is also the broader reality that the West figures to be a blood bath. Teams may hesitate to overpay for Brown, but they may also not want to hand him to a conference rival. Portland’s roster would become more complicated depending on what it gives up, though landing Brown would also solve a lot of that confusion.
At the end of the day, the leaks make one thing seem obvious: Boston is asking for almost everything it can get for Brown. And the only real leverage a trade partner has is knowing exactly why the Celtics are even willing to listen.
In Other News...
Celtics Just Made A Quiet Offseason Call On Two Young Picks
Amid a quieter stretch of offseason business, Boston has made one of those small but meaningful roster decisions that can shape the back end of the teams future. The Celtics did not extend qualifying offers to Max Shulga or John Tonje, a move that leaves both young guards headed into the summer without the usual team-controlled pathway.
Shulga and Tonje were late second-round picks from a year ago, and both spent time moving between Bostons standard roster and two-way territory as they tried to carve out a place. For a front office that has been sorting through several qualifying-offer calls around the league, the decision on those two keeps the Celtics own picture a little cleaner, even if it also opens the door for other possibilities in free agency. [Read more 🡒]
NBA Bombshell Just Put An Unthinkable Star In Boston's Orbit
LeBron James decision to tell the Lakers he will play elsewhere next season sent the league into immediate speculation mode, and Boston inevitably got pulled into the conversation. With James headed toward unrestricted free agency, the usual heavyweight suitors are already being discussed, but the Celtics have at least been mentioned as a team that could theoretically enter the mix if they wanted to shake up the entire landscape.
For Boston, the appeal would be obvious even before the bigger legacy questions come into play. The Celtics could put a real contract offer on the table, and the basketball fit would be just as tempting, with James able to ease into a secondary role next to Jayson Tatum and Jaylen Brown while still supplying playmaking, passing and rim pressure. Whether that idea ever moves beyond the realm of possibility is the part worth watching, because the door only opens if Boston decides this is more than a wild summer thought. [Read more 🡒]
Jaylen Browns Father Just Took Celtics Frustration Public
Marselles Brown has been willing to say publicly what Celtics fans have heard swirling around Jaylen Brown all summer: the noise around his son has started to feel bigger than basketball. During an appearance on Sway In The Morning, he defended Jaylen against criticism from ESPN voices Stephen A. Smith and Kendrick Perkins, pushing back on the idea that the Celtics star somehow deserves the backlash that followed Bostons playoff exit and the reaction to his comments afterward.
The timing matters because Brown is coming off a career-best season, yet the conversation around him keeps getting dragged into accountability debates and trade chatter. Marselles Brown argued the criticism has crossed a line, turning a basketball argument into something more personal, and it only adds another layer to a Celtics offseason that has already been defined by speculation about how the team views one of its most important players. [Read more 🡒]
