LAS VEGAS - Boston’s first Summer League outing was messy at the start, but the Celtics steadied themselves just enough to escape Toronto with an 83-80 win. The opening stretch looked rough in a hurry: Boston opened 0-for-5 from the field and coughed it up seven times in the first five minutes.
For a moment, it felt like the night could unravel. Instead, the Celtics’ young group settled in and showed enough flashes to make the comeback matter.
The biggest reason for that optimism was Chris Cenac Jr. The No. 27 pick in the 2025 NBA Draft - Brad Stevens’ earliest draft selection since taking over the front office - looked like a player with real upside.
When asked Saturday afternoon what felt natural about Friday’s performance, Cenac said, "I feel like it all felt natural, honestly. I've always felt like my game was better in the NBA," Cenac said on Saturday afternoon when asked what about Friday's game felt natural.
"But yeah, it all felt natural. I just went out and played hard, made the right reads, [and] let the game come to me."
His work on the glass stood out right away. Cenac finished with five offensive rebounds and five defensive rebounds, and he kept finding ways to get a hand on the ball.
He also made his presence felt on defense with four blocks, including two that came from his elite foot speed. One game in, and the defensive package already looks like it belongs.
The offense still has room to grow, but there were clear signs of something more. Cenac is raw on that end, yet the talent shows through in flashes.
In the fourth quarter, he put the ball on the floor with a crossover, drove baseline, and finished a bucket - not exactly the kind of move you expect from a near-7-footer. It was the sort of play that makes you stop and take notice.
Hugo Gonzalez had a rough shooting night, but there were still reasons to pay attention. Boston leaned on him as its main creator for most of the game, and he handled that load well enough to keep the offense moving.
His ball-handling popped, and all eight of his assists mattered because he was under constant pressure. Gonzalez turned it over only three times, which is a strong sign that he could become a real creator for Boston down the road if the shot starts falling.
Amari Williams found his rhythm as the game went on, Dillon Mitchell delivered a ridiculous slam, and John Tonje chipped in with some needed scoring. Even with those contributions, Milos Uzan was the one who really stood out after Cenac and Gonzalez.
Uzan spent last season at Houston alongside Cenac. The four-year college point guard - two seasons at Oklahoma, two at Houston - logged 32.9 minutes per game for Kelvin Sampson last year, the most on the team. Boston added him immediately after the draft, signing him to an Exhibit 10 contract, and he made a strong first impression in Summer League.
The stat line was modest: five points, four rebounds and five assists on 2-of-9 shooting, including 1-of-3 from deep. But the impact was bigger than the numbers. Uzan finished as a team-high plus-17 and brought a defensive edge that changed the tone of the game.
"He was great on both ends of the ball," head coach Amile Jefferson said. "Defensively, his ball pressure really helped our attack.
Just being able to get into the ball, speed the offensive player up, disrupt their offense. It was huge for us.
And then he brought a calming presence on offense, which really helped us get into our sets and flow more seamlessly. Him working with Amari in the get-game and the pick-and-roll.
He's just a really good, dynamic guard who's smart, cerebral, and he sees the floor really well."
Toronto kept trying to attack him, but Uzan answered every challenge with a level of toughness that lifted Boston on that end. When he was on the floor, the Celtics looked different. The momentum tilted their way.
With two-way spots still flexible heading into next season, the 23-year-old should be squarely on Boston’s radar for one of those openings.
Elsewhere in Las Vegas, the rookie spotlight has been bright. On Thursday night, Brockton native AJ Dybantsa took the floor for the Washington Wizards against Utah Jazz rookie Darryn Peterson in a matchup between the No. 1 and No. 2 picks in the 2026 NBA Draft. Dybantsa was eventually pulled late in the fourth with what appeared to be a nagging calf cramp, but while he was out there, he was impressive.
In Other News...
Celtics Fans Just Got The Dillon Mitchell Sign They Were Hoping For
The Celtics kept rolling in Las Vegas, moving to 2-0 at NBA Summer League with a win over the Hornets, and Dillon Mitchell was at the center of it. Bostons No. 40 pick in the 2026 NBA Draft led the way with 24 points, while also piling up eight rebounds, six steals and two blocks in a performance that gave the team plenty to like on both ends.
Mitchells value for Boston has always been tied to his energy and versatility, but this was a more complete showing than the one he put together in college. He attacked the glass, created turnovers and looked far more comfortable as a scorer, the kind of all-around line that can make a front office take notice even in the middle of summer league. The bigger question now is whether this was a one-night flash or the first real sign that he can carry that growth into the next stage. [Read more 🡒]
Celtics Just Made A Franchise Shaking Bet Fans Will Debate
The Celtics have taken a swing that will reshape the roster and the conversation around it, adding Paul George and future draft picks in a move that signals a willingness to chase a different kind of ceiling. According to the teams official release, the deal comes with multiple future selections and conditions attached, the sort of fine print that can matter just as much as the headline in a trade this large.
George arrives with plenty of name value, but also with real questions after two seasons in Philadelphia that were defined by injuries and uneven production. Boston is betting that the version of George it gets now can still tilt a playoff race, while the draft compensation gives the front office some insulation if the fit is not as seamless as the price tag suggests. [Read more 🡒]
Jordan Walsh Knows What Could Keep Him Off The Floor Late
Jordan Walsh spent last season carving out a real place in Bostons rotation, getting into 68 games and showing why the Celtics value his defensive versatility. He also flashed enough on offense to make this summer feel important, because the next step for a young wing on a contender is rarely about effort or activity. It is about becoming someone the coaching staff can trust when the game tightens and possessions get harder to find.
Walsh said during Summer League that his focus is on becoming a better scorer and playmaker, with the goal of giving himself more ways to stay on the floor late. He knows the margin is thin for wings in Boston, especially with the roster shifting around him, and he has pointed to the need to improve his shot, handle and ability to create his own offense in small pockets. The opportunity is there for him to grow into a bigger role, but so is the pressure to prove he can be more than a specialist when the Celtics need a bucket. [Read more 🡒]
