The Trey Murphy III chatter has been loud enough to make a Celtics deal feel inevitable. But the latest reporting out of New Orleans changes the math in a big way.
On Tuesday, Shamit Dua reported that the Pelicans are content to keep Murphy, are not shopping him, and would only consider moving him if they were “blown away”. Then on Wednesday, Jake Fischer said the trade buzz had been overstated and that New Orleans wants to hold onto Murphy.
For Boston, that matters. If the Pelicans really view him as a young building block on a strong contract, the price isn’t just high - it’s probably too high.
That’s especially true with the kind of return that’s been floated. Some reporting has suggested New Orleans would want three or four first-round picks, which is the sort of package that might make sense only if Murphy were far more established than he is.
He’s 26, and he hasn’t made an All-Star team. That kind of ask should stop Boston in its tracks.
And really, the Celtics don’t need to force it. They’ve picked up new assets and draft capital, but that doesn’t mean those picks have to disappear on the first tempting name to surface. There’s no reason to turn a stockpile into a shortage just because Murphy is available in theory.
The other big reason this feels different now: Paul George is already in Boston.
A few weeks ago, Murphy looked like a cleaner fit for the Celtics. Now the overlap is hard to ignore.
Murphy is younger and cheaper, and he brings a little more burst and rim pressure. But George gives you a lot of the same offensive value as a movement shooter, while also bringing better defense and real playoff experience.
The gap between the two is not nearly big enough to justify another major pick outlay.
There’s also the financial side, and it’s not small. To get Murphy into the mix using their traded player exception, the Celtics would need to move additional salary, with Sam Hauser among the names mentioned, and that would push them right up against their first apron hard cap.
So the smarter play may be the less dramatic one. See what George looks like in this system, duck the luxury tax to reset the repeater tax, and revisit the market at the deadline with plenty of assets still in hand. At this point, chasing Murphy looks a lot less like a savvy swing and a lot more like an unnecessary detour.
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Tatum addressed the change publicly for the first time at an event for his childrens book, and he made clear the transition has not been easy on a personal level. Even with Boston always moving forward, the emotional weight of seeing a longtime teammate and co-star gone is part of the story now, and it is the kind of development that changes not just the roster, but the entire feel of what comes next. [Read more 🡒]
