Derrick White Gets Real About Celtics Pressure After Chaotic Offseason

Derrick White opens up about the Celtics' strategic summer moves, including trading star Jaylen Brown and adding key players, while gearing up for his own performance boost.

LAS VEGAS - Derrick White had a front-row seat for the Celtics’ first summer league game, sitting alongside Jayson Tatum, Neemias Queta and Jordan Walsh. But before the action really got going, he took a few minutes to address the bigger conversation hanging over Boston’s offseason: the Jaylen Brown trade and everything that has followed.

White said he learned about the move at home.

“I was at my house … my wife told me,” White said. “Obviously, it's tough to see someone get traded, and JB's been an amazing teammate, amazing friend to me.

He kind of welcomed me when I got traded to Boston. So I'm always thankful for my time that I spent with JB.”

For all the change around the roster, White doesn’t sound like someone expecting the Celtics to lower the bar. He made it clear the standard in Boston hasn’t moved.

“When the ball goes up, whenever our first game is, everybody's gonna expect us to win and want us to win,” he said. “So we're gonna have the same mindset and expectations, and we gotta go out there and attack it.”

The Brown move may have been the headline, but White also pointed to the other side of Boston’s offseason - the arrival of Paul George. That part, he admitted, comes with its own strange feeling.

“He killed us the whole series, it felt like,” White said. “It's kind of like a mix of emotions, I guess. But sad to see him go.”

White knows better than most that the NBA keeps moving whether a player is ready or not. As someone who has been traded himself, he sees the Celtics’ next step as partly about what he brings back to the table.

“I just wanted to attack the summer. I don't think I played that great last year, so I think that's kind of what I've been focusing on,” he said. “I gotta shoot it better, obviously, but there's a lot of little things that I want to work on.”

Boston’s reshaped frontcourt is another part of the picture, and White is clearly glad to have Mitchell Robinson on his side now. Robinson was a major problem for the Celtics in the past, including when Boston was bounced in the second round two seasons ago.

“Mitch has been a pain to go against for us for many years now,” White said. “So it's going to be great having him on our team and someone that is one of the best rebounders in the league, and obviously a great defender as well.”

Robinson gives the Celtics more stability in the big-man rotation, pairing with Neemias Queta and offering a different look than Luka Garza. White also praised Queta, who earned a significant extension this summer after a year that changed a lot of opinions.

“Going in last year, everybody had a lot of questions about what he could do, and I think he proved a lot of people wrong,” White said. “I'm super happy, obviously well-deserved.

I texted him congrats, and it's good to see him out here now. He's got a couple extra dollars in his pockets.”

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