Portland finally made the blockbuster move everyone had been bracing for, but the first swing might not be the last one.
The Trail Blazers sent Jerami Grant and Kris Murray to the Grizzlies for Ja Morant on Monday afternoon, a deal that looked like the long-awaited superstar arrival in Portland. But the fit is strange enough that it has quickly raised a bigger question: was this really the first step toward Jaylen Brown?
For now, the Blazers’ backcourt is crowded in a way that doesn’t make much sense. Morant is in the mix with Damian Lillard, Jrue Holiday, and Scoot Henderson, and that doesn’t even account for Deni Avdija and Shaedon Sharpe, two more players who can handle the ball and operate like oversized guards. It’s a lot of creators and not nearly enough balance.
That’s why Brown starts to look more like the real target. Portland now appears to have more guard inventory than it needs and a clearer need for a player in the Jaylen Brown mold.
The deal for Morant also changes the economics of any larger move, since Boston’s reported resistance had been tied in part to not wanting to absorb Grant’s contract. With Morant, Holiday, Sharpe and other sizable salaries in the picture, that obstacle no longer looks the same.
Holiday, in particular, now stands out as a much cleaner fit for Boston than Grant would have been. And in Portland, his role may have just been squeezed out by the Morant addition. A package built around Holiday, Henderson, and ideally Donovan Clingan - though Shaedon Sharpe would probably be more realistic - plus a pile of draft picks, would make practical sense for the Blazers.
That kind of framework would leave Portland with Morant and Lillard running the show, two strong wings in Brown and Toumani Camara, and a center solution that could come from Clingan, Robert Williams, or even another deal. It’s a much more coherent shape than the roster they’d have if the Morant trade were the end of the story.
For Boston, Holiday would soften the blow of losing Brown. He’d step in as a third guard alongside Derrick White and Payton Pritchard, while Scoot Henderson would give the Celtics a promising young piece and the draft capital to work with.
From there, Boston could move Scoot and the picks for another player, perhaps someone like Trey Murphy III, or a similar type. If Clingan or Williams comes back too, that only adds to the appeal.
No version of a Jaylen Brown trade is going to feel painless for Celtics fans. But if this is where Portland is headed, the return could be strong enough to make the idea a lot easier to live with.
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Johnsons appeal is obvious because of his expiring contract and the kind of production that has made him one of the more movable names on the market, especially with several teams circling. Gordon, meanwhile, would give Boston a more natural answer at power forward and could even let Jayson Tatum slide back to small forward, which is the type of lineup flexibility the Celtics have been chasing. Whether Denver is actually willing to move either one is the part still worth watching. [Read more 🡒]
Heat Suddenly Loom Over One Celtics Shooting Threat After Giannis Move
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Anfernee Simons fits the type of scoring and spacing Miami is likely to be chasing, and the possibility of a bigger role there makes him one of the more intriguing Celtics-related names to watch. If the Heat cannot bring back Norm Powell, the pressure to find another guard only grows, and Bostons view of the market could end up intersecting with Miamis roster math in a way that puts Simons squarely in the middle of it. [Read more 🡒]
Celtics Rumors Just Reignited A Familiar Frontcourt Debate
Bostons frontcourt conversation has quickly turned from a short-term cleanup job into a familiar roster debate, with the club apparently weighing how to use its mid-level exception to bolster the middle of the floor. The appeal is obvious: one option brings the kind of steady, low-maintenance veteran presence teams trust, while the other offers a defensive impact that can change the tone of a game when he is on the court.
For the Celtics, the bigger question is less about whether help is needed and more about what kind of help makes the most sense. Boston watched its center depth get stripped down last season, then saw the position become a recurring issue when the games tightened up in the playoffs, so any move here will say a lot about how the team wants to balance reliability, health and upside moving forward. [Read more 🡒]
