The Brooklyn Nets had a chance to get in the Jaylen Brown business, but their top decision makers apparently shut it down.
According to The Ringer’s Bill Simmons, Brooklyn was in position to make a deal that would have sent Michael Porter Jr. and draft assets to the Boston Celtics. The move never happened, and Brown ended up with the Philadelphia 76ers instead.
Simmons and Zach Lowe discussed the Nets’ interest in Brown and whether they would have pulled the trigger if they were running Brooklyn.
A Brown trade would have pushed the Nets closer to the playoff picture, but it still would not have guaranteed a jump into true title contention unless more major moves followed. There’s also the age factor: Brown will be 30 at the start of the season, which means any team trading for him could be tied to a big salary deep into his 30s.
The fit is obvious, though. Brown leans on his athleticism to get downhill and to guard elite players at multiple positions.
Still, the price matters. The 76ers landed an MVP candidate for an aging, expensive Paul George, along with two first-round picks and two second-round picks. On that scale, Brooklyn could have likely topped the offer with Porter Jr. and two first-round picks alone.
Even so, that kind of move would have put real pressure on the Nets to win immediately and speed up their rebuild. That may not be the right time for that, especially with Egor Dëmin and Mikel Brown Jr. still needing more development before they’re asked to carry major roles on a championship-level team.
And Brooklyn’s stash of draft picks is still intact, which matters in a league where star players can become available fast. In the modern NBA, unhappy stars can hit the trade market, especially in smaller markets.
Anthony Edwards was mentioned as one example of how quickly things can change if the LaMelo Ball experiment doesn’t work out with the Minnesota Timberwolves.
So while a Jaylen Brown deal would not have been a mistake on its own, the Nets seem to be leaning on patience right now. At this stage of the rebuild, the focus is on maximizing the chance to win a championship once Mikel Brown Jr. and Dëmin are ready for bigger responsibilities.
In Other News...
Nets Head Into Vegas Still Waiting For Their Full Rookie Picture
Brooklyns Summer League group heads to Las Vegas with a little momentum and a little mystery. After going 2-1 in Sacramento, the Nets get their NBA 2K26 Summer League slate started against the Knicks, a familiar East Coast opponent that should give the team another useful measuring stick as it keeps sorting out its young roster and building chemistry.
The bigger storyline for Brooklyn is still the rookie picture, which has yet to come fully into focus. Danny Wolf missed all three California Classic games with lower back soreness but is nearing a return, and Joshua Jefferson is also in line to potentially join the mix as the Nets open play in Vegas, giving the team a chance to see more of the pieces it hopes to develop over the next stretch. [Read more 🡒]
Nets Suddenly Have A Different Kind Of Pressure Next Season
Brooklyns next season comes with a different kind of pressure, one that has less to do with the standings in the moment and more to do with how the organization wants to define itself. With the NBAs new lottery system in play, the Nets are staring at a decision point that could shape the way they handle the year from start to finish, especially if the roster spends much of the season on the fringe of the East race.
The real question is whether Brooklyn leans into a push for the play-in tournament or uses the year to prioritize development if the results start to slip. That kind of flexibility can change everything in the back half of the schedule, from how the team handles veterans dealing with nagging injuries to how many chances the younger players get against opponents still fighting for something meaningful. [Read more 🡒]
Lakers Interest Puts Nets Decision On Former Wing Under Spotlight
The Nets decision to let Ziaire Williams hit unrestricted free agency is suddenly looking more notable with the Lakers circling for another perimeter defender. Los Angeles has already made some offseason moves, including adding Kevon Looney, and is still trying to shore up its wing depth with players who can give it more defensive flexibility on the outside.
According to Lakers insider Khobi Price, Williams is among the names under consideration, which puts Brooklyns call on his team option back in the spotlight. The Lakers are also pursuing Jonathan Kuminga, though cap space may force them to choose one path over the other, leaving Williams as a realistic fallback if the bigger swing becomes too expensive. [Read more 🡒]
