The Jaylen Brown chatter is starting to pick up, and the Boston Celtics are at least open to hearing offers for their five-time All-Star after coming up short in their push to land Giannis Antetokounmpo earlier this offseason.
Brown makes sense as a target for plenty of teams. He’s coming off a career-best season in Boston during Jayson Tatum’s Achilles recovery, and if he does end up moved after nine seasons with the Celtics, he’d walk into his next stop as an immediate difference-maker.
One possible landing spot that keeps popping up is Utah, and that connection isn’t hard to trace. The Jazz have Boston ties all over the place, with Danny and Austin Ainge running basketball operations, which is enough to make them a speculative dark horse in any Brown discussion.
The price, though, would be steep.
Shams Charania reported, “In some cases, the Celtics have asked for at least four first-round picks for Jaylen Brown.”
The Athletic’s Sam Vecenie recently put together a set of possible Brown deals, and one of the scenarios he floated had Utah sending out a package built around Lauri Markkanen.
Vecenie described it this way: “This seems like a fair ask from the Celtics if they were to inquire with the Jazz about a deal. They get a returning centerpiece that matches Brown's salary in Markkanen, a young bench scorer in Sensabaugh, and a couple of draft picks that sweeten the pot.”
From Utah’s side, the appeal is obvious enough. Brown would give the Jazz a top-15 player, a true No. 1 option for the offense, and a wing who would help on the defensive end too.
But that doesn’t mean the Jazz should be sprinting toward the deal.
Utah is in a different spot than a team desperate to make one final swing. This is year one of trying to build a competitive, playoff-level roster. The Jazz have already put time into building chemistry, they’ve got a healthy mix of veterans and younger talent, and they still have future draft flexibility if they want to keep shaping the roster later.
The timeline matters here. The Jazz are not in a position where they need to force a move for Brown right now. They can let this group play out, see what it looks like next season, and revisit bigger decisions next offseason if necessary.
Markkanen is the other major piece of this puzzle. Brown may be the better player in a vacuum, but Markkanen has remained committed to Utah since the rebuild began.
He’s under contract through 2029 on the $238 million deal he signed in 2024, he’s still in his prime, and he just turned in a strong 2025-26 campaign. His game and versatility fit a wide range of Jazz lineups, both now and down the road.
So unless Boston puts something on the table Utah simply can’t turn down, there isn’t much reason for the Jazz to move off Markkanen for Brown.
A front office with Celtics ties might think about it. But thinking about it and actually doing it are two very different things.
For now, Jazz fans probably don’t need to worry about Brown landing in Utah anytime soon. And if a deal ever does get serious, there’s a real chance the Jazz would look back and wonder why they pushed their chips in so early.
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BYU Lands Uhila Wolfgramm In Huge Boost For 2027 Class
BYU added a major piece to its 2027 recruiting board with the commitment of Uhila Wolfgramm, the four-star EDGE rusher from Maple Mountain High School. One of the top prospects in Utah for his class, Wolfgramm gives the Cougars an early head start in a cycle that already looks important for keeping elite defensive talent close to home.
The timing matters, too, because BYU had been in a real battle for him and needed a win after Oklahoma had made a strong push. Wolfgramms decision keeps a highly regarded Utah County recruit in the fold and gives the Cougars a chance to build momentum around a player whose stock has risen sharply as his recruitment has picked up. [Read more 🡒]
BYU Should Watch How Big 12 Tension Boils Over This Week
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BYU will have a reason to pay close attention because the discussion is expected to stretch well beyond one schools troubles. The leagues push for a 24-team College Football Playoff, the NCAAs new 5-for-5 eligibility model and the Big 12s next move in media rights negotiations all point to a conference trying to protect its footing while the sport keeps shifting around it, and this week should offer an early read on how aggressive the Big 12 plans to be. [Read more 🡒]
BYU Just Lost A Key Coach Fans Did Not Expect
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Now Boise State is bringing him back into the fold as associate head coach, and Voigt is stepping into a familiar setting at a significant moment for the program. He said he was excited to return to a place where he had spent more than a decade, with Boise State officially entering the Pac-12 this week alongside programs including Utah State, giving the move an added layer of timing for a coach who knows the building and the expectations well. [Read more 🡒]
