Jaylen Brown and Kawhi Leonard each found themselves in blockbuster deals on Wednesday, but the return Boston got for Brown is the part that really jumps off the page.
Brown, the 2024 NBA Finals MVP, was dealt to the Philadelphia 76ers for nine-time All-Star Paul George, an unprotected first-round pick in 2031, a 2028 first-round pick swap, and two second-round picks in 2028 and 2030.
Leonard, meanwhile, was sent back to the Toronto Raptors for Gradey Dick, Brandon Ingram, first-round picks in 2031 and 2033, second-round picks in 2030 and 2033, and a first-round pick swap in 2027.
On paper, there are reasons to think Brown should have brought back more. He’s six years younger than Leonard, and unlike Leonard, who has dealt with injury issues over the past couple of years, Brown has not carried that same durability baggage. He’s also a recent champion, while Leonard has already been through a long run of wear and tear.
That’s exactly why NBA reporter Josh Lewenberg’s reaction lit up the debate. As he put it on X: "whispers the Clippers got more for a 35-year-old Kawhi Leonard than Boston got for a 29-year-old Jaylen Brown," he wrote.
whispers the Clippers got more for a 35-year-old Kawhi Leonard than Boston got for a 29-year-old Jaylen Brown.
- Josh Lewenberg (@JLew1050) July 1, 2026
The draft-pick comparison is the sharpest part of the mismatch. Leonard’s return included two first-round picks, while Brown’s brought back just one first-rounder, even if it was unprotected. The rest of the pieces are close enough to wash out, and when it comes to player value, Ingram and Dick together clearly outweigh George, who averaged less than 20ppg for the second straight year.
That’s why Brown feels like the more valuable trade asset in this setup. If a 35-year-old Leonard with durability concerns could command that kind of package, Boston likely could have asked for more in a Brown deal.
Brown’s move also changes the picture in the East. He now has to fit alongside Tyrese Maxey and Joel Embiid, though that kind of adjustment should come naturally after his years alongside Jayson Tatum. Together, that group can alter the balance of power in the conference.
Last season, the New York Knicks rolled to the Eastern Conference title, knocking out the 76ers in the semifinals and then sweeping the Cleveland Cavaliers in the conference championship series.
But Brown’s arrival raises the ceiling in Philadelphia. If Embiid stays healthy and the offense clicks in the playoffs, the 76ers become a much more dangerous team. Cleveland hasn’t made a major leap this offseason, even with rumors linking LeBron James to the franchise, and the Pistons may be a factor but don’t have the same star power.
That leaves the Knicks as the main obstacle in the East. If the 76ers get the version of Embiid they need and Brown settles in quickly, New York’s grip on the conference won’t be easy to protect next season.
In Other News...
Donovan Mitchell Just Turned Up The Heat On Clevelands Biggest Question
Donovan Mitchells irritation with Colin Cowherd after the Jaylen Brown trade was a reminder that the Cavaliers star is paying attention to more than just what happens on the floor. Mitchell is close friends with Brown, and the public edge to the reaction only adds to the backdrop around Clevelands biggest summer issue, one that has been hanging over the franchise since the season ended.
Mitchell has a contract extension option that opens July 7, and the Cavaliers can put a massive offer on the table right away. He has also said he wants to stay in Cleveland, which is why every bit of outside noise matters here: the front office has to sort through a decision that could shape the roster for years, while Mitchell continues to be viewed as the player who determines how high this team can climb. [Read more 🡒]
Cavs Summer League Roster Leaves Out One Name Fans Expected
The Cavaliers 2026 Summer League plans are taking shape in Las Vegas, with the club unveiling a roster that should give fans their first extended look at several young pieces in the pipeline. NaeQwan Tomlin and newly drafted No. 34 overall pick Meleek Thomas headline the group, while assistant coach Andrew Olson will steer the team alongside associate head coach and Charge coach Eli Kell-Abrams.
The list also comes with a few familiar names missing, which is part of what makes these early July rosters worth a second look. Cleveland will use four games in Vegas to sort through its next wave of talent, but the makeup of the group suggests the Cavaliers are balancing evaluation with a different kind of summer workload for at least one expected returnee. [Read more 🡒]
Cavaliers May Need To Sacrifice A Key Wing To Save This Offseason
The Cavaliers offseason has stayed relatively quiet, but the roster questions are starting to sharpen as the front office waits on LeBron James next contract decision. With Keon Ellis and Dean Wade already gone and Jaylen Brown arriving in a separate deal, Cleveland still has work to do if it wants to stay flexible without backing itself into a corner financially, and that has put veterans like Max Strus and Dennis Schrder into the trade conversation.
For a team trying to keep its core competitive, moving one of those win-now wings could be the cost of preserving cap room for the bigger moves still to come. Strus, in particular, has drawn attention as a possible salary-cutting piece, and the Cavaliers are weighing whether trimming money from the rotation is worth the risk of losing another established presence before the offseason really gets going. [Read more 🡒]
