Marc Stein Throws Surprise Wrench Into Jaylen Brown Saga

Amidst looming salary cap challenges, the Celtics contemplate a strategic player reunion as they consider a blockbuster trade involving Jaylen Brown with the Trail Blazers.

The Jaylen Brown trade picture keeps circling back to Portland, and one name could help make the whole thing click: Robert Williams III.

Boston would prefer to keep Brown, but the salary-cap fallout is making that a difficult path to hold onto. That has opened the door for a market, and the Trail Blazers stand out as one of the most logical landing spots. They have the draft capital and young talent to get the Celtics’ attention, and Williams could be the piece that helps bridge the gap.

Marc Stein and Jake Fischer reported last night - and not for the first time - that Boston wants Williams back. As Fischer and Stein wrote, "It's believed that (Kevon) Looney is also on Boston's list of center targets, which is likewise known to feature former Celtics big man Robert Williams III."

That interest makes sense on Boston’s end. The Celtics want help in the frontcourt, and because they’re firmly under the tax, they can also work a sign-and-trade. Williams is an unrestricted free agent, which gives Boston a path to use that flexibility if Portland is serious about pushing a Brown deal across the finish line.

Still, Williams would not be the centerpiece of any return. He’d be more of the lever that makes the trade easier to build, especially if Portland doesn’t want to feel like it’s giving up too much to land Brown.

Boston’s interest in Williams is easy to understand. He knows the organization, and he has the kind of talent that can play starter minutes when healthy.

The problem, as always, is availability. Injuries have followed him throughout his career, and that has kept his market from fully taking off.

His time in Portland hasn’t changed that storyline much. Up until this past season, he had appeared in only 26 games combined with the Trail Blazers in his first two years there. That history is why expecting Boston to bring him back and hand him the starting job would be a risky bet.

Portland already adjusted to that reality by bringing him off the bench behind Donovan Clingan. Boston could do the same if it ends up bringing Williams back. But the bigger point remains the same: if the Celtics want Timelord back, and there’s a clear reason they might, he’d be part of the return package - not the whole thing.

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