Sixers Finally Escaped The Paul George Chapter Celtics Must Face

The Philadelphia 76ers have successfully maneuvered a complex trade situation by acquiring Jaylen Brown and parting ways with an underperforming Paul George, altering the dynamics of two top NBA teams.

Jayson Tatum’s reaction to the Boston Celtics’ trade with the Philadelphia 76ers for Jaylen Brown put a strange twist on what the Sixers just gained.

The obvious part is easy: Philadelphia got better. Brown is a steady All-Star who doesn’t miss much time, and he just finished what some could argue was an MVP-caliber season. But the move also left Tatum and the Celtics carrying the awkward side of the deal.

“To be transparent, it's weird,” Tatum told ESPN ahead of the ESPYs. “I've been on the Celtics for nine years, and he was my teammate every single one of those.

You understand throughout the course of a career that the NBA is a business, and people change teams, coaches, and front offices. But it doesn't make it any easier.

There's still the human element that you feel those emotions. The city feels those emotions.”

Tatum also pointed out that Boston now has to welcome in its new group of teammates, while Philadelphia is the team bringing in Paul George.

That part of the story has its own strange finish. The Sixers went all in to land George, sending key members of their front office and ownership group to convince the former Clipper to sign. At the time, the move carried plenty of buzz.

Two years later, it never really settled into something clean or fully convincing. George always seemed a little detached, and he likely would have gone back to the Clippers if they had met something close to the four-year, $211.5 million contract he’s on now.

There was also real interest from the Golden State Warriors, and George said as much himself when he talked about wanting to team up with them.

Health issues made the whole thing even messier. George played only half of the games in his first season with the Sixers. In his second year, injury concerns and a 25-game suspension limited him to 37 appearances.

He did get some credit for his two-way play in the postseason, but it didn’t change much against the eventual champions in the second round. The New York Knicks swept Philadelphia.

Over two seasons, George averaged 16.7 points, 5.3 rebounds, and 4.0 assists in 78 games. The production never matched the price tag, and the connection with the city never really took hold.

He doesn’t need to be treated like Ben Simmons when he comes back for at least two games next season, but there’s no reason for a tribute video during a timeout either. The Sixers will move on.

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