Jaylen Brown’s name keeps surfacing in offseason chatter, but the actual market around him does not sound nearly as hot as the Celtics would like.
Boston has been operating with a steep price tag attached to the 29-year-old forward, asking for as many as four first-round picks plus players in any deal. That was the stance during the Giannis Antetokounmpo talks, and it remains the line now, even after the Celtics were beaten out by Miami in those sweepstakes.
The problem for Boston is that the interest out there appears limited.
Portland has been linked to Brown for a while, but league sources describe the Blazers’ interest as moderate at best. More importantly for the Celtics, it does not come close to matching the kind of package they have been seeking.
Denver has at least explored Brown as an option, but the Nuggets have not talked with Boston since the weekend, and team sources say their interest has been overstated. There is also a practical issue: they do not have the draft capital to meet the Celtics’ ask. And even if they did, those sources said, Denver would not be eager to move it for Brown.
Brooklyn, another team mentioned in connection with Brown, does not appear to be in the mix at all. Those sources said the Nets are not engaged with the Celtics and are not trending that way.
So the Celtics are left with a difficult question about what comes next. If Brown stays put, there is still work to do between the player and the team after the way this summer has played out.
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The move matters beyond just keeping a familiar big man in the fold. It keeps Portland below the luxury tax line and preserves the flexibility that comes with it, while also taking one of the more notable centers off the market before free agency fully gets going. For a team trying to balance present-day stability with future maneuvering room, this is the kind of decision that will draw a reaction either way. [Read more 🡒]
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For the Blazers, the logic is easy to follow even if the full picture is still evolving. Moving Jerami Grant opens the door to a cleaner roster fit, while Kris Murray was viewed as more of a limited role piece, and there is at least some belief around the league that Morant could still be revived in the right setting. What happens next will say a lot about how aggressively Portland wants to chase a quicker turnaround, especially with more star movement still looming across the NBA. [Read more 🡒]
Ja Morant Changes Everything As Blazers Face A Second Massive Question
Ja Morants arrival has already changed the conversation around the Trail Blazers, even before he has had a chance to settle in. Portlands new star was in contact with the team soon after the trade and made clear he was excited about joining the group, a welcome sign for a franchise trying to reset its direction in a hurry.
The bigger issue now is that the on-court splash comes with an off-court uncertainty hanging over the organization. With governor Tom Dundon involved in talks over Moda Center renovations and the possibility of a new arena, the Blazers are facing questions that reach well beyond the roster, and the next phase of this rebuild may end up being about more than just Morant. [Read more 🡒]
