Celtics Deliver Devastating Blow To Rival Knicks

The Boston Celtics make a strategic leap in their quest for dominance by signing elite center Mitchell Robinson from rivals, the New York Knicks.

The Celtics didn’t exactly come out swinging on Tuesday, but Wednesday morning changed the mood fast. Boston opened free agency by landing Mike Conley on a veteran minimum deal, then followed that up with the kind of move that can reshape a rotation: Mitchell Robinson is headed to the Celtics on a three-year, $47.4 million contract.

That’s a major win for Boston, both because Robinson was the best center still available and because the Celtics pulled him away from the Knicks in the process. He gives them exactly the kind of presence they were missing - a true rim protector, a strong rebounder, and a screen-setting, rim-running big who can make life easier on both ends.

Robinson’s game fits cleanly with what Joe Mazzulla wants to do. Boston’s identity may be built around threes, but the deeper engine is pace, spacing, and winning the possession battle.

Robinson helps there in a big way. He’s a force on the glass, he creates extra chances with offensive rebounds, and he gives the Celtics a reliable anchor behind the defense.

The Celtics know his value well from years of facing him. Mazzulla and his staff have made it obvious how they viewed Robinson, often fouling him intentionally to keep him off the floor.

That shooting concern is still there, but Boston isn’t bringing him in to stretch the floor. They’re bringing him in to do the dirty work around the rim.

If opposing teams want to go to “hack-a-Mitch,” Boston will have to live with it. Even so, the Celtics still have Neemias Queta and Luka Garza in the mix, so they’re not left exposed. In practical terms, this move gives Boston a much better answer at center than Nikola Vucevic, who never clicked and struggled defensively.

The fit is also about timing and need. The Celtics still had holes to fill at guard and in the frontcourt, and they’ve already addressed both with Conley and Robinson.

There’s still uncertainty about how much Conley has left, but he gives them another steady ballhandler. Robinson, meanwhile, is 28 and in his prime.

Last season with the Knicks, he averaged 8.8 rebounds, 4.6 offensive rebounds, and 1.2 blocks per game while coming off the bench and logging fewer than 20 minutes a night behind Karl-Anthony Towns. He also shot 72% from the field, and that efficiency should translate well in Boston through pick-and-roll action and second-chance opportunities.

The Celtics weren’t in position to spend big on a center, and they didn’t want to sacrifice major assets to solve the spot. On the market they had, this was the cleanest answer. Brad Stevens and the Celtics didn’t just improve their center room - they strengthened it significantly while weakening a rival in the Eastern Conference.

In Other News...

Bryan Blair Just Gave Syracuse Fans Their First Real Glimpse Of His Plan

Bryan Blair is still early in his run as Syracuses athletic director, but he used his new newsletter, Orange Report: Off the Top of the Dome, to give fans a clearer sense of how he is approaching the job. Since arriving from Toledo, he has been learning the department, settling his family, and handling the sort of transition work that comes with hiring a new mens basketball coach and taking over a major Power Four program.

Now Blair is starting to sketch the bigger picture, and it is one Syracuse fans will recognize as ambitious. He wants the Orange back in the national conversation, with a stronger overall athletics operation and a better in-person experience inside the Dome, while also leaning into the universitys academic strengths as part of the winning formula. The broad vision is on the page, and the next question is how quickly he can turn it into something visible on the field and in the stands. [Read more 🡒]

Syracuse Recruiting Buzz Builds Around Elite Wing With Familiar Ties

Will Brunsons recruiting profile keeps gaining steam, and Syracuse remains in the mix as one of the programs tracking the 2028 wing closely. The four-star small forward has already built a strong rsum at Rutgers Preparatory School, and he is now headed to IMG Academy in Bradenton, Florida for the 2026-27 high school season, a move that should only raise his national visibility as he continues to draw high-major attention.

For Syracuse, the connection is worth watching because the Orange have already re-offered Brunson after first getting involved in June 2025. He is active with Renaissance Hoops on the AAU circuit, and with offers piling up from a long list of major programs, the next phase of his rise figures to be closely monitored in college basketball circles. [Read more 🡒]

Why Tunmise Adeleye Could Matter Fast For Syracuse Up Front

Tunmise Adeleye arrives in Syracuse with a rsum that suggests he can help right away up front, and the Orange are banking on that kind of immediate impact as they reshape the defense under new coordinator Vince Kehres. The redshirt senior defensive lineman joined the program in January after a winding college path that included stops at Texas A&M, Michigan State, Texas State and UNLV, and he brings the kind of experience Syracuse has been looking to add to its front.

Adeleyes latest season gave a clear glimpse of why he was appealing, as he piled up 48 tackles, six sacks and three pass deflections in 13 games for UNLV. He also finished that year on a strong note with starts in the final six games, and now the question for Syracuse is how quickly that production and versatility translates into a starting role and a larger workload in the heart of the defense. [Read more 🡒]