This offseason has been a pretty chaotic one so far. Between the Giannis Antetokounmpo trade saga to the now exhausting Jaylen Brown trade discourse, it feels like there isn’t room to talk about the rest of the team as a whole.
After watching the Celtics blow a 3-1 lead to the Philadelphia 76ers and lose Game 7 at home in TD Garden, there was one glaring point on the roster that Boston needed to address: the center position. Once Joel Embiid came back in the series, it looked the Celtics had no answers
to stop him. Between Neemias Queta constantly being in foul trouble, Nikola Vucevic going ice cold on offense and giving nothing on defense, and Luka Garza trying his best in limited minutes, Boston’s center position was getting torched all series long and looked like the biggest issue on the roster going into the offseason.
However, lost in the discourse of finding the next Celtics big man, a thought crossed my mind that feels like fans aren’t talking about enough: Boston really needs to address the guard rotation, too. The lack of big names at center and the fact that the Celtics are seemingly trying to trade Brown for a big man makes it easy to forget that Boston could also use an upgrade at point guard.
As a result of a possible Celtics-Nuggets trade reported by The Ringer’s Bill Simmons who said there was smoke around a possible deal that could send Jaylen Brown and Sam Hauser to Denver in exchange for Jamal Murray and Cameron Johnson, here we are. However, Brian Robb of MassLive reported that “Boston isn’t expected to have interest in Jamal Murray due to his sizable contract.” Although a Murray trade doesn’t seem likely, in my mind if the Celtics were serious about trading Brown, it would be for an elite guard.
Jamal Murray and Cameron Johnson would be a great options for the Celtics to acquire if this Denver trade is a legitimate idea. Murray is coming off of a rough postseason, but was a first time All-Star and finished All-NBA 3rd Team in 2026, averaging 25.4 points and 7.1 assists per game on 48.3% shooting from the field and 43.5% from three. Johnson also had a career year shooting the basketball, averaging 12.2 points on a career high 48% from the field and 43% from three. Both of these guys would also answer the needs that Brad Stevens has mentioned about the guard position.
Stevens Addresses Guard Needs
Although the online discourse around the Celtics need at the guard position hasn’t been talked about enough, Stevens has addressed the need for help on the perimeter. In his press conference after the first round of the NBA Draft, Stevens talked about what Boston was looking for going into the offseason, saying: “size and then I would like to add maybe one more person with some speed on the perimeter.”
Before the second round of the draft, Brett Siegel of ClutchPoints reported that Boston was potentially interested in taking 6’4″ guard Ryan Conwell out of Louisville at 40th overall, but the Miami Heat would trade up to the 37th pick to pick him before the Celtics got a chance.
Celtics Recent Guard History
When the Celtics won the championship in 2024, what was one of the big roster moves they made in the offseason? It was essentially swapping out Marcus Smart and Malcolm Brogdon at the guard position for Jrue Holiday. Holiday had an incredible 2024 season where he averaged 12.5 points, 5.4 rebounds, and 4.8 assists while shooting 48% from the field and a career high 42.9% from three point range. On top of his offensive contributions, Holiday was an elite defender that could guard all five positions, culminating in an All-Defensive 2nd Team nod and 6th in Defensive Player of the Year voting. He was also crucial in the NBA Finals, becoming the Celtics third highest scorer behind Jayson Tatum and Jaylen Brown, averaging 14.4 points, and arguably winning Game 2 on his own with a 26-point performance on 11-14 shooting.
The 2025 season season was a step back for Holiday and it led to him being trading to the Portland Trail Blazers for Anfernee Simons ahead of the 2026 season. Although there wasn’t a lot of expectations for him, Simons performed really well with Boston as their 6th man behind Payton Pritchard and Derrick White. In 49 games with the Celtics he averaged 14.2 points on 44% shooting from the field and 39.5% shooting from three in only 24.5 minutes per game.
The inconsistency issues started to arise when the Celtics traded him to the Chicago Bulls in exchange for Nikola Vucevic at the 2026 trade deadline. The Vucevic trade in theory seemed to be a good one. Boston needed more big man depth and both him and Simons were on expiring contracts, so a flip was easy. However, Vucevic didn’t really work out well in Boston and it left the Celtics guard position a little bit in limbo.
Derrick White had an abysmal offensive season in 2026 where averaged 16.5 points on a career worst 39.4% from the field and a second career worst of 32.7% from three. Payton Pritchard, who was okay as a starter with the Celtics, transitioned back into the 6th man role after the trade deadline and played some of his best basketball of the season, finishing with averages of 17.0 points and 5.2 assists on 46.4% shooting from the field and 37.7%s from three.
Outside of those two, it felt like the Celtics had a hole in the starting lineup where a second guard should have been in the second half of the season. They tried to fill it with Sam Hauser, Baylor Scheierman, and Jordan Walsh but it never felt right. In the playoffs, Boston saw Pritchard and White struggle to shoot all series and their lack of production from the guard position led to the Celtics ultimately losing in Game 7.
Who should the Celtics target?
There is a lot of guard depth on the roster already but out of those guys it doesn’t feel like there is that level of player the Celtics need. In my mind it feels like they need a player who can be consistent second/third scoring option at times and a ball handler to initiate the offense if needed at the guard position. However, If I was to play Brad Stevens going into the offseason, who are the options out there that can really solve the problem?
Murray like stated previously would be an interesting idea that would not be beloved if he was traded for Brown, but it would fill the role stated previously. On the free agency market right now there aren’t a ton of great options. Could a reunion with Marcus Smart or Anfernee Simons be in the cards? Not necessarily the elite guard I had in mind. Is there a chance De’Aaron Fox coming off maybe the worst NBA Finals performance ever for the San Antonio Spurs is a bounce back option? Maybe we try to bring the gang back together again and trade for Jrue Holiday back from the Portland Trail Blazers again?
The other option outside of making a move is hoping that Derrick White’s shooting from last season was just a fluke and he can be that third option offensive hub for the Celtics again, Payton Pritchard takes another leap and becomes an All-Star level player, and maybe a guy like Baylor Scheierman will get a bigger role and become a consistent offensive threat off the bench. According to HoopHype’s Mike Scotto, Boston has interest in the Mavericks’ jitterbug PG, Brandon Williams.
It feels like with the limited options available the Celtics will bank on an in house solution, but with Stevens making it known he’s looking, it wouldn’t surprise me if he added another guy on a shorter contract in free agency. Although the center position is still the biggest need that on Boston’s roster that takes up most of the spotlight, I just hope the guard position doesn’t get neglected this offseason as well.













