BOSTON — Anfernee Simons wasn’t shocked to learn he’d been traded from the Celtics. The longtime Portland Trail Blazers guard was embroiled in trade rumors almost immediately upon arriving in Boston in July,
and understood that the Celtics could look to move him ahead of the deadline.
Still, the news stung. Simons had just woken up from a pregame nap in Dallas last Tuesday when he got the call from Brad Stevens that he had been traded to the Chicago Bulls.
“Brad is a good guy, and he’s always been open and honest about everything,” Simons said at Bulls shootaround on Wednesday morning at TD Garden. “Obviously, it was a tough conversation for him, for me to accept, but I understood.”
The 26-year-old guard loved his time his Boston, and spoke about his tenure glowingly.
“You build a connection with the city and team — you won together, lost together,” Simons said. “So that’s the toughest part, getting some relationships and relationships, and being able to go out there and compete with each other, and that kind of stops, and then you kind of feel you kind of feel sad about it. But the NBA moves fast, not even 48 hours later I’m on the court with a new team.”
For Simons, the on-court transition to Chicago has been relatively seamless. In three games with the Bulls since the trade, he has averaged 20 points and 5.3 assists, shooting 48.9% from the field and 34.4% from three. (The Bulls as a team, however, have not had as much success; they’re 0-3 since the trade deadline).
Still, as he stood on the TD Garden parquet for the first time in 10 days, it felt weird to be donning a red Bulls jersey; last time he was at the Garden, Simons dropped 27 points in a Celtics blowout victory over the Bucks.
“You start to see a future for yourself in Boston, for sure,” Simons said. “[You’re] winning, everything’s going great. You’re getting comfortable. Try their best to make you feel comfortable. And so you wanted to see, obviously, the light at the end of the tunnel, and be able to compete with the team the whole season, but obviously the NBA is a business.”
Simons said knowing he was traded for a great player in Nikola Vucevic made the trade easier to digest. He thinks Vucevic can change the Celtics dynamic as a big who can also stretch the floor, and understands that Vucevic aids the Celtics’ championship pursuits.
“You understand that part,” he said. “So you can get a little bit emotional behind it, but at the same time, you understand it. And, you kind of just move on. I understand that it was for a great player as well, somebody that’s been an All-Star. So you come here and just accept that with his new team, dive straight in and compete.”
Ahead of the trade deadline, Simons had previously expressed a level of nonchalance when it came to being in volved in trade rumors.
“It’s the NBA,” he said last month. “I’ve been in trade rumors since my third year. Every other week, it’s something new. It’s just a part of the NBA, and you just gotta be where your feet are.”
And, since his departure, Celtics teammates have gushed about the impact Simons had in Boston throughout his 49-game tenure.
“He’s just a great, great person, great kid on and off the floor, just humble — I hope he gets everything that he’s looking for just because he just fit right in with his group of guys in our locker room,” Jaylen Brown said. “He could have had different thoughts, and thought differently, and his energy could have been different. He was a great teammate and did everything he needed to do that we asked him and more, and contributed to winning. Anfernee has all the respect in the world from me, and I hope he gets everything he deserves.”
Joe Mazzulla similarly praised Simons for how he handled this relatively brief stint.
“I thought he handled the role and the preparation and the situation about as best as he could — and we’re a better team for that,” said the Celtics head coach. “It came from his humility, his work ethic, and his dedication.”
And, at a community event on Tuesday, Jordan Walsh said that he looked forward to reuniting with Simons in Wednesday’s matchup between the Celtics and the Bulls.
“Fortunately, I’ll see Ant [tomorrow],” Walsh said with a grin. “We’ll have to destroy him, though. But, it’ll be good to see him again, have him back in the Garden. But missing those guys, having them gone, it definitely leaves a void in the arena.”
Could Anfernee Simons eventually return to the Celtics?
Simons’ on-court role may have diminished in Boston — he averaged just 24.5 minutes per game, his lowest in five years — but he felt that the experience greatly benefited him.
“Just the opportunity to go out there and contribute to winning,” Simons said. “And obviously, [it’s] a historic franchise, they have a lot of aspirations to win a championship, and you can see that each and every day — in the way they practice, by their habits, the way they speak to each other, it’s one common goal. So, I learned a lot from just being around and being able to experience it here.”
Simons will finish out the season in Chicago, and become an unrestricted free agent over the summer.
Asked whether he could see himself one day returning to Boston, he smiled.
“Potentially, for sure,” Simons said. “Obviously, got to finish our season here first and see what happens there. But, for sure down the line. Like I said, [I] enjoyed my time here, built great relationships here, so I see it for sure.”








