Jaylen Brown is 29 years old, in the middle of his prime, with three years left on his contract, coming off a season in which he finished sixth in MVP voting, and is just two seasons removed from winning Finals MVP. So why hasn’t Brad Stevens been able to trade the star forward yet?
Once the Giannis Antetokounmpo trade saga ended with the former MVP taking his talents to South Beach, I expected Jaylen Brown to be traded shortly after, or at a minimum, a bidding war to commence. It has been worryingly
quiet on the bidding war front.
The Celtics front office was not willing to go all in on Giannis Antetokounmpo. Reportedly, the Celtics were not willing to include more than Jaylen Brown and two first-round picks in order to acquire Antetokounmpo. The unwillingness to go all in would lead me to believe that Brad Stevens is, or was, confident in the contingency plans should the Celtics not land the Bucks big man.
However, in the passing days, the market for Jaylen Brown does not appear to have materialized. Either the NBA does not view Jaylen Brown as the perennial All-Star that he is, or the market is trying to squeeze Brad Stevens. In what reached a ridiculous head on Saturday evening, an old friend, ESPN’s Bobby Marks, dumped gasoline on the Jaylen Brown discourse.
On Sirius XM, Marks said: “There are mixed feelings about him. Jaylen Brown’s analytics are not good…I had an analytics guy tell me, ‘We view him as the seventh best player on the team.'”
To be fair and provide context, he went on to say that he views Jaylen Brown as a top-10 player in the NBA.
The claim from the “analytics guy” is obviously outlandish, but it also reeks of something someone might want out there if they were trying to suppress the market for Jaylen Brown.
These comments led Jaylen Brown defending himself.
It feels as though the situation is heading in a bad direction for the Boston Celtics.
As we attempt to sift through the muck of internet drama surrounding the Jaylen Brown trade sweepstakes, per Marc Stein and Jake Fischer, “It has been stressed to The Stein Line in recent days that neither the Hornets nor the Rockets, despite speculation to the contrary, are actively pursuing Jaylen Brown.” Again, to me, this reads as the market trying to bully the Celtics into a corner. Jaylen Brown would be a great fit in Houston. I don’t buy the reported lack of interest.
This raises the question of whether the Celtics are actually in a desperate position. Do they need to trade Jaylen Brown? At the end of the day, Jaylen Brown is being paid $57 million next season to play basketball for the Boston Celtics. While Brown may feel slighted by the Celtics for being thrown into trade discussions for Giannis Antetokounmpo, it’s hard to make the case that the Celtics have been anything great for Brown’s career. With the Celtics, Jaylen has become an NBA champion and Finals MVP, been selected to multiple All-NBA teams, and signed over $360 million in contracts with the iconic franchise. Brown could do a lot worse and would likely find himself in a worse situation wherever he ends up.
A return to the Celtics should not be not out of the question.
Whether or not Celtics fans think the team needs to or does not need to trade Jaylen Brown, the reality is that Brad Stevens is trying to trade the All-Star wing. Since Brad Stevens has taken over the Celtics front office, any reporting on Celtics transactions has been hard to come by. Over the last week, the Celtics’ business has been out there which likely means the Celtics want their business out there.
In Brad’s most recent press conference after the first night of the NBA Draft, Brad was asked about whether or not Jaylen would be traded or return to the Celtics. Brad could have said anything, and what he didn’t say was loud. He did not say that Jaylen Brown would be back on the Boston Celtics. The Celtics are trying to trade Brown. We don’t know exactly why. It could be fall out from being included in the Giannis negotiations, Brown could have asked for a trade because he’s ready to move on, or the Celtics front office may have decided it will be easier to build a championship contender without Brown’s supermax contract on the cap sheet. All we can do is look at the front office’s actions. Which indicate they want to trade the 2024 Finals MVP.
If we assume the Celtics feel as though it’s time to move on from Brown, the potential return could make or break this era of Celtics basketball. At the present moment, I think the return is going to disappoint Celtics fans. The only team that is reported to have a significant interest right now is the Portland Trail Blazers. The Blazers have some intriguing pieces; Donovan Clingan would fill the need at the big man spot, Toumani Camara could replace some of what Brown provided the Celtics, and the Blazers own a slew of valuable draft picks.
However, reports indicate the Blazers would be unwilling to part with either of Deni Avdija or Donovan Clingan, but that their draft picks would be on the table. At first glance, this might make many Celtics fans vomit in their mouths. However, I may be able to sell you on what a draft pick-centric package could look like. Firstly, the Blazers should not make a Brown trade if they have to give up Clingan or Avdija; that’s just shuffling the deck chairs and leaves them without a big man. A potential package would be the defensive stopper Toumani Camara, former third overall pick Scoot Henderson, and a young semi-disappointing wing on a somewhat bloated contract, Shaedon Sharpe, plus two unprotected Milwaukee Bucks picks (2028 & 2030), and the Celtics get their own 2029 pick back from the Blazers, allowing them more flexibility for the moves that would follow a Brown deal.
I think most Celtics fans would view this as a disappointing return, but I believe the Celtics could help Henderson unlock his potential, giving the Celtics a much-needed boost in backcourt athleticism. Camara would be a great pairing with Jayson Tatum, and Sharpe could be used in trades, along with the newly acquired draft capital, to upgrade the roster. Whether that is a Trey Murphy package or an unknown package, it provides the Celtics with the flexibility to go out and make more moves.
Something to keep in mind is the reality of trading Brown’s $57 million contract. It’s hard for teams to patch that amount of salary without gutting their roster, and there’s no point in making the trade if you have to do that to acquire the five-time All-Star. That being said, I think this return is workable. The Celtics would essentially run it back from last season with Jayson Tatum in the Jaylen Brown spot, with a supercharged version of last season’s roster. The Celtics add a big man in free agency, hopefully flip the assets acquired in the Jaylen trade for an impact player, and experience internal development from their young players like Hugo Gonzalez, Jordan Walsh, Ron Harper Jr, and Baylor Scheierman. The floor to me for next season would be 55 wins and a first round exit. I would project them to exceed those expectations. And now the roster is flush with tradeable contracts and high value picks for the front office to take big game hunting in the 2026-2027 offseason.
If there is a better trade out there, Brad Stevens and the front office will make it. I’m just skeptical that deal is out there.
A week ago, I felt a lot better about what Jaylen Brown would return on the open market. It’s easy to say that if the right offer isn’t there, then the Celtics can simply bring back the All-NBA forward. That’s not typically how the NBA works. On the other hand, Jaylen Brown and Jayson Tatum being on the same team for nine years, through all the ups and downs, is already atypical. We might look back and laugh at the ridiculousness of the past couple of weeks when Jayson Tatum and Jaylen Brown find themselves in their sixth conference finals appearance come next May. However, I view a split between the Celtics and Brown as imminent, and the return to be one that still allows the team to position themselves for another title run, even if it initially disappoints a large portion of the fan base.













