The Boston Celtics are engaged in trade discussions involving Jaylen Brown, with multiple teams interested in acquiring the All-Star forward who was at the center of Boston’s unsuccessful pursuit of Giannis Antetokounmpo before the two-time MVP chose to join the Miami Heat.
The Celtics included Brown as the primary piece of their offer to Milwaukee before the Bucks ultimately chose Miami’s package of younger players and draft capital. Following that outcome, Boston has continued to engage with interested teams and is actively listening to offers for a player who represents one of the most significant trade assets available in the league.
A team president who praised Brown while trade talks continue
The optics of the situation are not simple. Celtics president of basketball operations Brad Stevens addressed Brown’s status publicly this week, calling him valued and a big part of the organization’s identity while explicitly declining to predict the future. Stevens described a relationship characterized by open and candid conversations and said he had met with Brown multiple times this offseason while maintaining contact with his representation.
His language was careful and warm without being definitive. He acknowledged that Brown’s name being circulated prominently in trade rumors is not an easy thing for a player to experience and said the organization had tried to be proactive and transparent in communicating with him throughout. The combination of genuine praise and an unwillingness to make any forward-looking commitment is consistent with the posture of a team that is simultaneously honoring a player’s contributions and keeping its options open.
What Brown brings and what it would take to move him
The case for Brown as a trade asset is rooted in what he produced last season. He averaged 28.7 points, 6.9 rebounds, and 5.1 assists per game, finished sixth in MVP voting, and earned All-NBA second-team honors. It was by most measures the best season of his career, and it came despite the Celtics losing in the first round of the playoffs for the first time since 2021.
Brown has three years remaining on a five-year extension worth $285.4 million signed in 2023, and he will be eligible to sign an additional two-year extension valued at approximately $142 million beginning in late July. The combination of his age, his on-court impact, and the length of his contract makes him an attractive but expensive acquisition for any team considering a trade.
Over his decade in Boston, Brown has earned five All-Star selections, appeared in nine postseasons, reached the Eastern Conference Finals six times, and won an NBA championship in 2024 when he was named Finals MVP. He leads all players in playoff wins since his postseason debut in 2017.
A complicated summer for one of the league’s best players
Brown described last season as the favorite year of his basketball career despite the early playoff exit, a comment that suggested a player at ease with his game even as the organizational context around him grew complicated. Watching his name surface prominently in trade speculation while the team publicly praised him is an experience that tests any player’s composure.
Stevens acknowledged as much in his public comments, framing the situation with empathy while making clear that the relationship between player and organization remains strong regardless of what the summer brings. Whether that relationship results in Brown remaining in Boston for years to come or departing in a trade that reshapes both franchises will depend on the offers the Celtics receive and how their evaluation of those offers compares to their assessment of what a Brown-centered core can accomplish going forward.

