The Boston Celtics are exercising their team option on center Neemias Queta and immediately extending him on a fully guaranteed four-year, $56 million contract, rewarding one of the most productive breakout seasons by a starting center in the league last year.
Queta, who turns 27 later this month, enters the extension coming off the first full-time starting role of his NBA career, a season in which he delivered production and efficiency that far exceeded what most observers expected from a player who had appeared in only 20 games across his first two professional seasons combined.
What Queta produced last season
The numbers Queta posted in his breakout year are striking for their consistency and efficiency. He averaged 10.2 points and 8.4 rebounds per game across 76 appearances, starting 75 of them, while shooting above 65 percent from the field. He added 1.3 blocks per game, received a scattering of All-Defense votes from league personnel, and finished fourth in Most Improved Player voting at the end of the season.
The playing time he received, just over 25 minutes per game, was the result of necessity becoming opportunity. Boston lost three veteran big men in consecutive offseasons and handed Queta the starting role without the safety net of an experienced backup ready to absorb significant minutes if the production did not materialize. It did materialize, consistently, over the course of an entire regular season, producing the kind of sample size that makes the extension a straightforward decision for both parties.
A career that almost went differently
Queta’s path to a guaranteed $56 million deal ran through Sacramento, where he appeared in 20 games over his first two seasons without finding a foothold in the Kings’ rotation. He signed a three-year deal with Boston that was explicitly an opportunity rather than a promise, entering a frontcourt competition with no guaranteed outcome.
The story of how that contract became the foundation for a breakout year and then a long-term extension is a useful reminder of how quickly the NBA landscape can shift for players who get the right opportunity at the right moment. Queta’s efficiency numbers, particularly his shooting percentage, reflect a player who knows precisely how to operate within his range and makes few wasted efforts, a quality that tends to translate across situations and become more valuable as a player gains experience.
What the extension means for Boston
The Celtics are navigating a significant roster transition in the aftermath of their championship run and the departures and trades that have followed. Queta represents one of the clearest pieces of continuity available to them heading into next season, a proven starter at the most important frontcourt position who has demonstrated both the physical tools and the competitive reliability to anchor a lineup.
At 27 when the extension kicks in, Queta should be approaching the peak of his athletic prime over the contract’s duration, giving Boston a center committed through his early thirties at a price that reflects his value without overextending given the uncertainty that always accompanies players entering their first major long-term contract.
The four-year, fully guaranteed structure gives Queta the financial security he earned through last season’s performance and signals to the rest of the league that Boston considers him a genuine cornerstone rather than a bridge option to be replaced when a more established name becomes available.

