Boston Sports Extra

Jaylen Brown Is a Philly Sixer Now. I’m Still Not Okay With It.

The part that keeps replaying in my head isn’t the trade itself. It’s Jayson Tatum finding out from the news. Ten years of shared locker rooms, playoff wars, one championship night in Dallas — and Brad Stevens couldn’t pick up the phone. That detail hit differently. That’s not how you end a decade. Tatum had already given Boston everything this spring just to get back on the floor, and this is what came next.

ESPN reported the trade was made official on July 6, and the details still feel unreal. Jaylen Brown to Philadelphia, for Paul George, a 2028 first-round swap, a 2031 unprotected first, and two seconds. The team that drafted him 3rd overall in 2016 just sent him to the team that eliminated Boston in the first round this spring. Somehow Boston ended up with the cornerstone of the team they beat.

That sequence of events doesn’t compute unless you sit with the full picture. Stevens stood at the podium and talked about the path forward being more challenging with so much cap and usage tied into two players. That’s a real argument. Two max players eating 70% of your cap is a real constraint. When you can’t go back to the well — when Brad tried to make a Giannis deal happen and watched Giannis pick Miami instead — you start to see the walls closing in.

The Paul George piece makes basketball sense as a short-term, high-upside gamble. The two firsts are legitimate assets if this team is rebuilding around Tatum.

None of that makes it easier to accept.

Brown averaged 20.8 points, 5.4 rebounds, and 5.0 assists across the 2024 Finals against Dallas. He won Bill Russell Finals MVP. He was the best player in that series on the better team, and the city of Boston celebrated him for it. That’s not a footnote. That’s ten years of someone showing up through first-round exits, through a 2022 Finals loss to Golden State, through every version of this roster, and finally through the night they actually won. You don’t send that guy away without it costing something.

Brown told ESPN: “I’m excited and disappointed at the same time… There’s definitely more to it. I just wish the more to it could have been explained to me.” That’s a man trying to be gracious while being hurt. He earned more than a press release.

His first post as a Sixer: “Philly #throwtheballup let’s get it.” Two-point-eight million views. He’s moving on because he has to, because professional athletes always do, and because sitting in your feelings about a city that traded you away doesn’t pay dividends.

The player-for-player swap is obviously not even if you’re comparing peaks. But peaks are the wrong frame — the question is what both players can realistically contribute to a Tatum-led team over the next three years. George is 36, owed $54 million this season with a $56 million player option next year. He’s essentially a rental. That either works brilliantly if he’s healthy and motivated, or it becomes a very expensive cap anchor with a lot of regret attached.

The Ringer’s breakdown gets at the real gamble: Boston is betting that the picks and flexibility unlock something bigger, that the path to a second championship runs through a different construction. Maybe that’s right. The 2031 unprotected first is years away from mattering. The bet is on a future that hasn’t been written yet.

What has been written is Brown’s ten seasons here. Stevens said “his legacy as a Celtic is forever etched in stone,” and he meant it, and it’s still true. But Brown’s own goodbye landed harder: “The relationships I built here, the battles we fought together, the championship we brought to this city, and the connection I shared with the fans, I’ll carry on with me.”

He’s carrying it out the door to South Philly. Boston fans are going to have to figure out what to do with the complicated feeling of watching a Finals MVP in green and gold — and then watching someone else decide he wasn’t part of the future.

The front office math is defensible. The human cost is real. Both things are true, and neither one cancels the other out.

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