The Boston Celtics shocked the NBA by trading Jaylen Brown to the Philadelphia 76ers just two weeks ago. The return was criticized by many, as the Celtics only received a highly expensive and aging Paul George, along with two first-round picks and two second-round picks.

What happened?

The Celtics would not have been able to afford to keep Brown anyway, not with his extension eligibility coming up. Looks at Cleveland Cavaliers franchise superstar Donovan Mitchell: He was just extended for four years, $273 million. By the end of that contract, he will be making a whopping $75 million per year. Brown will command a much bigger extension than that, and at some point, so will Jayson Tatum.

Why it matters for Jaylen Brown

The Celtics' decision to trade Brown might have been the best thing they could have done. They replaced a Brown in his prime with an old George, and didn't get as many picks as they were hoping for either. However, this trade might have been the best thing the Celtics could have done if you inspect closer.

What comes next?

The Celtics are now building their roster around Tatum, similar to how the Houston Rockets completely built around James Harden, and the OKC Thunder built around Russell Westbrook when Kevin Durant left. Tatum is a beast when the ball is in his hands. Noted by FOX analyst Colin Cowherd, the Celtics are dominant when Tatum controls the ball most of the time. In the past four seasons when his usage rate is above a third of the time, the Celtics win almost 90% of their games, going 76-9. When it's lower? The Celtics are 99-52, which is still almost 66%, but you're sacrificing a whopping 24% by just not giving Tatum the ball more.

The future of the Celtics

The Celtics are now Tatum's team. Stars like George, Payton Pritchard, and Derrick White will support him, along with all their other top-tier role players. This might be the way to go; the only way to find out is to watch next season, and compare it to how Brown does with Philadelphia.

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