Philadelphia 76ers reportedly wanted out of Paul George’s deal, then somehow walked into Jaylen Brown, leaving the NBA rumor mill with a fresh case of whiplash.
Philadelphia’s Front Office Gets a Gift
The Philadelphia 76ers were reportedly looking for a way to move Paul George’s contract before the Boston Celtics came calling with Jaylen Brown on the table, a twist that sounds less like front-office planning and more like finding a winning ticket in an old jacket pocket. George signed a four-year, $212 million deal with Philadelphia in 2024, but injuries and uneven form quickly made that contract feel heavier than expected.
Boston’s offer changed the whole picture. The Celtics sent Brown to the Sixers in exchange for George and four draft picks, including two first-round selections and two second-rounders. Reuters reported the deal as Brown for George, a 2028 pick swap, an unprotected 2031 first-round pick, and second-round picks in 2028 and 2030.
Why Brown Changes the Mood in Philly
Jaylen Brown gives Philadelphia something George no longer reliably did: prime-age force, playoff credibility, and the kind of two-way scoring punch that can swing a postseason series. He averaged 28.7 points, 6.9 rebounds, and 5.1 assists in the 2025-26 regular season, finished sixth in MVP voting, and already owns a 2024 NBA Finals MVP.
That matters for fans and bettors alike. Joel Embiid and Tyrese Maxey already made Philadelphia dangerous when healthy, but Brown makes the Sixers look far less like a “what if” team and far more like a group books will have to take seriously in Eastern Conference and title futures markets.
Draymond Green Says the Quiet Part Out Loud
Draymond Green did not dress up his view of the trade. Speaking on his podcast, he argued that George-for-Brown is not close to an even player swap, pointing to Brown’s age, recent production, and Finals MVP résumé while noting George is now deep into the back end of his career.
That is the awkward part for Boston. The Celtics may have wanted draft capital and a reset around a different mix, but sending a 29-year-old star to a division rival is the sort of move that invites second-guessing before the first press conference even ends.
Bettors Now Have a New Sixers Problem to Solve
For the average NBA bettor, the question is not whether Philadelphia won the headline. It is whether Brown’s arrival actually fixes the Sixers’ usual springtime headaches: health, spacing, late-game shot creation, and keeping Embiid fresh when every possession starts to feel like a courtroom cross-examination.
The upside is obvious. Brown can carry usage, defend top wings, and punish teams that load up on Embiid. The risk is also familiar: Philadelphia has looked like a title team on paper before, only for the paper to catch fire by May. This time, though, the Sixers did not just tweak the roster. They turned a contract problem into a star upgrade, and that is exactly the kind of move that makes futures markets twitch.

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