Brad Stevens Talks Celtics, Second Apron, Open Roster Spot, Horford

After winning the franchise’s first title in 16 years, Celtics president of basketball operations Brad Stevens made it a priority to secure all of his core rotation players over the summer, as he explained in an interview with Adam Himmelsbach of The Boston Globe.

After Boston beat the Mavericks in the 2024 Finals, the club signed Jayson Tatum, Derrick White, and Sam Hauser to contract extensions and re-signed frontcourt free agents Xavier Tillman and Luke Kornet.

“Any time you get a group that fits together, that accentuates each other, that kind of know who they are and what they bring to the table, I think you want to try to keep that,” Stevens said. “That doesn’t mean we’re going to be blind to improving. We have to keep our eyes on — especially early in the year, because even the same group can be a totally new thing in a new season — so we have to keep an eye on, where are we, really? And do we need to improve? Do we need to make subtle changes? Do we need to make big changes? We’ll just always keep our eye on that.”

The whole interview is well worth reading in full. Here are some additional highlights:

  • While the Celtics are already well above the NBA’s second tax apron, the roster will get significantly more costly in 2025/26 when Tatum’s super-max extension and White’s and Hauser’s new deals take effect. Stevens seemed to suggest he’ll be open to exploring ways to reduce Boston’s payroll, if necessary. “What we want to do is try to get our guys locked in on fair and good extensions that they feel really good about and hopefully continue this thing as long as we can continue this thing,” Stevens said. “We’ll cross every bridge when we get there, and the different basketball penalties that will be associated with being above the second apron, those are real, and we’ll just have to weigh those against where we are as a basketball team, and we’ll also have to weigh the financial part of that. And I’m sure part of that will be a discussion amongst whoever the new investors are.”
  • The Celtics still have one open spot on their 15-man standard roster for 2024/25, but Stevens likes the optionality of keeping the spot available heading into training camp, in case of an injury. “We’re just going to monitor the health of our team and see how everybody’s doing, and if there’s any issues that arise between now and September that we need to really address, then we might use it,” he said. “But right now I’d say it’s unlikely. We’re still looking to sign a couple of Exhibit 10s that their most likely path will be to play in Maine. But we’ll see.”
  • Five-time All-Star Al Horford, now the Celtics’ sixth man at age 38, won his first title with Boston, after years of deep playoff runs with the Hawks, Celtics, and Sixers. “[For] a guy like Al, he deserves that accolade, because he’s been knocking on the door,” Stevens said. “And the margins are so small that I’m glad people that view it as championship or bust can include Al in the win one category.”
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