
Jrue Holiday ‘pissed' to land with Trail Blazers after Celtics divorce
Jrue Holiday apparently hopes for another quick stay in Portland.
The ex-Celtic is 'pissed' he's with the Trail Blazers after Boston moved him in a cost-cutting maneuver, longtime Celtics reporter Steve Bulpett wrote Tuesday for Heavy.com.
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Holiday previously spent four days as a Trail Blazer after being traded by the Bucks and then acquired by the Celtics in 2023.
'Now, if he winds up staying there, I'm sure he'll be the professional he's always been and make a positive contribution,' a source told Bulpett. 'But he's not happy with this deal. I'll be surprised if Portland doesn't move him on if they can, because right now, he does not want to go there.
'I'm sure if he has to go to Portland, he'll end up going and it'll be OK, but right now they want to be somewhere else. But with that contract, it's not going to be that easy.'
Jrue Holiday during the second-round playoff series against the Knicks.
NBAE via Getty Images
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Holiday, 35, played a pivotal role in the Celtics winning the 2024 championship, but Boston is retooling after being a second apron luxury tax team, and also facing the realistic possibility that star Jayson Tatum will miss the entire season after tearing his Achilles in the second-round playoff series loss to the Knicks.
Boston thus kicked off its moves by sending the respected veteran to Portland, where he figures to bring needed experience and defense to a young team hoping to become a Western Conference contender.
It's understandable, though, that Holiday would allegedly be upset since he'll be 36 years old next season and surely would prefer to be on a sure-fire contender with his career winding down.
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Holiday has won two titles in the last five years, one each with the Celtics and Bucks, and is entering his 17th season in the league. The Trail Blazers, should he remain, will be his fifth team.
Portland, even if it takes the next step, is a long shot to come out of a loaded Western Conference, which includes the reigning champion Thunder, a Rockets team now employing Kevin Durant, the Nikola Jokic-led Nuggets and the expected Lakers tandem of LeBron James and Luka Doncic.
It's certainly possible the Trail Blazers could once redirect Holiday to a contender, just like in 2023 when they acquired him from the Bucks in the Damian Lillard trade, and then sent the point guard to the Celtics in exchange for two players and two first-round selections.
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The Celtics followed their Holiday trade by sending Kristaps Porzingis to Atlanta in a three-way deal, and there is plenty of interest in Jaylen Brown and Derrick White.
Trail Blazers guard Shaedon Sharpe.
NBAE via Getty Images
Sam Hauser and Anfernee Simons, acquired in the Holiday deal, could also be moved, per ESPN.

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NBA Fans React to Celtics Trade Report on Saturday
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New York Times
2 hours ago
- New York Times
Celtics and Blazers swing deal, but what is Portland doing?
Chicago and Cleveland make a deal. The Wolves are re-signing one of their own. Follow for the latest. Imagn Images I have a lot of thoughts on the late Monday trade of Jrue Holiday to Portland for Anfernee Simons and two second-round picks, because it wasn't really something I expected. The Blazers are a young team that is possibly on the rise but doesn't necessarily need to be paying a 37-year-old $37 million three years from now … especially when they're already committed to paying Jerami Grant $36 million the same season. One wonders how they'll have any money left over to pay the players who are actually central to their plans. On the flip side, Simons makes nearly as much as Holiday in 2025-26 and doesn't advance the ball that much in terms of digging the Celtics out of their second-apron hole. Let's start with Boston, though, because this was another tremendous swap by a front office that has won nearly every trade for the last half decade. 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The Blazers improved over the second half of last season, but this was a 36-win team that relied on Simons to create half-court offense on a squad with little dependable shooting and playmaking. The point guard reins are now seemingly turned over to 21-year-old Scoot Henderson, but his first two seasons have been a struggle. The one plus for Portland is that even the Holiday and Grant contracts might not push their salary structure past the breaking point because of the value that is the next three years of Deni Avdija's declining-money contract; Donovan Clingan will also still be on his rookie contact in the last year of the Holiday and Grant deals. Let's wait and see what else the Blazers cook up this offseason; maybe they can wave a magic wand and turn Ayton into a point guard and a shooter. At this moment, however, I am flabbergasted that they sent out draft capital to turn Simons into Holiday. 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This is also what happens when you hire the fourth-most successful coach in Dayton University history, who also has zero NBA front office experience, to handle this situation as your lead executive. If this is what it looks like when Ishbia is more involved as an owner, the rest of the league is going to be licking its chops at any potential deals. Teams will also start circling around wondering if/when Devin Booker might want out of town some day. This is an excerpt from The Bounce, The Athletic's daily NBA newsletter. Sign up here to receive The Bounce directly in your inbox. Michael Owens / Getty Images It's official: The New Orleans Pelicans have the worst injury luck in NBA history. They traded away the Pacers' 2026 first-round pick four days ago when they thought it would be in the late 20s. That's far less likely if Tyrese Haliburton misses significant time with this Achilles injury. 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Dylan Buell / Getty Images The Pacers seemed likely to go into the luxury tax to retain center Myles Turner in free agency, and still might head in that direction if Tyrese Haliburton's Achilles injury is serious. By declining a $2.9 million option on Tony Bradley, using their 54th pick on a player who makes the rookie minimum, adding two other veteran minimum contracts and only carrying 14 players on the roster, Indiana would be $17 million from the luxury tax line before it re-signs Turner. Of perhaps greater significance, the Pacers would be $25 million from the first apron. Even if Turner makes more than $25 million in the first year of his new contract, Indiana has some outs if it wants to avoid paying luxury tax in a Haliburton-free season. The Pacers could try to sell high on Obi Toppin's $14 million a year deal and move 2023 lottery pick Jarace Walker into his role, for instance, especially if they could get another point guard in return. 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It threw what had been a brilliantly executed piece of short- and long-term roster construction into chaos. How can the Pacers overcome this? In the short term, it seems impossible. The Pacers had been set up for a two- or three-year window with their core group, while many of their potential opponents in the East faced either significant injuries to key players or, in the case of the New York Knicks, the fallout from players after firing a popular coach. Haliburton, Pascal Siakam, Andrew Nembhard, sixth-man extraordinaire T.J. McConnell and reserve forward Obi Toppin are all signed through the 2027-28 season. (McConnell has a partial guarantee of $5 million in the final year of his deal.) Forward Aaron Nesmith is signed through 2027. Fourth-year forward Isaiah Jackson, who missed most of this season after his own Achilles tear, will be a restricted free agent this summer. Bennedict Mathurin, another contributor off the bench, had some big moments in the postseason and will hit restricted free agency next summer. But there's no replacing Haliburton's rare abilities and face-of-the-franchise qualities, even as Indiana's front office, led by Pritchard and Buchanan, built a championship-level franchise around him — despite never having a top-five pick. Read more here. GO FURTHER Tyrese Haliburton's injury obscures the Pacers' magical run — and their future Justin Ford / Getty Images The Oklahoma City Thunder are now authors of one of the greatest seasons in NBA history after narrowly avoiding a stunning upset with the opponent's best player first hobbled then seriously injured. The Thunder won the franchise's second championship — and first since it moved to Oklahoma City from Seattle in 2008 and rebranded from the SuperSonics to the Thunder — by capturing Game 7 of the NBA Finals over the Indiana Pacers 103-91 on Sunday. 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A complement to this trade news is a set of trade grades, where we'll slap down some red ink and figure out if we're complimenting one or all sides of the deal. Read more about the trade grades below. GO FURTHER Desmond Bane trade grades: Magic, Grizzlies swap guards, but did Orlando give up too much? Getty Images Before there was Kevin Durant getting dealt to the Houston Rockets, the NBA trades didn't stop. The first major trade of the offseason was the Memphis Grizzlies sending Desmond Bane to the Orlando Magic for Kentavious Caldwell-Pope, Cole Anthony and draft picks. Read The Athletic 's Josh Robbins for all the details and analysis from this trade. GO FURTHER Grizzlies trade Desmond Bane to Magic for Caldwell-Pope, Anthony, picks
Yahoo
2 hours ago
- Yahoo
Bruins hire veteran coach with power play experience for Marco Sturm's staff
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