The Globe is finally getting around to explaining the logic (if that's the term) on this trade that we've hashed out here pretty well
The problem ultimately is that JB and Tatum have back to back max extensions - that's in part through some good luck in drafting, but it's largely untenable not to have them spaced out by a few years. (They also get into the eyeball test on JB, compared to the analytics the Celtics are clearly guided by)
Brown was eligible for a two-year, $141 million extension later this month; Jayson Tatum is due for a similar deal next year. Perhaps the Celtics didn't want two players on max deals if it wasn't a championship formula.
www.bostonglobe.com
Sadly, the way to look at this trade is that it's not for next year but the following year when they're out of their cap constraints.
At that point, after next season, they can trade George's expiring contract for a different $60 mil player who they can extend a few years after paying Tatum his extension and exceed the salary cap on the supplemental players.
This also explains why Stevens is drafting guys who might be future max players who will get their G-League and bench time to develop until we get to that next phase (now of course those players might not pan out but they have a higher ceiling than the guys at #27 who are closer to game ready)
So there IS some logic there - it just means that 2026-27 is a gap year. Now even as we say that, we know that JB was able to bring us to a pretty high playoff seed just on his own - and now we get to see if Tatum can do the same thing, but hopefully with someone at Center who can defend and score next season, though it remains to be seen if that player is currently on the roster.
I'm not sure the dealing is done and we might see another trade (White?) but I think they are hoping to keep White and keep him at that $30 million per year contract level.
So there is some basis in logic and the ability to have staggered max contract guys interspaced with the players he's drafting/developing now, who again, have typically been selected as very young, raw, but high ceiling guys, plus a few selected 2nd round draft choices who are older and potentially ready to contribute sooner, though with a lower ceiling - which isn't the worst way to use the draft, especially when you are trying to build the way the Celtics are.
Cenac and Gonzales are good examples along with Prtichard
In the end, Brad is hoping to develop a dynasty that he can afford to keep and replace highly paid veteran stars with younger stars who develop from low paid bench players to low paid (for awhile) quality starters (which is why he was reluctant to trade those guys in the Giannis trade, although I'd definitely prefer that, given that they could have contended with him and Tatum, but instead we're looking at a gap year team that's looking to go over the top not this coming season, but next.