Celtics playoff standout expected to depart for massive free agency raise

Alex Kirschenbaum

Celtics playoff standout expected to depart for massive free agency raise image

A key Boston Celtics playoff piece could be on the move when free agency tips off on Monday.

Per Steve Bulpett of Heavy, a "front office source" speculates that reserve center Luke Kornet could be ditching Boston for a raise in the neighborhood of a three-year, $39 million deal.

Eric Pincus of Bleacher Report projects that Kornet could be a unique fit as a true backup five behind MVP Denver Nuggets center Nikola Jokic — who hasn't had a quality traditional center behind him for eons.

“Kornet may not be a starter, but he’s shown throughout the last few years that he’s a viable rotation center who can provide a defensive presence. That might be enough for a team to pay more than Boston can or will, especially with the Celtics facing massive repeater taxes, in a year when Tatum (Achilles) is unlikely to suit up,” Pincus notes of Boston's situation. “Could Denver seek a better backup to Nikola Jokić in Kornet with the TMLE?”

The taxpayer mid-level exception this season pays players a starting salary of $5.7 million annually.

In a scenario where Kornet departs the 2024 champs, Pincus predicts that soon-to-be-39-year-old backup big Al Horford could rejoin the Celtics at a decent sum, a bit below the $9.5 million he was earning last year. Boston has already traded away starting center Kristaps Porzingis to the Atlanta Hawks, after a second consecutive playoff no-show.

“Horford returns at a slight discount, perhaps $7-8 million,” Pincus predicted. “Boston may not be a title contender without Tatum, but the team may still compete in the East this season.”

Kornet showed plenty of promise this year while on a veteran's minimum deal in Boston. He enjoyed a career playoff performance in a 127-102 Game 5 win, during the Celtics' eventual six-game second round playoff series defeat to the New York Knicks. In 26 glorious minutes, the 7-foot-2 journeyman big scored 10 points, pulled down nine boards, and rejected a whopping seven shots.

Across 73 regular season contests for the 61-win Celtics last year, the Vanderbilt product averaged 6.0 points on 66.8% field goal shooting and 69.1% free throw shooting, 5.3 rebounds, 1.6 assists and 1.0 blocks — in a scant 18.6 minutes per.

Alex Kirschenbaum

Alex Kirschenbaum is a freelance writer with The Sporting News. He grew up a devout Bulls fan, but his hoops fanaticism now extends to non-Bulls teams in adulthood. Currently also a scribe for Hoops Rumors, Athlon Sports and "Small Soldiers" director Joe Dante's film site Trailers From Hell, Alex is an alum of Sports Illustrated's On SI fan sites, Newsweek, Men's Journal, Grizzlies fan site Grizzly Bear Blues, and Bulls fan sites Blog-A-Bull and Pippen Ain't Easy, among others.