What happened: Brad Stevens declined to shut the door on a Jaylen Brown trade in remarks made once the NBA Draft wrapped, signaling that the team's roster is not set heading deeper into the offseason. Rather than commit publicly to keeping the All-Star wing, the front office left the door ajar, keeping Brown's name in the offseason conversation.
Why it matters: Brown is a max-salary cornerstone, so any willingness to entertain offers reshapes how the rest of the roster can be built around the cap sheet. The posture matters because earlier reporting already tied Brown to swap scenarios, and an open-ended stance from the top keeps those frameworks alive rather than killing them.
What to watch: Watch whether the front office actually engages on offers in the days after the draft, and which contending or rebuilding teams surface as suitors for a player of Brown's tier.