Celtics retain another member of championship roster with latest signing
On Tuesday Xavier Tillman became the latest player to re-sign with the Boston Celtics, agreeing to a two-year deal.
Brad Stevens is continuing the process of keeping the 2023-2024 NBA Championship roster together for the Boston Celtics. On Monday the Cs finished re-signing an extending their main rotational players with contract extensions for Jayson Tatum and Derrick White. Tuesday, he made a signing further down the bench.
As first reported by ESPN’s Adrian Wojnarowski, the Celtics and Xavier Tillman have agreed on a two-year deal that will bring the 26-year-old back to Boston. According to Jared Weiss of The Athletic, the deal is fully guaranteed for the veteran’s minimum salary, or about $2.4 million.
Tillman spent the second half of last season with the Celtics after being acquired at the trade deadline for Lamar Stevens and two second-round draft picks.
After arriving in Boston Tillman appeared in 20 regular season games, making two starts. He averaged four points and 2.7 rebounds in 13.7 minutes per game. In the playoffs, he appeared in eight games off the bench.
Prior to joining the Celtics Tillman spent the first three and a half years of his NBA career with the Memphis Grizzlies, who drafted him in the second round in 2020 out of Michigan State. Tillman started 56 of his 207 career games for Memphis, including 15 prior to being traded this past season.
Looking ahead, Tillman could be in for a bigger role with the Celtics this upcoming season – at least to start the year. With Kristaps Porzingis expected to miss the start of the season as he recovers from leg surgery, Boston’s front-court depth will be tested. When Porzingis missed time during the playoffs this year, it often led to the 6-foot-8 Tillman getting more time on the floor.
With Tillman re-signed, the Celtics have just three unrestricted free agents remaining in Oshae Brissett, Svi Mykhailiuk, and J.D. Davison (Drew Peterson is a restricted free agent). According to Adam Himmelsbach of The Boston Globe, Brissett “is still hoping to find a team that can offer more playing time, but the door is not fully closed on a Boston return.”
Keep scrolling for more on the Celtics…
A summary of Boston championships in this millennium
In this millennium, compiling a summary of Boston championships is something of a never-ending task. In that way, it’s a little like home ownership. As soon as you finish one project, there always seems to be another.
But those are good problems to have.
Now that the Celtics have dispatched the Dallas Mavericks for the 18th title in franchise history, it felt like a good time to revisit the city’s historic run to the start of this millennium, during which Boston has now won 13 titles in 22 years, including at least one in each of the four major North American team sports. The Patriots, Red Sox, Celtics and Bruins have gone a collective 13-7 in final games/series, a winning percentage of .650 against what is, theoretically, the toughest competition in sports.
To this point, only the Bruins have failed to win multiple championships, though they did make three appearances in the Stanley Cup Final between 2011-2019.
Where you rank all these championships is entirely up to you, but suffice it to say that championships are truly like fingerprints, each possessing distinguishing characteristics. The most rewarding of those championships? You might say the 2004 Red Sox. The most heart-stopping? Probably the 2014 Patriots. In the wake of the 2013 Boston Marathon bombings, the 2013 Red Sox title meant a great deal to the community. The 2011 Bruins run may have been the most rewarding.
Regardless, each of the 13 had their own story, some (like the 2001 Patriots) associated with beginnings and others (like the 2018 Patriots) associated with endings.
These Celtics? Well, they could be both. Boston has been tracking toward this title for several years, after all, beginning when Jaylen Brown and Jayson Tatum each were selected with the third pick of consecutive NBA drafts.
Since that time, the Celtics have played in six conference championships, bringing their total in this millennium to 10. (Boston teams overall have made a resounding 33 trips to the league semifinals in the 2000s – 13 for the Patriots, 10 for the Celtics, seven for the Red Sox and three for the Bruins.) And yet, now that Brown and Tatum have entered their peak years, one can’t help but wonder if the duo is merely beginning their own championship era.
Today, we stop asking if Tatum and Brown can win a championship together.
And we start asking how many.
Like we said, one project inevitably leads to another.
A summary of Boston championships beginning with the Patriots’ extraordinary title in 2001: