Game Night in Boston, But the Roster Moved First
BOSTON A few hours before tipoff against the Phoenix Suns on Monday night, the Boston Celtics handled some housekeeping.
They brought in another big body.
Boston signed center Charles Bassey to a 10-day contract ahead of the matchup at TD Garden, the team announced. Nothing flashy. Just roster math and a little frontcourt insurance.
And yeah the timing wasn’t random.
The Celtics entered the night rolling after a 111-100 win over the Washington Wizards, where backup center Neemias Queta bullied the paint for 24 points and 10 boards. The ball moved, the defense tightened late, and Boston looked like a team settling into the stretch run.
Still, depth never hurts in March.
Who Is Charles Bassey?
Second-Round Pick Still Hunting a Permanent Spot
Bassey’s NBA ride has been a little bumpy.
The 6-10 center came into the league as the No. 53 overall pick in the 2021 NBA Draft out of Western Kentucky Hilltoppers men’s basketball. Big frame. Shot-block instincts. Runs the floor harder than most guys his size.
But sticking? That’s been the challenge.
He’s bounced around stops with the Philadelphia 76ers, San Antonio Spurs and Memphis Grizzlies mostly filling backup minutes and G League assignments.
The raw numbers won’t jump off the screen:
4.3 points.
4.3 rebounds.
Just over 12 minutes a night across 116 career games.
But the efficiency pops a bit a 62.6% clip from the floor, mostly dunks, dump-offs and put-backs. Classic rim-runner stuff.
Boston knows the player already. Bassey spent time with the club during the 2025 Summer League in Las Vegas, where he flashed the usual toolkit: offensive boards, lob finishes, a couple nasty swats that got the bench yelling.
Nothing subtle about his game.
Why Did Boston Make the Move Now?
Frontcourt Depth and Roster Numbers
Part of it is simple league rules.
Reporter Zack Cox noted the signing helped Boston reach the NBA’s 14-player roster minimum after converting Max Shulga from a two-way contract to a standard deal.
So Bassey plugs the gap.
But it’s also about depth at center.
In a season where big men keep dropping across the league sprained ankles, knee soreness, random maintenance nights teams are hoarding playable size like it’s gold.
Boston already leans heavily on rim protection and paint control. When the Celtics’ defense hums, it usually starts with their bigs sitting in drop coverage and cleaning the glass.
Bassey’s job, if he sees the floor: rebound everything and don’t screw up the pick-and-roll coverage.
Ten-day contracts are auditions. Simple as that.
Fans Had Thoughts – Plenty of Them
The reaction online was immediate.
Some fans see a useful bench big who can survive 10–15 minutes without sinking a rotation. Others wondered why it took this long for him to land another NBA shot.
A few scouts pointed to his Summer League tape where he flashed legit energy and rim protection and called the move overdue.
Another thread focused on opportunity. With G League roster shuffling and big-man injuries around the league, Bassey landing in Boston feels like the right place at the right time.
Or at least the next place.
Where the Celtics Stand Right Now
Boston isn’t scrambling. Not even close.
The Celtics entered Monday at 44-23, sitting second in the Eastern Conference and looking every bit like a contender heading toward April. They’ve taken six of their last ten and own a strong 22-10 mark at home inside TD Garden.
The defense still travels. The three-point volume remains high. And when the ball starts whipping around, the offense can avalanche teams in a hurry.
Monday’s opponent the Suns brings star power, sure. But Boston’s bigger focus might be the schedule ahead.
Because Wednesday gets loud.
That’s when Stephen Curry and the Golden State Warriors roll into town for the next stop on Boston’s homestand.
Another contender. Another measuring stick.
And somewhere on the bench, Charles Bassey will be waiting for a shot.
Ten days to make an impression. Sometimes that’s all it takes in this league.