Are they done yet?

That’s the big question facing the Celtics after a frenetic week in which they traded away starters Jrue Holiday and Kristaps Porzingis, received a pair of NBA veterans in return and then selected three players in the 2025 NBA Draft.

The Holiday and Porzingis trades pushed Boston below the second apron of the luxury tax — an offseason priority for the franchise — and more moves likely are coming as president of basketball operations Brad Stevens and his staff reshape a roster that already looks quite different from the one that secured an NBA championship last summer.

In the meantime, here is an updated look at that roster, which, when factoring in the three new draftees, currently includes a total of 16 players. The Celtics can enter the season with up to 15 rostered players, plus three more on two-way contracts.

Guards

Derrick White, Anfernee Simons, Payton Pritchard, JD Davison, Max Shulga

White and Holiday formed one of the NBA’s best defensive backcourts for the last two seasons. The move to Simons radically changes the identity of this group.

The 26-year-old former Trail Blazer isn’t nearly the defender that Holiday is. But he does offer much more offensive upside, averaging 20.7 points per game over his three seasons as a full-time starter in Portland while bombing 3-pointers at one of the highest rates in the NBA. Only Stephen Curry, LaMelo Ball, Luka Doncic, Damian Lillard, Jayson Tatum, Donovan Mitchell and Klay Thompson attempted more threes per game during that span, and Simons made 37.4% of his. That’ll play in head coach Joe Mazzulla’s offense.

That’s assuming Simons sticks around through the offseason, which is no guarantee. He’s on a $27.7 million expiring contract that Boston could look to move in a subsequent trade.

If he stays, Simons is the most likely replacement for Holiday in the starting lineup, but Pritchard also could up his involvement after a standout season that earned him NBA Sixth Man of the Year honors. Mazzulla preferred to use Pritchard off the bench, giving him just three late-season starts despite Holiday missing 20 games with various injuries. Despite that, Pritchard smashed his previous season high for minutes played (28.4 per game) and was one of three players to break the Celtics’ franchise record for made threes in a season, ranking fifth league-wide in that category.

Davison, the 2024-25 G League MVP, has a non-guaranteed team option for 2025-26, so his place on the roster is tenuous. Second-round draft pick Shulga (57th overall) is expected to sign a two-way, according to Celtics vice president of basketball operations Mike Zarren. He was a standout 3-point shooter at VCU (40.2% over the last two seasons) who earned Player of the Year honors in the Atlantic 10.

The Celtics reportedly received pre-draft offers for White and Jaylen Brown, but Zarren said “there hasn’t been anything close to serious about trading them.”

Wings

Jayson Tatum, Jaylen Brown, Sam Hauser, Georges Niang, Baylor Scheierman, Jordan Walsh, Miles Norris (two-way), Hugo Gonzalez

Include a massive asterisk next to Tatum’s name, as he’s expected to miss at least a significant portion of the upcoming season while he recovers from Achilles surgery. Stevens said Boston’s All-NBA centerpiece is making “great” progress in his rehab but would not offer a projected timeline for his return. Tatum won’t be back in action until sometime in 2026 and could miss all of next season, depending on both his recovery and how the Celtics fare without him.

Brown will have a long-awaited opportunity to be the Celtics’ go-to guy for the first time since he joined the organization in 2016, assuming he’s not dealt in the coming months. He’s recovering from minor knee surgery but is expected to be full-go before training camp begins in September.

Hauser is a name to watch as the Celtics continue exploring ways to increase their financial flexibility. His 3-point shooting would make him a solid addition to any team’s bench, and he’s on a reasonable contract for the next four seasons ($10 million salary in 2025-26). Boston also has a potential in-house replacement in 2024 first-round pick Scheierman, who flashed late in his rookie season.

The Celtics used their ’25 first-rounder (28th overall) to land Gonzalez, a young Spaniard who played sparingly this season on a loaded Real Madrid squad. Stevens loves Gonzalez’s energy, motor and team-first attitude, but with his age (doesn’t turn 20 until January) and relative lack of experience, he probably needs more seasoning before he’s ready for real NBA minutes.

The other newcomer here, Niang, who came over in the Porzingis trade, has plenty of experience, having appeared in 544 games for five teams over a nine-year NBA career. Born in Lawrence and raised in Methuen, the 32-year-old is another quality 3-point shooter (39.9% for his career) who won’t provide much on the defensive end. Niang set a career high in points per 36 minutes in 2024-25 (16.6) and projects as a rotation player if he’s not rerouted elsewhere this offseason.

Bigs

Neemias Queta, Xavier Tillman, Amari Williams

Yeesh. Fortifying this group needs to be the top priority for Boston, and it hopes to do so by re-signing free agents Al Horford and Luke Kornet, who were the Celtics’ second and third big men this season behind the departed Porzingis.

Horford remained effective on the court and vital to the locker room as a 38-year-old in Year 18. The soon-to-be 30-year-old Kornet is coming off the best season of his career. Both will have other suitors this offseason.

“There is no question our priorities would be to bring Al and Luke back,” Stevens said. “Those guys are huge parts of this organization. They’re going to have, I’m sure, plenty of options all over the place, and that’s well deserved, but I think that would be a priority. At the same time, I don’t want to put pressure on them. It’s their call ultimately. But, yeah, we would love to have those guys back.”

Queta was comfortably behind Kornet on the depth chart by midseason and was not part of Mazzulla’s playoff rotation. Tillman hardly played outside of garbage time after the opening week of the season, ranking 13th on the roster in minutes played (more than 600 fewer than Queta).

Williams, a 7-footer drafted 46th overall out of Kentucky, is expected to sign a two-way deal. He’s regarded as a great passer for his size and drew comparisons to Queta during the pre-draft process. The Celtics passed on two centers viewed as fringe first-round talents (Creighton’s Ryan Kalkbrenner and Stanford’s Maxime Raynaud) when they traded down from No. 32, so there’s potential for second-guessing there if either player hits.