Brown and an asset or two for Donovan Mitchell.
Rumors he may want to leave Utah, and he's an East Coast kid (grew up outside New York, went to my alma mater for grade school in CT, and also HS in CT).
On the other hand, if I am Utah, there is no way I trade Donovan Mitchell for Jaylen Brown. Not unless Mitchell says he wants out. That he is definitely leaving.
I do not like Jaylen in that Utah offense.
They are too reliant on Donovan Mitchell's ball-handling, individual shot creation and facilitation of the offense with his passing. He carries a heavy burden. Jaylen can't do that. And Utah doesn't have enough talent elsewhere on the team to make up the difference. Plus, Mike Conley is old. This would send the team into a semi-rebuild / retooling phase that takes them out of title contention and back into the middle of the pack of the playoff teams in the West. Good but not good enough. Second round and out sorta team.
It could work out in the long run if Utah could replace Conley with a younger PG (Fox?) to make up the playmaking loss. Or if they find a way to add a 4th star to provide some ball-handling, passing and shot-creation in between Conley and Jaylen. A present day version of Jeff Hornacek. That too could put them back in title contention.
But both of those options are unlikely be readily available so I would be extremely reluctant to trade Donovan Mitchell for Jaylen Brown unless I felt I was forced to do so because Mitchell told me he for sure was leaving / wanted out. In that case, Jaylen is a good return for Mitchell and gives me some hope in a semi-rebuild situation.
Outside of Gobert, what else does Utah have?
This is clearly not happening soon. I'm thinking more as the Jazz trend down (which they are and will), and Mitchell begins to press the front office on a long term plan. Because Utah isn't exactly bursting with your talent and assets.
I like Utah in terms of building around / retooling around Gobert & Donovan Mitchell.
Mitchell can carry a huge load offensively and Gobert can carry a huge load defensively. They give the team a solid basis on both ends of the court. A team identity. A style of play.
... I like their capacity to switch players in and out of that roster and maintain high standards so long as they can keep those two guys.
Conley plays an important role as a secondary creator on offense. He is the hardest piece to replace. The rest of their offense is all predicated on filling your roster 1 through 4 with shooters around Gobert -- due to his limited offensive game, a game-plan I would like to see Boston imitate with Rob Williams. Those are all replaceable pieces.
So yeah, even if Utah has a downturn in fortunes and needs to revamp their roster, I would feel good about their prospects so long as they can keep Mitchell + Gobert together. If you lose 1 of those 2 guys, everything falls apart. But if you can keep them together, a lot can chance while keeping standards sky high.
---------------------------
On another note, I'd love to see Utah upgrade Jordan Clarkson. He had a great shooting start to the season last year but he has come back to Earth in the second half of last season and this season. This is the real Clarkson and it is not good enough. Utah needs a better backup guard.
I love the idea of Utah imitating the backcourts of the late 1980s early 90s Pistons or late 70s early 80s Sonics. Where Detroit had Zeke, Dumars and Vinnie Johnson. The Sonics had Gus Williams, Dennis Johnson and Freddie Brown. Three dynamic ball-handling guards who could all score and shouldered most of the offensive burden for their teams.
I love the way those three guards could all play alongside one another and could switch roles from lead guard to off guard playing with or without the basketball.
I see Utah having a similar situation with Conley, Mitchell and Clarkson. That this trio too shoulders most of the offensive responsibility for their team. I like Conley and Mitchell but Clarkson is not good enough for them to win a title.
As Chuck Daly used to say after they lost Vinnie Johnson, paraphrasing here "I used to only 2 of my 3 guards to play well to win. Now I need both of guards two play well every night to have a chance to win." That is what I see happening with Utah. Clarkson's drop-off (reversion to normal) has been like losing a player and has made them over-reliant on their two starting guards in a way that is unhealthy for any team that has playoff dreams. They need to replace Clarkson somehow to make that next step and win a title like those Sonics and Pistons teams did (in how they built their offenses around a 3 guard attack).