During a season where nothing’s guaranteed and rotations are a revolving door, Boston Celtics center Neemias Queta found a way to strengthen his bid at remaining in the team’s starting lineup.
“Neemy was the best version of himself,” Celtics head coach Joe Mazzulla told reporters, per CLNS Media. “Even though he was only 3-for-4, you felt his presence.”
Queta assumed his usual starting spot for the 47th time this season. But this time, he played a critical role in a double-big lineup that also gave Luka Garza his second start of the season. With Jaylen Brown, Sam Hauser, and Anfernee Simons — who remains unofficially traded in the Nikola Vučević swap with the Chicago Bulls — out, the Celtics were in a tough spot. On the other end, a healthier Houston Rockets team awaited, one that had last beaten Boston by 27 points on Nov. 1 and had won five of its last six games.
Short-staffed and on the second night of a back-to-back, the Celtics had little going in their favor. Rookie Ron Harper Jr. was thrown into the fire, making his first career NBA start and immediately tasked with guarding future Hall of Famer Kevin Durant. Payton Pritchard remained in the sixth man’s role to balance the second unit, and on a night that seemed destined for defeat, Queta used Boston’s circumstances to his advantage.
Queta recorded his eighth double-double of the season, scoring 10 points with 19 rebounds — including a career-high 12 defensive boards — and five blocks in Boston’s 114-93 win over Houston.
“It’s mostly positioning — getting there early, wedging guys under the rim, and going to get rebounds with two hands,” Queta told reporters, per CLNS Media. “I think I did a pretty good job with that tonight. That’s an emphasis for me. I’m trying to go get it with two hands at the highest speed, and you have to be fortunate enough to get a couple of those. But mostly, it’s positioning — you’ve got to go get it with two hands.”
Currently, it’s unclear what Vučević’s pending arrival will mean for Queta’s role. Vučević, a 15-year veteran and two-time NBA All-Star, obviously brings a level of experience Queta doesn’t yet match. Still, Queta’s case isn’t fragile. Since being tossed into the starting lineup for the first time in his career, he’s handled the role better than the Celtics could have expected after parting ways with Kristaps Porziņģis, Al Horford, and Luke Kornet in the offseason. He hasn’t performed like a downgrade and is developing rapidly, keeping pace with Boston’s rise from underdog to a bona fide contender in the Eastern Conference.
Queta has been more than a serviceable rim-protecting, lob-target center, adapting seamlessly to what Mazzulla has architected this season’s Celtics to be. Unlike Porziņģis, Horford, and Vučević, Queta is a purely traditional big. He’s not going to keep defenses on their toes on the perimeter, as he isn’t a 3-point threat. Instead, Queta’s movement around the elbow and his off-ball screens help the Celtics establish a fluid offensive flow that gets everyone involved, even when he doesn’t touch the ball.
It’s a scheme that won’t always produce eye-popping box score figures, but it keeps Queta effective.
Sometimes Queta will finish in the 10–15 rebound range; other nights, it’s a modest eight points and eight rebounds on a high-efficiency shooting percentage. But it’s never about the numbers. It’s always about staying impactful towards winning.
In the fourth quarter Wednesday night, Queta found himself in the middle of his most adventurous sequence, colliding with Houston’s Tari Eason and tumbling several rows into the stands — only to scramble back on defense seconds later to guard a quick Rockets transition.
“Eason and I got tangled up, and I lost my balance, which threw me all the way up to like the 14th (row),” Queta told reporters. “I champed it up with a fan on the way. On the way down, I was looking at the bench, then they got the ball, and my momentum was taking me the other way. I just tried to stay patient and poised, and I got the block, fortunately. But at the end of the day, it would’ve been a highlight if they didn’t score, so that wasn’t that great.”
Queta’s retelling matched the play’s real-time confusion and drew laughter in the locker room after the game.
“That was hilarious,” Derrick White told reporters, per CLNS Media. “Yeah, Neemy is hilarious. I was just watching him keep going up and up, and I’m like, ‘Just stop.’ But that was hilarious.
White continued: “He was big-time for us tonight — protecting the paint, rebounding. He did a lot of great things for us.”
If anything, Queta’s statement performance in Houston didn’t just reinforce his case to keep his role — it showed how effective he can be within a double-big rotation. Vučević, meanwhile, is better suited to last season’s version of the Celtics, entering this year as a career 35.1% shooter from beyond the arc while attempting 4.5 threes through 48 games in Chicago. He’s also an aging center at 35, further clouding how Boston will manage the five spot moving forward.
Regardless, Queta isn’t overly concerned if Boston needs to resort to a double-big lineup.
“I don’t think it’s that big of an adjustment,” Queta told reporters. “A lot of the guys who’ve been here the last couple of years — that’s what we’ve been running. So it’s more about getting used to it, figuring out how to maximize each of the new players, and that chemistry. We started pretty well and rebounded the ball well, too. That’s stuff we can still get better at, but I don’t think it was that big of an adjustment for us tonight.”