How about instead of Ainge trying to get super cute in every draft, he just looks at Tankathon's player analysis before making a draft pick:
#14, Romeo Langford:
http://www.tankathon.com/players/romeo-langford A slew of red (negative) flags.
Take Brandon Clarke instead:
http://www.tankathon.com/players/brandon-clarke A massive list of green(positive) flags.
At #20, just take Matisse Thybulle Again, a massive slate of green flags and "historically" disruptive and great defensively at the college level
* Smart and Thybulle had potential to be one of the best defensive back courts of all time, as back ups - Smart can play the point. Carsen Edwards had a load of red flags as well, not green.
At #22, just take Bruno Fernando May take some time, but has a loaded set of green flags, Versus Grant Williams, who had a load of red flags.
* Get us a big man and since you already took Clarke at #14, you can pass on Grant Williams.
Then, instead of getting super cute and throwing $2.5 million on another French stiff in Poirier just go use that money to sign a player (Noel, O'Quinn, Cauley-Stein, etc., that were still available and who have proven they can actually play and contribute at some level in the NBA). All of those guys signed for about $500K to $1 MM less than we paid for Poirier.
I don't hate Langford, Williams or Edwards at all. I think Langford has a shot at being special and that both Williams and Edwards can carve out some roles, though both are undersized for today's game (another specialty of Ainge, take guys who are too short for their position and then compoound it by a lack of eleite athleticism and short arms. That's right in Ainge's strike zone.
I like Ainge overall but boy does he seem to make if far more difficult than it needs to be when it comes to the draft. I'm obviously not saying you just look at Tankathon and pick, but a lot of these picks are kind of smack you in the head obvious, then Ainge usually does the opposite of that. His drafts typically make me nuts.