Dwight is the Center version of Kyrie. And I thought we don't want another locker room cancer as we already passed from guys like Boogie.
If Kyrie was in his mid-30's, desperate to earn a roster spot anywhere, and was on a one year vet-min contract - maybe he wouldn't have been such a locker room problem.
From what I have seen Howard does appear to have matured to some degree. At the very least he's always kept his body in exceptional shape, which suggests that he has a quality work ethic at the very least. And for all his criticisms he DOES have quite a bit of playoff experience, and does have the experience of having led a fairly weak Magic team tot he ECF.
More importantly, unlike Kyrie, Dwight
does not need to have the ball in his hands in order to contribute to a team. He can get you some extremely efficient points purely off put-backs and lobs. Even when he isn't scoring himself, he can give your offense second chance opportunities through his offensive rebounding. He's a guy who can score, rebound and defend yet would not need to take ANY touches away from Kemba, Jaylen and Jayson or Gordon. Just stick him in the middle and let him do the dirty work.
He also is one of the greatest players in NBA history at actually drawing fouls and getting to the line - and even though he shoots free throws at a poor percentage, his ability to draw fouls on opposing defensive players is valuable in itself. This is one area that has been publicly brought up as one of Bostons big, big weaknesses last year.
I really doubt that there are any big men available for vet min money who have the ability to contribute more then he could. His ability to defend at an at least 'acceptable' level immediately makes him a better fit for Boston's starting 5 then Kanter IMHO.
I actually think the biggest issue for Kyrie right now is that he is still young, and still feels like he has something to prove as an individual. He clearly feels that he was robbed of his "time to shine" when Cleveland got Lebron, and so he is still out there focusing on his personal legacy, trying to prove to the world that he is an elite individual talent. Maybe 3 or 4 years down the road he will start to feel that the only way to take his legacy to the next level is to prove he can win a title without Lebron, and at that point he will start to believe that winning games (whatever it takes) is more important then getting his numbers. And maybe he grows into that role as a leader. For now I just don't think he's ready for that yet mentally.