No chance Utah would have interest in this trade. They may consider a Grant for Vanderbilt trade but beyond that the C's are giving up nothing that would cause them to even pick up the phone. Pritchard at this point wouldn't be in their rotation either. Utah traded Bogdanovic pretty much straight up for Olynyk in the summer, I doubt they are going to give him away now. Gay is playable Gallo is not.
I think the C’s would likely have to attach a first round pick as well. I’m not high on Vanderbilt, he can’t shoot, but I’d much rather have Kelly than Grant.
I have watched all of Utah's games this year and in my opinion the C's should not be interested in Vanderbilt at all. He doesn't fit with Timelord at all and next to Horford wouldn't be great either. Much prefer Grant in both cases. Playing him as a small ball center isn't good either.
I agree, but I’d rather have Kelly over Grant. He’s a legit 4/5. Utah is full rebuild and Olynyk being over 30 doesn’t fit their timeline. Grant and Pritchard do, though. Then throw in the C’s first round pick for this year…. That makes a lot of sense for both teams.
we don't have our first pick this year -- went to Indy in the Brogdon deal. I wouldn't be throwing a first rounder in for either KO or Vanderbilt. each is a bench guy that isn't going to be someone you want on the court in the final minutes of a game.
Well, you are dealing with Danny Ainge, so good luck not giving up something that you didn't want to. Lol.
And this is why a trade won’t get made. Neither of those two are worth a first to the Celtics, and Olynyk especially isn’t because we’d have to also give up at least someone on the fringe of the rotation to make salaries work.
Other than Rob, I can’t think of any players the C’s have had success drafting in the late 20’s. I mean, the last two picks in the teens were not very good with Langford and Nesmith. What’s that old saying, “A bird in the hand…” Would much rather have the proven players for this Celtics team.
There's always the "lottery ticket" aspect of a draft pick. You can end up with a good player at a very cheap salary for four years. That's usually more enticing than the "bird in the hand".
And, we've done okay in the 20s, at least under Danny. Perk, Delonte, Tony, Grant, Sully. There have been plenty of misses, too, but if you figure a draft pick in the 20s yields about a 40% - 50% chance of a decent rotation player, it makes sense why teams hoard them.