I may update some of this before the deadline, and I expect my minutes allocations would change based upon matchups. But, for now...
Boston CelticsKP / Giannis / Turkuglu / Jrue / Curry
Sabonis / Brand / A. Thompson / Oladipo / Brunson
Jordan / Bowen
Porzingis (2023) / Sabonis (2023) / Jordan (2015)
Giannis (2019) / Brand (2006)
Turkoglu (2008) / Thompson (2025) / Bowen (2016)
Jrue (2021) / Oladipo (2018)
Curry (2016) / Brunson (2024)
Very rough playoff rotation:
C: Porzingis - 24 minutes - Sabonis - 10 minutes - Jordan - 14 minutes
PF: Giannis - 20 minutes - Brand - 28 minutes
SF: Giannis - 9 minutes - Turkoglu - 26 minutes - Bowen - 7 minutes - Thompson - 6 minutes
SG: Jrue - 32 minutes - Oladipo - 16 minutes
PG: Curry - 35 minutes - Brunson - 13 minutes
Cooper Flagg, waving that towel and representing Maine for 48 minutes
But, as mentioned, it's matchup dependent. Jordan would get more minutes against bigger teams, I suspect. Bowen will play more when the team is struggling to contain Lebron or Durant or Kobe, etc.
In terms of team philosophy, it was important to have a foundation of game changers. Curry is the most game-changing player of his generation, and I say that with all due respect to Lebron. Curry stretched the floor well beyond the 3PT line, from about 23 feet to a legit 30 feet for him. He needs to be covered no matter where he is, forcing his defenders completely out of helping roles.
The other legit game changer is Giannis. At his peak, he was the best defender in the NBA, perhaps the most efficient volume-scoring forward, a guy too strong for small ball PFs to cover and way too fast and athletic to be covered by bigger PFs. He pressures a defense constantly.
After that, it was basically finding players that fit around them. Elite, league-best rebounding. Multiple floor-stretching centers. A rim-runner who blocks shots and finishes at the best rate in NBA history. A 6'10" SF who was an excellent shooter and passer and who was a good defender at his peak. Perhaps the best perimeter defender available in Bruce Bowen, who won three rings. A young disruptive athletic freak who can cover four positions. An all-defense two-way guy off the bench. The player considered to be perhaps the most clutch player in the NBA today.
All five of the starters have been to the NBA finals. Four of the starters have won rings. Six of the seven bench players have received DPOY votes. And, not a fat guy in the bunch.

To me, these drafts are about more than stats. Fit needs to come into play. I don't think it's as easy as looking at the guys with the highest usage, taking them, and calling it a team. If it were, Russell Westbrook would have gone top-5 in this draft. It's about the individual pieces and whether they'd thrive in the role that's been asked of them. I think most teams achieved that assignment this year, so well done.
I think my team is an offensive juggernaut that wouldn't be stopped in a 7-game series, and it's quite strong on defense, as well. And yes, I fully endorse Moranis's take that Steph Curry was a "good" defender, although perhaps not a great one.
This year has been a lot of fun. Thank you all for participating, and for having me back.