82 games is a long season, so I think they are bound to win some games just by out working their opponents on a given night.
Between that method and the occasional night when they are shooting lights out from 3 (hasn?t happened yet besides part of the Cavs game ? but is bound to) I anticipate them being a .500 squad.
My question is: How can they best set themselves up to actually compete next year?
This is the issue I have been raising.
I said before the season started, that this roster is a play-in level team with an insanely competitive head coach. Nothing about this season will help the Celtics challenge next season. Mazulla will not play the rookies consistently to help them develop, he is only concerned with winning as many games as possible.
Look at the 76ers, if they do not get V. J. Edgecombe, what does their future look like? Dallas benched their stars at the end of the 2022-23 season and were able to draft Dereck Lively. The next season Dallas makes the Finals, with Lively significantly contributing.
I'm curious why you wrote this today after it seems pretty clear that Mazulla IS playing his youth consistently. Minott and Hugo are the biggest stories so far for the Celtics. Hugo is averaging 15 mpg and that is on the rise. Minott 22 mpg also heading upward. Mazulla is also playing youth in crunch time. There are things to complain about but not playing the young this year (other than Walsh) has not been one of them.
Sorry, I misspoke.
What I was trying to get across is that Mazzulla is not playing the youth to develop them, he is playing only to win. Some young guys like Hugo are getting solid minutes but it is in a limited capacity.
Usually on a rebuilding team, you let the young players grow and develop by allowing them to make mistakes and develop their skills. Gonzalez & Scheierman should be bringing up the ball, attempting to run the offence.
When Giannis was a rookie, Jason Kidd played him at point guard (something he is doing now with Flagg). Giannis has alluded to how this helped him greatly into developing as a playmaker & seeing the floor better. Obviously at the time Milwaukee struggled to win games, but it was more important in the long run.
I do not blame Muzzulla for focusing on winning, it is his job. I blame ownership and the front office for not looking at the long term ramifications of this season.