Keep in mind that things aren't all that much different than last year. Cassell didn't get here until the last 1/3 of the season anyway, and Pruitt still didn't play that much.
I don't think we're disagreeing that much. If we once again win 66 games and we once again win half of them by double digits, well then there should be about 33 minutes where Pruitt gets garbage time in the fourth quarter. I just find it doubtful that a team that has a strong starting point guard and a decent backup is going to find enough time for a third point guard to get meaningful minutes on a regular basis.
And why should they cut him if they don't plan to use him more? This isn't Little League; everyone doesn't have to play. Moreover, this isn't some goodwill charity either. This is a business of trying to win. The Celtics need players who aren't going to play on a regular basis that can step in if someone gets hurt. Pruitt was a second round pick; he should be happy to still be in the NBA at this point.
It's not little league, but they don't have unlimited roster spots. If Pruitt's not good enough to get any more than garbage minutes then he's not good enough to be the 3rd pg in the playoffs. Keep in mind tht the 3rd pg isn't a ceremonial position. House played a total of 18 minutes against Detroit even though he'd just taken the job from Cassell, so it's not like we can definitely get through with just House. Pruitt playing 33 minutes of garbage time during the season won't be at all ready to step in and play. We'd need another pg, and we'd need Pruitt's roster spot for him.
The only reasons three point guards got minutes for the Celtics were a) Rondo was very young and inconsistent at times and b) Doc couldn't make up his mind who the backup 1 was. Normally, in the playoffs, coaches don't go more than 1 deep at a position, and often 1 backup backs up multiple positions (like Posey backing up Allen and Pierce). No other team did that. Juan Dixon didn't play at all for the Pistons in the Conference Finals. Only Jordan Farmar saw minutes behind Derek Fisher for the Lakers. Damon Jones only saw minutes in the Cavs series after Gibson went down. I could go on. No team, under ordinary circumstances, is going to play 3 point guards in the playoffs. And most aren't going to play 3 on a regular basis in the regular season. There just aren't enough minutes to go around.
Doc couldn't decide on a backup pg because he didn't get consistent play out of either of them. He started with Cassell and then switched to House when Cassell faltered, but he then switched back to Cassell. It's no coincidence that House played very few minutes against Detroit when everyone predicted that he'd struggle against then.
Right. But my point is that it's not happening this year. Cassell has consistently been a borderline All Star who had historically come up big in the big game. That can't be said about Pruitt. Doc didn't utilize him last year when he didn't have a third string PG for the first 65 games of the season. And while he may have improved this offseason, Rondo is going to get even more minutes this year and House has further cemented himself as a part of the C's rotation.
How has he further cemented himself as a part of the rotation? Are his flaws going to disappear? If Doc was concerned about House in the playoffs last year why won't that be the case this year?
I'm no fan of House. I'd prefer a purer point guard. However, he played a role in the championship run, which is something that Pruitt can't say. Thus, I'd say he's the incumbent backup that Pruitt has to beat out. That's what I meant by cemented himself.
And as I showed above and as others have agreed on, we certainly don't need a third point guard in the playoffs. If there's any time we may need a third point guard, as others have pointed out, it's in the regular season. In the playoffs, you play your best players as many minutes as possible. It was totally a fluke situation that allowed for Rondo/House/Cassell to all get minutes. No other playoff team had a three man rotation at the point.
Would you be confident going into the playoffs with Davis as your only backup center, with a 3rd center who's only capable of getting into garbage time? Because that's the equivalent of what you're doing. Davis played almost as many minutes as House during the season and he played almost as many minutes as House during the playoffs. PJ brown getting more minutes than him was the same kind of fluke as Cassell getting backup pg minutes.
You've shown that teams don't need to have 3 pgs play in the playoffs and most teams don't play 3 pgs in the playoffs. But you haven't shown that House is capable of being the sole backup pg for a team in the playoffs. That's the key point.
I don't know if he can. I don't particularly like Eddie House's game. I think he's vastly overrated on this board. But I also think for a guy nobody's really ever seen play a meaningful minute of pro basketball, Gabe Pruitt is also grossly overrated. That's not to say he may not prove me wrong. I just think that anyone who thinks he's going to be any good is just using the following non-sequitur:
Danny Ainge historically has picked good players late in the draft
Gabe Pruitt was picked late in the draft.
Gabe Pruitt must be a good player.
And of course such a conclusion has no factual basis.
I was extremely panicked about backu-up point guard last year. I was thrilled we got Cassell because I don't have a lot of faith in House. Still, this year I'm less concerned. There's no reason to believe that come playoff time, Rajon Rondo can't play 40 mpg at the point guard spot. If that's the case, does it really matter all that much who's backing him up? While I don't like House running the show, I'm sure we can get by with him for a few minutes early in the second quarter and a few more late in the third. Ditto with Pruitt or even Tony Allen. My only point has been that it'll only be one of them doing the backup duties.
As for Rondo going down for the season in the playoffs, if that happens, we're not going to win #18 anyway, so it really won't matter how much experience Pruitt has.