I want to call attention to what is the most important thing Doc Rivers told Mark Murphy in this morning's paper:
“Posey’s numbers were never justified in bringing him back, I guess,” said Rivers. “But his intangibles were absolutely justified, and we just weren’t able to replace those.”
This is a critical point that a lot of people miss: intangibles and versatility.
Basketball is not a homogeonous game, no matter how hard the sabermetricians and the fans try to make it. Everybody's not hitting, fielding and pitching like baseball.
Think of a championship team as a completed jigsaw puzzle of diverse skillsets: The 7-footer who can shoot the 20 footer, rebound and defend the rim. The 6-10 guy who works the boards and defends. The 3 who defends like crazy, attacks the rim and takes the big shots. The 2 who stretches the defense from the perimeter. The point guard who distributes the ball, attacks the rim and disrupts the other point with his defense.
Clearly, from this morning's discussion on the Doc thread, several people think a title stops there. If only KG hadn't gone down, we repeat.
Unfortunately, there are more pieces to the puzzle that have to be filled in. ANY title team at ANY level MUST have a reserve who can come in, box out, get some rebounds and preferably hit a big shot. They also have to have a versatile perimeter player who can do, among other things, stretch the defense with the outside shot, slow down the other team's best perimeter player and be able to play multiple positions. And if you don't have a point who can run your club without turning the basketball over, defend and hit a shot or two, you're in trouble. There's the issue of fatigue, which every coach fears and must manage, down to the specific roles that every player on your team must fill to be a complete champion.
Any one of these missing pieces is a hole in the championship puzzle. Put more than a couple together and you're not winning a title.
I got into a discussion on another board with a poster who said, "Rondo, Perk and Baby got better and that makes up for the loss of Posey." Those are discussions best exited, because the other guy just doesn't get it.
It's a little bit like the posters who say, "Rondo had a triple-double, so he had a great game." Yeah, but. How many points did he allow on the defensive end? How many points were scored off picks he played poorly? What was the impact of the turnovers he made?
I have eight managers for my team, because I need specific statistics to accurately evaluate my players. We keep numbers like shooting percentage inside 4 feet, points allowed on the defensive end, rebounds allowed on the defensive end, missed defensive assignments and rotations, points off positional turnovers, the "Lazy Pick," or failure to fight through a screen or correctly go around it, etc. Then, I look at game film three times and do my own stat sheets. NO box score or plus-minus sheet tells me enough to help me coach accurately.
Clearly, several folks think Garnett's injury is a mitigator that overshadows management's off- and in-season personnel decisions.
In fact, I would assert that it's a magnifier. A fundamental foundation of building this Celtic team, given the age of its centerpieces, should be recognition of the need for the above bench pieces, to answer in-game challenges and give the club a chance to win in case one or more key pieces go down for any length of time. Anything less is a fundamental failure, a huge hole, if you will in the puzzle.
We'll never know how far this team would have gone with Garnett, but I would assert there were already fatal pieces missing from our championship puzzle.
The only thing I add to this is the fact that people (including Ainge) need to get over the fact that this team probably isn't going to be a title contender in 3-4 years...and that's OK. We knew that when we traded for Garnett and Allen. So having Posey at a high price 3 years from now wouldn't be a big deal.
The whole goal in professional sports is to win a title: we did that. We could have tried to turn Rondo and Jefferson into Stockton and Malone, but like Utah, we could have had nothing to show for it when all was said and done.
3-4 years from now we probably won't be contending. At that point, I really don't care how bad we are, because in my book, if you're not contending, it's all just a matter of how bad you are.