First, let me make it clear that I am not supporting Ainge or management here. I believe they made a calculated gamble here based on the premise that: 1) the dollars he would've taken up could be used to sign FAs to fill their immediate needs elsewhere (if you want to simplify it, Powe's $ could be applied to Big Baby's contract, not an insignificant amount given the C's are in luxury tax land); 2) there is no guarantee that Powe would return and be effective (if you listen to Ainge's words carefully about willing to sign Powe provided he's healthy...you can see that's a big concern for the C's especially in the current economic environment and again with the C's already in luxury tax land); 3) that Powe would still likely be available later this summer or towards the end of this year at which point the C's will know their roster and have more visibility on when Powe would be able to return; and 4) someone feel free to correct me if this is wrong, but I believe that given the number of years Powe has played, he would be a cheaper contract as a vet minimum than the qualifying offer we would've tendered.
Look, I don't think you can be a true Celtics fan without feeling some remorse that Powe was not extended a qualifying offer. We all loved his hard-hat work ethic, the odds he overcame to reach the NBA and generally being a quality human being.
Having said that, I just felt the need to post because many of you have NO CLUE as to how contracts work in the NBA. Talking about how Powe is more valuable than Scal, TA, JR, Gabe, etc? I don't disagree one bit- a HEALTHY Powe is more valuable than any of those guys. However, besides Gabe, the other three have GUARANTEED contracts. Now, Scal and TA have guaranteed but EXPIRING contracts, and thus the onus is on Danny to turn those assets into something productive for us off the bench. Just appreciate the fact that this isn't pick-up basketball at the Y. There are real contracts, real $$ and real rules involved here that make what seem like obvious no-brainer basketball decisions impossible in reality.