Come on. Powe got a minimum deal because he got hurt. I think he would've gotten $12/4 yrs if he did not suffer that injury. Powe is one of those guys that shows up on all of those efficiency/rebounding advanced statistics.
I think it's funny that we're calling a guy mediocre at drafting when he got Rajon Rondo and Al Jefferson OUT OF THE LOTTERY. Below 13!!! And a starting center at 27??? A guy that defends Dwight Howard just as well as anyone out there?! Just crazy. I just watched Howard dominate the Raptors big men the other day and it makes you realize how valuable Perk is.
Ainge is a great drafter. I don't know if there are any better out there. I'm unclear as to who was drafting for SA earlier in this decade (Buford or Pop), but Ginobili and Parker were incredible. The Warriors also plucked out Ellis, Biedrins and Arenas, but they've busted pretty bad on the higher picks.
TP
I agree that the drafting of Rondo, Big Al, and Perk was very impressive. However, like all great drafters (including Red), he did get lucky. I mean he did want Robert Swift and settled on Big Al.
As for guys like Gomes, Powe, and Baby, I'm not sure I'd call it great drafting as much as settling for role playes. I think there's probably 5-10 other GMs out there who thought those three would be as good as they are today. However, I think those 5-10 GMs also realized that you can get players like them on the FA market and decided to role the dice on someone with potential and hoped to get lucky. It's certainly worked out nicely for Ainge since this team has been more in need of role players or superstars. However, it takes no more than looking at Minnesota to see that while Ryan Gomes is a nice player, he's certainly not a difference-maker.
What does it all mean? It means I expect Danny to continue to draft guys like Hudson in upcoming drafts because he has the luxury of saying that the team doesn't need a difference-maker. However, I don't totally blame teams for passing on low-risk, low-reward players: they aren't going to make a difference on a 20-60 team.