No, I don't think so. Injuries can have a silver lining by giving younger players an opportunity to show they belong but I don't think that's happening, or will happen, here for Boston.
(1) The Celtics main rotation players are all veterans -- Eddie House, Marquis Daniels, Rasheed Wallace, Glen Davis. The starting five. And to a lesser degree Scalabrine + Tony Allen. They've all been around the block and know what they're capable of.
So veterans who've "been around the block" can't benefit from
additional time on the court? I think the coaches and the players themselves would disagree with that quite vehemently. To say that the bench players, whether veterans
or rookies, can't benefit from court-time, especially the pressure and expectations of an actual game, is a bit short-sighted, to say the least.
ANY player or coach will tell you that the more game-time experienced the
better ... otherwise what you're insinuating here is that "veterans" know it
ALL, and as such can't benefit from additional in-game court time. Sorry, but EVERY player benefits from extra time on the court, whether they're veterans, rookies, or the best player in the world.
(2) The remaining players aren't good enough to justify a rotation spot. JR Giddens, Bill Walker, Lestor Hudson.
Well, that's just your opinion, and it doesn't hold much water, because obviously Doc, Danny, Thibs, and the rest of the coaching staff think they're good enough, or they wouldn't be on the team or IN the rotation whatsoever. Frankly, I see abilities and promise in
each of them, and value the chance to see how they perform on the "big stage" ... and a few-minutes-here-and-there is no way to make a fair assessment of
anyone's abilities. So I think I'll stick with the Celtics' coaching staff's view of their potential and my own opinion for now.
(3) And, on a different note, Shelden Williams, who is better off in a limited role where better players hide his flaws. So, he doesn't benefit from increased minutes + touches.
Huh? Where better players hide his flaws?!? That sounds like the guy is a complete detriment, where the only good he can contribute is to NOT contribute! He's had some VERY productive showings so far in BBD's stead, and while I agree he's still a bit of a question mark, he is CERTAINLY as productive as a Scalabrine, (I would argue much MORE so), and has more potential for the future on this team. Doc has a great deal of confidence in Shel, so again, I'll stick with the team's assessment ... I mean how can
anyone NOT benefit from extra touches?!? That just makes no sense.
I don't see any upside for the Celtics bench players here. Normally, injuries do create a great opportunity for players but not in this case.
How can more playing time, more experience, more time interacting with the other players in a real game, more court time, more running of the plays under the coach's game-time eye and guidance, more experience under the glare of the media, be anything BUT an "upside"? Sorry, but I just don't get that
at ALL. In every sport on the face of this big earth, the most important thing is EXPERIENCE ... any coach or player will tell you, all the skills and training in the world do not and never
could compare to actual experience in a game. So please explain to me: How can more game-time experience have
NO UPSIDE?