And you are taking those quotes completely out of context.
President of basketball operations Danny Ainge said Pierce’s injury and Garnett’s one-game setback aren’t related. That is correct. Pierce’s injury is a byproduct of a chance infection, but the question now is whether the Celtics will look to preserve the Big Three for more significant games in April and May.
“It’s a goal of mine not to have KG play 81 games and to not have Paul Pierce play 81 games,’’ Ainge said yesterday. “And to not play 36 minutes a game for 81 games. That’s not my objective at all, or our organizational objective. KG could have played [Tuesday] night. We look for opportunities to give him time off.
“This has nothing to do with wear and tear, especially in Paul’s situation.’’
In other words the quotes here are in answer to a question asking if the injuries were the by-product of too much play. The objective is not to overplay them. Well, neither player is being anything near overplayed. The quote has nothing to do with the extra experience benefiting the bench or how that extra experience for the bench benefits the team.
Principal owner Wyc Grousbeck told the Globe that the Celtics aren’t going to release a player to sign another one because they are at the 15-player limit.
“We’ve got a roster of 15 players. We’re not going to be cutting anybody,’’ he said. “We don’t have any open roster spots. We’ve got guys to practice. I’m glad to see Tony Allen’s playing very well and we’ll have to have people like Tony to step it up.’’
This quote is in response to a question regarding trades or signing a player and again has nothing to do with your theory.
If it takes that much effort to beat Indiana in December, what is it going to take for key April games to seize the No. 1 seed?
“That’s Doc’s choice and Doc’s decision to who he’s going to play,’’ Ainge said. “We know that our best players are in their 30s. It’s never been my objective to win 68 or 72 games. We want to win every game but we want to do it without wearing guys out night in and night out, not forcing guys to try to play 82 games to accomplish some regular-season goal. Our objective is to be prepared physically and have chemistry by the time the playoffs start.’’
Agaian this quote is in response to a question regarding playing players heavy minutes and what it is going to take to win the #1 seed. He is responding that the #1 seed is not the priority and that keeping guys minutes down.
Nothing quoted in that article discusses whether the injuries are a good thing for the bench to get extra playing time or whether the extra playing time for players at the very end of the bench is beneficial for the team. And really, that is what is being lost in this discussion, what is best for the playoff chances of the Boston Celtics.
The injuries to our players are not beneficial to our championship aspirations. Neither is the experience that Walker, Scal, Hudson and Giddens gets. They will not be seeing time on the court during the playoffs. This experience will not develop them into players that will be useful for this team, they simply aren't that good. Their increased experience just in no way helps this team in the pursuit of a championship, which is the goal. And as the coach said in response to the direct question of whether this experience is beneficial to the team:
"There is no benefit as far as I know," he responded before the question was even finished. "When the playoffs start, I am 99 percent sure I will have the regular nine (rotation players) on the floor."
Is this good for the individual players? Sure.
Is it good to help evaluate said players? I doubt it. I think the team has a very firm grip as to who and what they are as players by now.
Will it increase their trade value? I doubt it. Most of the players at the end of the bench are just that, end of the bench players. Their value is in the numeric value of their contract and that's about it.
So, in conclusion, if the coach isn't going to be playing them unless for garbage time and when 1/3 of the team is out due to injury, and even then in limited minutes, if it's playing them is not going to help the team in evaluating the players or will it increase their trade value, and if it's not going to help keep the minutes of the starters down because that is already being done through coaching and proper rotations, what benefit does this bring to the team and it's chances to win the championship? None.
Sure it benefits the players as players, but those players aren't players that will be seeing playing time or even be around here next year.