I still don't understand why Ainge fills our roster with undersized 4's. Aside Garnett and Al Jefferson's short stint in green, all of our power forwards have been undersized hustle players. Baby, now Harangody, Gomes, can even go back to the days of Brandon Hunter.
Here are the power forwards drafted after Gomes. Belgian Axel Hervelle, who remains in Europe. Lawrence Roberts, who spent two seasons with Memphis and is now in Europe. Amir Johnson, who was turning pro straight out of high school. Marcin Gortat, listed as a PF/C, and I think we all would prefer the Polish Hammer to Gomes. Uros Slokar, who saw only garbage minutes with Toronto before going back to Europe.
Undrafted power forwards that year who have spent time in the NBA include: The even shorter Chuck Hayes, who plays well for Houston. Journeyman Josh Powell, now with his sixth team in seven seasons. Shavlik Randolph. Jawad Williams is an athletic combo forward for the Cavs who hasn't done much.
Of that list, you would clearly prefer Gortat over Gomes and you can't really criticize Ainge for taking undersized power forwards then say he should have taken Chuck Hayes. Amir Johnson has much more upside, but I can understand passing on a HS kid.
Fun fact that is probably related to Gomes playing on bad teams: Among players drafted in the second round of the 2005 NBA draft, Gomes has the most games played and rebounds per game and is second only to Monta Ellis in ppg.
Of the several power forwards drafted after Glen Davis in 2007 (who, perhaps ironically, include Stephane Lasme), the players who have made the most impact in the NBA are Dominic McGuire and Chris Richard.
The power forwards drafted behind Harangody are Ryan Reid, Derrick Caracter, and Dwayne Collins. If the late second round is just a crap shoot, then Harangody has about a one-in-four chance of ending up the best player out of that group. Given Ainge's track record, then Harangody probably has something more like a 35-40% probability of being the best of those late draft 4's.