You would be wrong. Both Westbrook and Durant are ball-stoppers. Green is an afterthought in an offense that doesn't afford or create for him any looks that he doesn't take.
Been saying this all night, and I'll say it again: If you think you can thoroughly evaluate Green's performance and potential in a system that is constructed for two teammates, go ahead.
I thoroughly disagree, and clearly, so does Ainge and Rivers.
So, what in OKC would make him a bad rebounder? Why would he be bad at shooting 3's? I understand why a westbrook/Durant heavy offense would lower his raw scoring numbers or assist numbers, but why would his "hustle" things like rebounds be quite bad, and why would his efficiency numbers like FG% or TS% be bad?
I'm intrigued by him, but we have quite a bit of evidence that he's and underwhelming bench player who was drafted too high and wants to get payed like it this offseason.
Six rebounds makes Perkins good and Green bad? Got it. Same number, both players. Shooting percentage is what it is in an offense created to iso your two superstars, and it's invalid as any ckind of an evaluation in the Boston system. I've said it all night and I'll say it again - Green will get and take good shots with the Celtics ball movement.
The rebounding argument makes me chuckle. We're a bad rebounding team with Perkins, and somehow we're going to get worse when we don't know what the roster's going to look like? Please. It's a mild concern, but at this point I'm going to give Ainge a chance to address it. Perkins wasn't going to get 20 boards a night on those bad wheels, so fail to see where Green should face those expectations.
And again, we're not going to talk sabremetrics. They aren't an accurate measure of a player's intangible worth and they are of zero value to me.
I love that because YOU don't like something, they are meaningless to a discussion.
But yeah, let's delve into the radical world of "Per Minute" for a second, and not just look at career per game averages. And if you don't buy or understand why "per minute" might have value, I'm sorry. If a bench player can get 5 rebounds in 15 minutes, he's a heck of a lot better rebounder than a bench player who could grab 5 rebounds in 35 minutes. Not sure how that's "meaningless," it's basic logic and math.
But, I see you are saying "six rebounds is six rebounds."
1. You are using career totals, which seems silly considering Green entered the league as a polished college player and Perk came in as a raw high schooler. The last two seasons, perk has averaged 8.0 and 7.6 RPG. I think that's a little closer to his real rebounding value currently.
2. Minutes DO matter. Green gets his 5.6 rebounds this year in 37 minutes per game. That is just not good for a guy who starts at PF. It's not. Can't spin it. Not good. Maybe he just wasn't trying to get rebounds because he hated being 3rd banana behind Durant and Westbrook. If that's the case, this is going to improve when he is decidedly 6th banana? Meanwhile, Perk was getting his 8 rebounds in 26 or so minutes. So, 10 less minutes but solidly 2 more RPG. Yeah, I feel confident is saying Perk is a significantly better rebounder.
3. If you are a good outside shooter, and you are not the focus of offense, you make your shots. If you are not the focus, your attempts go down and your percentages go up. Or they should. They have for Ray and Pierce. Sorry i'm using something as new fangled as "shooting percentage" to gauge whether someone being touted as a floor stretcher is a good shooter. Will he be? hopefully. I really hope so. Is he? Not yet. Not sure how it changes. 3 pt. arc is the same no matter who's jersey you have on.