Nice collection of declarative statements, sans evidence. I'm sure the people who are angry about this trade will buy them - if they believe that every game is a boilerplate, which is the one major flaw in your reasoning.
Sans evidence? Have you read this thread?
In the statements that have been made:
Jeff Green is not a good rebounder. Evidence: He has a career 9.5 rebound percentage, meaning he grabs 9.5% percent of available rebounds, this is not a very good rate. Perk, for example, a very good rebounder, is at 16 or so.
Jeff Green is not a very good defender. Evidence: He has a career 109 defensive rating, meaning that when he's on the floor, his team gives up 109 points per 100 possessions. That's not a "sabremetric" stat - that is a stat. On his own team this year, he is tied for second worst on the team.
Other evidence that has been posted and promptly/conveniently ignored by you: Perk - better PER and Win Shares/48. I can certainly understand not trusting sabremetrics...
But I have provided numerous pieces of evidence that Green is, indeed, a poor rebounder and defender.
Do you have any evidence to the contrary that you can provide? Other than your eyes and experience?
I harken back to that summer night in 2007 when the masses over here were livid because Ray Allen couldn't guard a chair.
Didn't turn out that way, did it?
What does this have to do with anything? Is it your point then, with your eyes and experience, that any player who spends a whole career being one of the worst defenders on his team will definitely become a better defender/rebounder just because he's on the Celtics?
Different systems, different teams, different players, different results. That's real basketball.
Um, yes? What? I don't understand what this even means. I thought real basketball consisted of playing a game.