I don't agree, but fine, let's pretend that every single deal was absolutely necessary. The question *still* must be asked how to evaluate the players brought in. I'm quite sure Ainge will ask this question, so I think it's fair for us to as well.
it is not about agreeing. It is about fact. Of the roster that started the season, Marquis, Nate, Shaq, JO, Perkins, Erden and West were down with major injuries. That meant we would have had 8 healthy bodies for at least a month. And at least 2 of those have not even come back yet. So yes, it is a fact that we would need to sign free agents or play an 8 man roster for a month. And to sign those free agents we would need to cut people and keep their salaries on the books or dump them on trades.
It very well might be that no better value was out there. Or it might be possible that we did get value, and the numbers can show it somewhere. You could also argue that the value is in future positioning--I've said I think it's either 2011 or 2016 for this team, but that's a fair point to argue. But the question is much more important than rehashing the "Perk vs Green" debate for the millionth time.
And in that case, it is at worse a wash. Perk has been truly abysmal in these playoffs. Marc Gasol is averaging almost 7 points over his regular season average.
I don't follow. Green sits because Doc wants to play PP more, of course, yes. But how does that explain the fact that Green's numbers when he *is* on the floor not measuring up to Kyle Korver's, or Darrell Arthur's, or Shannon Brown's?
Again, simple: he is going up against Lebron James and Carmelo Anthony. Is it so hard to understand that players will put up worse numbers against better competition?
In any case, as I said, if you evaluate Green that way, you have to evaluate Perk that way.
Have I not been clear? I do not care about Perkins' stats with OKC.
The only reason I posted was to try to get out of the "Perk vs Green" debate that is so tiresome and fruitless. Instead, I want to focus on assessing what value we got, and trying to determine if it was worth the costs. Take Jeff Green's name out of it--if we focus on the numbers and try to put them in context of other similar numbers in the playoffs, maybe we can judge the output of the trade without making it about personalities or emotion.
This makes zero sense. How can you "determine if it was worth the costs" without evaluating the costs? How can you evaluate if we got fair value in return without evaluating what we gave up?
Again, when you're comparing outputs per minute it's totally irrelevant who the guys are playing behind. But sure, it's fair to say that the whole team is underperforming, and it's fair to consider the opponent. But I don't know that it excuses some truly awful turnover and rebounding numbers. Green's averaging more turnovers per minute than Tony Allen did last year...facing those same elite players. And I say again, if you don't think these are fair comparisons, please, by all means, suggest another player! I'm just an armchair guy looking for a new take on an conversation that is done to death by focusing on actual numbers rather than names.
FWIW, looking at Battier's numbers I absolutely would have traded a 1st rounder + more for 3 months--because those 3 months would have given us the best chance of winning a title in the next 5 years.
Again, this makes absolutely no sense.
You talk and talk about the "costs" and the "numbers" but you don't accept it when anyone brings up Perkins numbers!
I mean, Perkins is too much to give up for Green and a first because Green is not doing so well in the playoffs (but doing poorly in the playoffs can't be used against Perkins)? But you would be ok giving up a 1st for a guy who is putting up worse numbers on more minutes?
Let me get this straight:
- the way he has played in the New York series (because he has been fine against Miami) should count against Green in order to evaluate what we got.
- Perkins abysmal performance should not count against him for whatever reason, even though you want to evaluate if we got fair value in return.
- Battier similar performances should not count against him either when we suggest alternatives.
Did I miss anything?
If you want to evaluate Green based solely on the playoffs, you need to do the same for Perkins and the alternatives to Green.