I'm not interested in asking "would Perk have made the difference?" We just can't know. To me, the question that can (and should) be asked is: did the Celtics receive enough value to justify the immense turnover *this season*?
I'm of the opinion that no matter who the Celtics add in 2011 or 2012, it's not going to be enough to overcome Miami, and maybe even Chicago or whoever else. Even some sort of best case scenario where the Celtics have Howard, Rondo, and some other decent guy (a John Salmons-type)-- that's not enough. So for me, it was this year or 5-7 years from now.
Turning over a huge portion of the roster, caused a ton of on-the-floor confusion in the process, and required an extended "settling" period that would, even with the best case scenario, probably effect our playoff seeding. I'm not even talking vague things like "chemistry" or "ubuntu" (which are of course important, but not quantifiable.) So to my mind you have to ask whether all that turnover and confusion was made worth it by the contributions that have come in.
Obviously Krstic, Arroyo, Pavlovic, and Murphy have given us nothing. That's unfortunate but probably undebatable at this point. And I don't think you can blame Doc on that--none of them have earned minutes. So it's down to Jeff Green, who is by all accounts a class act and a nice player. Jeff Green averaged 18.6 MP, 7.1 pts, 2.6 rebounds, .12 assists, .63 steals, .5 blocks, 1.3 turnovers and 2.4 fouls. He shot 42% from the field, 40% from 3, and 69% from the line. Discussion around him has pretty much exhausted itself, so I decided that I'd look at the numbers in the playoffs for guys that have played a similar amount of MPG as Green with similar outputs. I've attached the excel sheet for those that are interested.
The closest comparisons:
- Marvin Williams averaged 19.2 MP, 5.5 pts, 2.5 rebounds, .6 assists, .8 steals, .6 blocks, 1.1 to's, and 1.7 fouls. He shot 41%, 27% from 3, and 77% from the line.
- Kyle Korver averaged 19.78 mp, 8.8 pts, 1.4 rebounds, 1.4 assists, .67 steals, .22 blocks, 1.3 to's, and 1.89 fouls. He shot 41%, 49% from 3 and is perfect from the line (6 for 6).
- Shannon Brown: 16.6 mpg, 7.2 ppg, 1.9 rebs, .7 assts, .6 steals, .2 blocks, .9 tos, and 1 foul. He shot 46%, 28% from 3 and 69% from the line
- Darrel Arthur: 15.8mpg, 7 ppg, 2.6 rpg, .7 assts, .4 steals, 1.1 blks, .9 tos, and 2.3 fouls. He's shot 46% from the field and is 3 from 4 from the line (hasn't attempted a 3 pointer).
There's more guys in the excel file. You can draw your own conclusions, but to me, I wouldn't have changed things up so drastically just to get Shannon Brown or Kyle Korver level production. I would've taken what I could from Anthony Parker (who wouldve given 60% of those numbers) and kept the 50% of the playbook we had to scratch.