the trade wasn't necessarily the issue.....but the timing of the trade was. along with injuries.
i blame danny bc of the timing and falsely banking on the health of shaq
The timing was the most important thing. Danny tore a gaping whole in our starting unit, AND changed over about a third of the team, with barely a month in the season left. This wrecked our cohesion, at the worst possible time, and THAT is why we stumbled down the stretch, and why we looked slow, old and tired against the Heat. How did we go to that, from being a team that had the Heat and Chicago and pretty much every other team in the league (but not the Mavs, interestingly) intimidated, 2/3 of the way through the season? The Trade was the single most important reason.
And I don't think anyone should fool themselves about why The Trade happened. It had nothing to do with winning. As Ainge himself admitted (but he didn't have to admit it for us to know it), The Trade happened because of Perkins' contract. In view of what has transpired since then, with our lovely owners having been revealed as NBA contract hardliners, the real meaning of this is clear: the Perkins Trade was the first shot fired in the owners/players war.
Please, do not tell yourselves that Ainge really believed that Shaq would be back to save the season. Come on, people! Does Ainge also believe in the tooth fairy? Does he set out milk and cookies for Santa Clause? Do you all remember Ainge, or his accomplice Doc Rivers, telling us at one point that Shaq was on a new diet that was going to make all the difference? Come on, folks, this was baby talk. A diet can make a real difference, but not in a few weeks. They were laughing at us. We'd be lucky to have Shaq giving us a few minutes off the bench, and they knew it.
Losing Nate was, in itself, not very important. Nate's role on the Celtics reminded me of ML Carr's role. Remember Carr, the enthusiastic bench guy waving a towel back in the eighties? His importance was mostly symbolic. Same for Nate's importance this season. For Ainge to send Nate away was symbolically significant, in that it reflected Ainge's heedless decision to blow up team cohesion with The Trade and ancillary moves.
We had an excellent chance at a championship until Ainge did that. He still has not faced the fan anger he deserved. Instead everyone rips Baby and tries to trade Rondo. It's all scapegoating. If you want to blame someone, and you should, then blame the one person who made possibly the most reckless move any team in hot contention has ever made. My thoughts go back to the Adrian Dantley for Mark Aguirre trade of 1988, but even though that worked out badly for Dallas, it looked like two teams exchanging similar players to somehow boost their chemistry, and it didn't happen as late in the season as the Perkins trade. And to try to understand the Dantley for Aguirre trade you didn't have to sell yourself crazy ideas, such as that Shaq would find the Fountain of Youth, that Jeff Green was a superstar just waiting to bust out, and that team cohesion wasn't nearly as important as the almighty OFFENSIVE SPACING.
!!!
Man, do you all remember that? Remember how we convinced ourselves that Krstic and Green would give us that magical spacing that would make us forget all about the importance of folks ACTUALLY KNOWING THE PLAYBOOK!!
Let's get real. The Trade was about Perkins' contract, and it likely blew a championship. And we should be ticked. At Danny. And at the owners. It was bush league, and that's putting it very nicely.