Personally I think if Paul Pierce truly values his legacy as a Boston Celtic he will eventually appreciate the value of being the next great player to fill the role of 6th man on the Boston Celtics after the likes of John Havlicek, Kevin McHale and Bill Walton among others.
I'm not saying it is something he should bee considering at this point but if he really wants to end his career in Boston and does appreciate his own legacy then it is something he should strongly consider down the line.
He is not bigger then the Boston Celtics.
You're right. And as soon as the Celtics find that next great player so that Pierce can step aside, I am sure he will.
That next great player is not Jeff Green.
It doesn't necessarily need to be the next great player to make the team as a whole more effective. Was Cedric Maxwell a great player when he was playing ahead of Kevin McHale? Was Hondo still not one of the five best players on the Celtics when he was a great 6th man? The Boston Celtics more so then any other team have proven you can win while not starting your best five players.
Maxwell who was the Finals MVP is a bit different then Jeff Green.
That's true. Still Maxwell was riding on the coat tails of Bird, Parish and Archibald. He was far from a "future star" while it was quite evident even at that point that McHale, the 6th man was a better player then Maxwell.
Max won the Finals MVP when McHale was a rookie. Then McHale still came off the bench and won 2 consecutive 6th man awards. Then Max got traded so McHale could start. That's what actually happened.
So to say the better McHale came off the bench while Max started isn't really true for the first 3 seasons. In 84, the team dominated to a 62-20 record and it had become Bird's team. In 81, it was Max's team. A case can be made that in 84, McHale was better, but at that point the team was rolling and Mchale was getting plenty of minutes anyway, so what did it matter? In any case, Maxwell/McHale is in no way similar to question of Pierce being 6th man unless trading Paul to make room for Green was to happen, which is just silly.
Hondo played the 6th man role as well, but started and dominated quite a few seasons first. He didn't make way for a better player necessarily, but rather age and a declining game was it. That may be more the deal with Pierce, and I hope he can cope with it when it comes around. It will. And the player who starts might not be as good as him.
Regarding JGreen, I really like his game and ability. I'd like to see him develop on defense, and practice with the system will help. I project him as a solid 3rd option on most teams of playoff calibre, but with Rondo setting things up (and being perhaps a 3rd option himself), I could see Green being a #2 option. He has spot-up 3 ability and a great post game; imagine a freakishly athletic Eric Williams.
If he can become a great team defender, I'll take that as my #2-3 option. Green is a keeper.