So, how is this Ray for LRidnour and WJohnson and upgrade for now or the future?
It's neither, and Ridnour has two additional years on his contract, so it eats into our cap space, too. And we're supposed to be giving up a draft pick, as well?
Obviously, it's just a made up sports talk radio rumor. However, I'm surprised that some Celtics fans seem to be in favor of it. It's really a pretty bad deal for us.
I really don't see it as a BAD deal for us. Trades like this may be our only shot at a bright future. Yeah we take back extra years on Ridnour, but how would you use that money in FA. It's not looking like K. Love or D. Howard are coming to town and after them this FA pool is pretty shaky. So instead of letting Ray walk or bringing him back for the short term, we take a chance on a Wesley Johnson. Sure he hasn't shown too much yet, but he's been on a pretty bad team with bad PG play(until this season). Rondo and Doc will give Johnson every chance to succeed.
i think Gerald Green showed more in his first 2 years than Johnson, and Green was doing it at 18-19 whereas Johnson is stinking up the joint a 23-24. And this year, with a good PG (Rubio/Ridnour platton) he's at a 6.69 PER, a -12.9 in terms of his PER vs. the PER of who he is guarding, and an astounding -13.0 in terms of +/-. That is terrible, in no other words. If we are taking a "risk" for the future, i'd rather risk that Derron Williams and Dwight would want to play with each other enough that we could convince them to sign in Boston and trade Pierce/Rondo for complementary picks and pieces (NJ's complementary pieces look pretty bad, and their picks were dealt to get Derron...Play your cards right and you could have Derron and Dwight deciding between NJ with Morrow, Petro, and maybe Humphries but he might be too expensive or Boston with Doc, 2-4 first round picks, and someone like kevin martin, wes matthews, or milsap) than take on money for Ridnour when we have Rondo, Dooling, Bradley, Moore, with the money significantly limiting our ability to pounce on free agents, for the maybe 1% chance that Johnson suddenly, at 24-25, becomes a completely utterly different player.