Well soldier, you're terrible at sensing sarcasm, but that burden might be on me for not making it more clear.
You were clear enough, and my sarcasm detector in in perfect working order. I just wanted to point out your hyperbole for what it was.
I'm confused..you were trying to point out my hyperbole? I'm saying those alleged connections haven't amounted to much beyond lip-service. The Celtics offered Green a low-risk, possible high-reward qualifying offer that really didn't take a whole lot of faith or belief in Green on their part, and Green so far hasn't offered anything more substantial to Boston beyond lip service.
And I know, its easy to get riled up about this stuff and not for a second acknowledge how critical discovering his heart condition might have been to not only his career, but to his very life, I'm not diminishing that it happened. I just don't think it will manifest later into some kind of contract good-will.
Whoa, whoa now...Comparing Paul Pierce (made lots of money spent entire career here, has a defined role and is *ahem* the captain of the team) to Jeff Green is a completely false comparison.
Negative. It is precisely the same thing, just a (huge) difference in magnitude. Like the old joke goes, the baseline is established, and it's just haggling over the price at this point.
Its not 'precisely the same thing' at any magnitude. What evidence, if any, do you have that Jeff Green will sign with Boston for less money?
You've got 3 months of up and down play, a lockout of zero contact, a heart condition and a voided one year qualifying offer contract.
Comparing Jeff Green's situation to Paul Pierce's is also off because of what Pierce was sacrificing and what Green is hypothetically sacrificing. Green accepted the 1 yr qualifying offer because at 8 million dollars it was likely more than any longer term contract he could sign based on his performance, especially after his ~30ish games in Boston. On top of that, he would've been a restricted FA which would have dissuaded offers from other teams based on Boston's ability to match.
He hasn't actually given up anything yet. How is it 'precisely the same thing' as the situation with Pierce? Its not even remotely the same thing yet. It might end up being similar, but you've first got to have Green sign on the dotted line for less money than he could make elsewhere.
I just don't think that's such a big deal, or that it should be taken as a harbinger of good things to come.
But it does exist as a result of the trade, and that's why it's unfair to imply that Jeff Green is just a free agent like any other (see what I did there?). If he signs with us and turns out to be something good, you'll have the trade to thank for the opportunity.
Sure, maybe he walks, or maybe he comes back and is a bust, or maybe World War 3 breaks out and nuclear winter cancels the 2012-13 season. We'll talk about the nutritional value of five-legged muta-bears in the post-apocalyptic wasteland when they get here.
Well, I do appreciate a good apocalypse joke, but its a lot more probable that he comes back and is just Jeff Green, who has historically been an up-and-down player with a good amount of pure talent that was too small to play the 4 and too streaky from outside to be an exceptional 3.