I've been looking at the mock drafts for a couple or weeks now and I think I have a good idea of what players are needed on which teams. Right now our picks look to be 22/23. With those picks we aren't going to get premium talent. The options are:
Trade up
Trade down/out
Chance late 1st-rounders
My feeling is that if we can't trade up we should trade down. The only player worth their salt that might be available at those picks is Arnett Moultrie and it would really depend on what we could get for our picks if Moultrie is the prize of our draft.
So here is my armchair GM-ing.
Plan A: Trade up
Next years draft looks like $hit. Let's throw our 1st next year along with our 1sts this year at the Hornets or the Blazers for their picks this year. If they want assets we can work a sign and trade or Bass or Ray, maybe throw in Johnson as a cheap prospect for the coming years. I'd like to keep Bradley but if it's Bradley + this years picks for both of their 1sts I'm probably going to do that.
Plan B: Trade down/out
At 22/23 the best we can hope for is Moultrie and a cheap backup PG like Marquis Teague or Tyshaun Taylor. I'm willing to trade our picks for a player who is established if we cannot manage Plan A. Some players that might be worth 2 late 1st rounders are:
Josh Smith (wants out, probably won't resign in 2013)
Javale McGee (immature, dumb)
Greg Monroe (maybe not worth it?)
Martin and/or Scola combo (Houston looking to get taller and younger)
Monta Ellis (wishful thinking)
DeMarcus Cousins (I dread this but he's going to be a great center when he stops being a moron)
DeMar DeRozan (wildcard, might only need 1st + 2nd to get him)
Jefferson or Millsap (Utah is stacked at PF)
With that list of proven players I think trading out of this years lauded draft class isn't the worst idea. I'm not looking forward to drafting Fab Melo and Royce White when we inevitably make it to the 2nd round of the playoffs as the 4th seed in the east. With the exception of Josh Smith in Atlanta all of those players are on rebuilding teams. Teams in rebuilds need picks. Seems like a good position for Danny could swing something.
Plan C: Chance picking late (twice)
I have to turn to history here and warn against this. In the last 8 years here are the guys picked 20th or later that have had become stars. My apologies for the subjectivity but I'm talking guys who are considered to be the 1st or 2nd scoring options (allstars) or have outstanding defensive statistics.
2004:
Jameer Nelson
Kevin Martin
2005:
Monta Ellis
David Lee
2006:
RAJON RONDO
2007:
Marc Gasol
2008:
DeAndre Jordan
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And I stretched calling Kevin Martin and DeAndre Jordan stars maybe. Yeah yeah I know Avery Bradley was #19 and Perkins was #27. I know that Jeremy Lin went undrafted. While occassionally late 1st round picks work out the overwhelming majority of the time they don't. History doesn't look favorably on post 20 picks in the last decade, at least not for star players. If we can pull a known quantity from another team for a our picks or even 2 proven glue guys it would be a safer bet. That is why Plan C is the worst. It's the most risky and the least likely to keep us from full rebuild once our veterans retire.
If Danny had a history of drafting well I'd be much more confident in Plan C. Danny is WAY better at trading for players than drafting them. With the exception of 2004 we have pretty much struck out with drafting, including trading Brooks this last year. In 2004 we had 3 first rounders that dramatically increased the odds of us getting something right. I'll credit Danny with Jeff Green, but the genius in that was trading him for Ray. Avery Bradley was a nice grab as well but I'm sure the genius in Bradley will be a trade too. In 9 years as GM Danny has made 2 great picks. Jefferson (traded for KG) and Green (traded for Ray). Now that isn't nothing but it's also 2 for 20...3/19 if you count Bradley as a success at this point. My point is that I'm way more comfortable with Danny making deals than making drafts.
Danny's picks:
2004: Jefferson (15), West (24), Allen (25) - no busts, but regular starters/key bench players. Justin Reed (40) at least got a couple of seasons in the NBA.
2005: G. Green (18) - seems to be maturing, but could be considered a bust. Still he is a legit NBA player now. Ryan Gomes (50). An NBA starter until this season. Good find.
2006: Traded the 7th pick for Telfair (no draft bust, but a bad deal). Rajon Rondo (21) steal of the draft (along with Millsap). Leon Powe (49) again a good find. No later picks from that year have had any impact.
2007: Jeff Green (5) traded for Ray Allen (huge deal - instrumental in bringing the Big 3 together). Gabe Pruitt (32) and Glen Davis (35). Big Baby was a 6th Man of the Year candidate last season (until his horrible shooting slump). Good find.
2008: J.R. Giddens (30). A bust, but not much talent when you draft this late (although Dragic, Pekovic and Jordan stand out). Bill Walker (47) and Semih Erden (60) - two legit NBA players.
2009: No first round pick (in the KG trade). Lester Hudson (58), still in the NBA.
2010: Avery Bradley (19), appears to be a possible starting sg or at least a fine rotational player. Luke Harangody (52), still in the league.
2011: JaJuan Johnson (27), E'Twaun Moore (55). The jury is still out...
I think Ainge does a pretty good job, when he estimates talent in the draft.