Still a lot of misconceptions about how good Green is.
He was played out of position most of the time in OKC. He would have been a starter on 50% of teams in the NBA, but had a future Hall of Famer in Durant ahead of him at the 3.
If Paul Pierce was played mostly at the PF position for the first 5 years of his career, we probably would have thought he stunk too.
Green came to Boston last year in the worst of circumstances: right before a play-off run, with teammates who were reminded of their Perk-traumatic-stress-disorder every time they looked at him. Hard to get comfortable in that environment.
Now he knows everybody, and has a much greater comfort level with the team and his role on it.
Locking this guy up at $40 mil/4 years isn't a big stretch, and it pretty much assures the Celtics of a smooth transition during Pierce's decline and beyond.
Nothing but sunshine for the foreseeable future in Celticland.
This deal will not happen.
Even proven starting SF that are not stars have trouble getting close to 10 million a season.
Green is the furthest thing from a proven staring SF for everything you listed.
And what team pays 10 million a year to back up Pierce?
If you are a starter making 10+ per year, you have to have a couple of elite skills on your resume. Green doesn't do anything at an elite level. He does everything at an OK level. That to me means he's a bench player and should be paid as such.
Guys that are paid that kind of money and are just below all star level:
Josh Smith - elite athleticism, rebounding, defense.
Lamar Odom (pre-Dallas) - elite rebounding, and then elite handle and passing for a 6-10 player
Al Jefferson - elite rebounding and low post scoring
Paul Milsap - elite rebounding and scoring, lesser Al Jefferson
Deandre Jordan - elite althleticsm, rebounds, blocks, dunks
Stephen Jackson - elite scorer and defender
...and so on.