Regardless of how long Bradley will be out, doesn't it make sense to start Pierce at SG and Jeff Green at SF? Especially considering we are paying Jeff Green close to 10 mil per year. That's not backup money... that's starter money.
I have to admit that my confidence in Jeff Green definitely wavered a bit during the 26 games he played for us. I guess I expected slightly more out of him, but as a mid-season acquisition I think he was probably having trouble finding his role, picking up the system, etc. All things considered, he averaged 10 points, 3.3 rebounds and 48% shooting in 23.5 minutes while playing for us during those 26 games. I think partially my disappointment was that Jeff seemed made to run the break... and he clearly was getting out ahead of the break many times, but he and Rondo just never developed chemistry during that stretch. You can partially blame the fact that Rondo was mildly catatonic post-Perk trade. He was mentally checked out for much of it.
So I'm just going to pretend that stretch never happened and reiterate my original thoughts on Jeff Green. I live in Seattle and have been keeping an eye on Jeff since his rookie season. I've always been really impressed with his game. I think he's got the potential to be a fringe all-star in this league. He is a small forward. He has always been a small forward. In fact, he's the kind of small forward that Ainge has desperately wanted for years ... lengthy and athletic. Jeff is 6'9 and 235 which is great size for the position. Unfortunately for him, he happened to get drafted by a team that also took Kevin Durant... one of the transcendent players of our generation... and also a small forward. Early on, the Sonics actually tried playing Durant at shooting guard to solve this problem. That never made sense to me. Then they moved Jeff Green to power forward... that never made sense either. In fact, that Sonics/Thunder roster at no point made sense to me. I remember reading an interview with Sam Presti at the time and he basically talked about how he wanted to rethink a lineup... and how he thought it would work if they just had lots of tall forwards playing together instead of a traditional roster. It was dumb then and it's dumb now. There was no way they were ever going to trade Durant... trading Jeff Green was inevitable. It absolutely had to happen at some point. He was too talented to come off the bench... and playing him out of position was a bad idea. I had been waiting for them to trade Jeff Green for a legitimate big man since the first month of his rookie season... I hadn't anticipated it would be for Perk, though.
So Green spent his majority of his tenure in Seattle/OKC playing out of position... and as the third option between Westbrook (undeniably a chucker, but he's improved) and Durant. He still managed to average 15-16 points with solid shooting percentages 45%/34%/78%.
What was also interesting to me was how Jeff Green played in the few games that Durant missed with injury. In 2008-09, there were 5 games we got to see Jeff without Durant. Here's Jeff's stats during games:
12/31 - 26 points, 8 rebounds, 2 steals, 1 block, 52% shooting
2/27 - 28 points, 12 rebounds, 1 steal 45% shooting
2/28 - 27 points, 10 rebounds, 1 steal 40% shooting
3/10 - 22 points, 6 rebounds, 1 steal 46% shooting
3/11 - 19 points, 7 rebounds, 1 steal 41% shooting
It's a small sample size for sure... but it was interesting.
I joked that when we first traded for Jeff Green that I could totally see him be a 20 point scorer on the post-big 3 lotto Celtics. I can still see it. At this point, I think it definitely makes the most sense to start Paul Pierce at SG and Green at his natural SF... you can bring Terry (and eventually Bradley) off the bench since they are undersized guards best suited for bench roles. Allow Jeff the ability to play his natural position and run with Rondo. Let's see if they get some chemistry. 4 years 36 million is a serious commitment by the Celtics. That's starter money.