Green, Sully, 16, and a future 1st is not about the same as Martin, Lamb, Lotto Pick from another team, 1st, 2nd
Martin is better than Green and expiring. Lamb was drafted higher than Sully in the same draft and is not currently injured. A lotto pick from Toronto is far better than 16. The 1st and future 1st are about a wash, plus there is a 2nd.
That and I think we are using a little hindsight in regards to James Harden. Yes, there were plenty of people who pointed out that Harden was statistically one of the best SG's in the league despite sharing the spotlight with Wesbrook and Durant (averaging 15, 4 and 4 off the bench)... I was one of those people who believed Harden was a stud... but it was far from unanimous that this guy was a "superstar". The two camps were either
#1 - He's totally capable of 20 points per game, but his efficiency will take a bit of a hit as the top dog
or
#2 - He's not worth the max money. He's a good player, but he's best in that 6th man role and will struggle as a top dog.
Very few figured he'd be the 4rd most statistically productive player in the league behind Bron, Durant and Kobe...
In fact, if you check the "trade reaction thread", you'll find that this forum was somewhat divided. A lot of folks felt that OKC "won that trade by a landside". Even some reporters were questioning MOrey on why he didn't save his assets for a "real superstar". We all pretty much agreed Harden would be a starter... but that was about it. If the consensus that Harden was a "max guy/superstar", OKC would have just paid him... and he wouldn't have been coming off the bench.
One CB'er compared Harden to Joe Johnson... someone who would get overpaid and would put up improved stats on a bad team... but defintely not a superstar.
Check the thread yourself:
http://forums.celticsblog.com/index.php?topic=60367.0 My point: Houston gave up more better assets than Boston currently has for someone who POTENTIALLY was a superstar, but few believed they were actually getting a "superstar".
I'd just like to point out that James Harden was 44th in the league in statistical productivity last season... this year he was 4th.
So in a way it would be like trading JEff Green + Sully + the #16 pick + another 1st rounder + another 2nd rounder... for Larry Sanders. And then projecting that Larry Sanders was a future superstar.