I've seen a lot of Pierce to Golden State ideas, some resurrections of KG to the Clippers, and some trade with ATL for either Josh Smith or Al Horford. I decided to have some fun and try to combine them all as reasonably as possible into one series of absurd (but possible, salary-wise) trades. What do you think:
Three-way trade with Clippers and Warriors (before June 30):
Clippers get:
Kevin Garnett
Warriors get:
Paul Pierce
DeAndre Jordan
Jason Terry
Terrence Williams
Shavlik Randolph
DJ White
Celtics get:
Eric Bledsoe
Harrison Barnes
Festus Ezeli
Andrew Bogut
Richard Jefferson
Andris Biedrins
Why it works*: The Clippers seemed close to doing this trade during the regular season, and with a first-round exit, may be inclined to reconsider. The Warriors add a young center to add to their core, and can move David Lee to the 4. Pierce and Terry supply them with some leadership and bench scoring. They also save $6.5 million in 2013-2014 salaries after they waive the China 3, which is important for them since they'd probably like to bring back Jarrett Jack, and may need to replace Carl Landry if he doesn't pick up his player option, but are likely very near the apron for next year (without this trade they're currently committed to over $75 million next season.) The Celtics get three young pieces to build around, and $34 million in expiring contracts.
Trade #2 - S&T with Atlanta for Josh Smith + Al Horford (July 2013)
Atlanta gets:
Eric Bledsoe
Harrison Barnes
Festus Ezeli
Andrew Bogut
Richard Jefferson
Andris Biedrins
Celtics get:
Josh Smith (for $15.84 million in year 1)
Al Horford
DeShawn Stevenson
Shelvin Mack
Note: This trade is actually carried out in three separate trades: Smith for Jefferson and Biedrins, Horford for Bogut and Barnes, and Stevenson and Mack for Bledsoe and Ezeli. Otherwise the salaries don't work.
Why it works*: After the Hawks miss out on Howard and Paul, which is a near-guarantee, the Hawks get three young players to build a nucleus around, and $34 million in expiring deals to help them meet minimum salary requirements, and not bog them down in the summer of 2014 when they get to play max-salary lotto again. They also stink for a year and move up in the all-important 2014 draft. The Celtics get Josh Smith and Al Horford, while keeping their current young nucleus of Rondo, Green, Bradley, and Sully. They also have the non-guaranteed salaries of Stevenson and Mack to use as filler in any other deal they want to make that off-season, or just release outright. Not including their 2013 draft pick, the Celtics would have about $67.8 million committed to 10 players for 2013-2014, leaving them with room to add someone with the big MLE (and might now be seen as a viable free agent destination for ring-chasers with 4 potential all-stars in Rondo, Smith, Horford, and Green.)
EDIT: I forgot to mention that due to "base-year compensation" rules, if Smith makes more than $15.84 mil in year 1, his salary for this trade is actually treated as $13.2 mil (this year's salary), since he'll have received a raise of over 20% as part of a sign-and-trade. This will mean that we aren't taking back enough in salary for the full salary dump to work. If his salary is less than $15.046 million, we will also not take back enough in salary. So if you choose to discuss this trade, know that as presently constructed, Smith would need to be paid between $15.046 and $15.84 million in year 1. (You could probably pay him less by adding in another non-guaranteed contract from Atlanta (presumably Mike Scott), but you cannot pay him more.)
Have fun with this one, CB-forum users!
*We're using a loose definition of "works" here, in which we only consider the positives for each team, and not the negatives.