I have three problems with the news of the last few hours:
1. Danny Ainge is blowing it up, gathering draft picks like crazy, and wants the fans to trust his ability to judge talent andhe is going to build through the draft. But then he goes out and trades UP in this draft to get the guy with possibly the least upside and biggest bust potential in this draft. That's after picking Melo last year, JuJuan Johnson the year before and JR Giddens another year.
2. His vision is to build through the draft but he has handicapped this team over the next two years with contracts like Wallace's, Bass', and Lee's to add to the contracts of Green and Rondo that come to over $20 million a year. He has no cap flexibility while having a bad team that will have to add a couple a players a year for the next three years.
3. Gambling on winning the lottery has screwed this team twice before. The chances of landing that guy are not good. The chances of replicating what OKC has done, is not good. Talent with experience will beat talent with very little experience, almost all the time in the NBA. Even the elitest of talent takes years to develop enough experience to lead a team to a title and many times, its not with the team that drafted them. So there is the very real chance you could lose then before they get good enough to win you a title.
#1 - I've had my run-ins with a fair share of Celtic fans. 90% chance that by Summer League half this forum will be calling Olynyk the next "Dirk Nowitzki" or "Larry Bird". You know this to be true. And then mid-season at the deadline when rumors start swirling about Kevin Love wanting out of Minny... you'll see plenty of posters saying, 'NO WAY WOULD I GIVE UP OLYNYK FOR A PLAYER LIKE LOVE... IN TWO YEARS OLYNYK WILL BE BETTER THAN LOVE!!". Ainge has a good record with draft picks... gotta give him a pass on this one. Sorry.
#2 - I don't think it's possible to "handicap" a team financially that is clearly planning on tanking next year and probably again the year after that. Plus, we dumped Terry's salary and Humphries is expiring. We are LESS financially "handicapped" than we would have been had we kept these guys since KG and Terry would have still been on our books. Plus, if you have no intention of winning for the next two years, you probably don't want to sign impact players anyways... you want golden top 5 picks. Cap space is nice, but signing like Smith (who will help you win games... but not enough games) is counterproductive to a proper tank job. And then in 3 years when this team is really to pounce again, that Wallace contract will be a very valuable expiring piece that we can package with our expendable young assets and land another impact player. It's a process... a 3-5 year process. Ainge successfully turned us into a contender in 4 years the last time around. One final FYI, Humphries has some value at the deadline since he's a big expiring contract that can be packaged with any number of assets... maybe we can take on another terrible 3 year deal for Humphries (that will line up with Wallace) and pick up ANOTHER draft pick out of it. Flexibility isn't lacking here.
#3 - Gambling on the lotto in 1997 "screwed" this team... i guess... I mean, Ainge wasn't in charge back then. And what was our alternative in 1997?... Trade for Shaq? Sign Michael Jordan? Also, the 1997 draft was pretty top-heavy. Keith Van Horn went #2. Know who we took #3?... Chauncey Billups... dude was eventually Finals MVP for the Pistons. Not like we completely struck out there. Billups ended up being a 5 time all-star. Important to note that 2014 draft is supposedly loaded with several superstar or star level players. "Gambling" on the lotto in 2007 netted us a #5 pick that was key to bringing in Ray Allen... which was key to bringing in Kevin Garnett (Theo Ratliff's expiring contract was a huge part of that deal, btw... that's what Wallace could be for us in 3 years). It's not possible to say that "tanking" failed for Ainge when literally the only time we "tanked" we won a championship the very next year. There is no possible better outcome than that. That's a 1 billion % success rate.
All about perspective. Your concerns aren't valid. Ainge is a brilliant GM and this was absolutely the smart move. It's a long-term vision move. I've been whining and complaining and wanting this team to tank since we stopped being contenders in 2011. I had to suffer through two dreadful seasons of also-ran basketball where we had no realistic chance of winning a title... and listen to all these overly optimistic fans tell me about how a 41 win team built around near-retiring former stars could miraculously win a title in a Superstar's league. It doesn't happen. Not in the real world, at least. Thrilled we are finally tanking... thrilled it is happening before the 2014 draft. If you're going to do it, you might as well do it before the draft that is considered the best in over a decade. This is definitely the best play.