[quote author=RyNye link=topic=66099.msg1505812#msg1505812
What is with people on these forums being so excited about this trade? I can understand if you think the trade is a good long-term move, and you can certainly make this argument, but I don't understand the people who are coming out and claiming this is some brilliant heist by Danny. It isn't. There is a possibility that this trade, when combined with future moves, will help our rebuild, but there is an equally strong possibility that it does NOTHING to help us.
Let me help you with this.
1) Paul Pierce shot 43% from the field last season and was a turnover machine. He's not the player he once was, and he no longer has the ability to carry a team. Picking up his option would have forced us to pay him over $10M
2) KG even last year was showing his age. He put up good games still, but they were less frequent and the poor games happened more often. This year he is looking practiclly non-existent offensively. He was due $12M this season.
3) Terry would ave had his uses (as a PG in Rondo's absense) but he is no the player he used to be, and he was due $5M a year over the next few years.
4) We had zero cap space to sign new players - if we kept those guys, we would have been (at best) an 8th seed in the East for one more year
5) KG probably would have retired after this season, Pierce maybe with him. Maybe Terry too. Once that happened we would have some decent cap space, but very few picks to draft talent
6) Rookie contacts are amazing value for money. Doc currently has valuable trade assets in Bradley, Sullinger and Olynyk on this roster and none of them are due more than about $2.5M a year for the remainder of their contracts
7) With mid-to-high first round picks in the past two seasons Doc was able to draft Sully and Olynyk. Both are talented players with high IQ, who look like they will be productive players in the league for years to come
Now, Danny has actually had pretty good success in drafts lately. Rondo, Bradley, Sully, Olynyk and Pressey are all examples of cases where DA has overachieved in the draft. He's very good at picking talent late in drafts...imagine how good he could potentially draft if he gets multiple lottery picks over a few consecutive seasons?
Assuming Danny finds a way to make the Wallace/Hump for Amare deal work, that will give us a $22M expiring contract a year from now. Combine that with what looks like will be multiple lottery picks over the next few years, then combine that with the young talent we already have. Imagine if Bradley, Sully and Olynyk develop into above average starters, AND we get a couple of quality lottery picks, AND we get $20M in cap space to sign a max salary free agent two seasons from now. Then combined that with arguably the best pass-first PG in the league.
That's a hell of a lot of resources that are accrued here, and much of that is only possible because of the Brooklyn trade.
Of course nothing is guaranteed...DA could draft poorly in every draft and we could end up with garbage players...but if we do end up with multiple lottery picks, the chance of us getting a sub-par player in every single one of those draftsis pretty rare. Chances are at least 1 or 2 of those players will be quallity starters.
The trade is considered amazing because draft picks are considered incredibly valuable in today's NBA. Teams will rarely give them up without getting incredible value in return. Boston picked up what...four first round draft picks AND $17M in expiring contracts (Bogans, Humphries) in return for a coach and two guys who's average age is about 37 and who probably only have a year each left in them.
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The thing we all need to keep in mind is that the value of the NJ trade is only based on the quality of their picks and/or the potential pick we get for tanking. Nothing else they sent us means anything.
Wallace is a burdensome contract who financially straps us more than hanging onto KG would have.
Humphries does represent a large expiring contract, but so would have Pierce had we picked up his option.
Marshon Brooks and Keith Bogan are worthless.
And if salary relief was really the main goal, we should have just not picked up Pierce's options and rode KG out for 2 years (or let him retire).
So again, this trade could pan out. But it's really only a good trade if the Brooklyn picks pan out (and remember, if they tank this year, Atlanta is just going to swap picks with them) or we tank so badly we get Wiggins or Parker.
But all of that is contingent on things playing out a certain way in the future. By no means should any of us be declaring this deal good or bad at this point.