So here's an interesting question I've been wondering about while this whole pro-tanking/anti-tanking debate has been going on. I want to ask this sincerely, because I'm open to hearing other viewpoints on this:
Is there something wrong with playing young players at the expense of wins?
I mean, this doesn't just apply to the Celtics for this coming season; I've always wondered this every year when teams become mathematically eliminated from playoff contention. In baseball, when teams are eliminated from playoff contention -- and even when it looks unlikely that they'll make the playoffs -- you see older players traded to teams who need a short-term boost and positions handed to young players to see whether they can contribute to the team or not. It's low pressure enough, and you're not going to win, so you see what your assets are. Either you win with them (in which case they're either building blocks for the future or valuable trade assets) or they fail (in which case you know their limitations moving forward). I guess I'm just not sure why that mindset is such a terrible idea in basketball. Is it because there's fewer games? Fewer roster spots? Because I'd think that would only make one's incentive greater.
Forget for a moment the pros and cons of deliberately trying to get a high draft pick. Right now, we have players on our roster like Bass and Humphries who, pragmatically speaking, are known quantities. They've been in the NBA a while, and we're probably about 95% sure as to what they can and can't do. Players like Sullinger, Olynyk, Brooks, Melo -- and to a certain degree Bradley and Green -- are still unknown quantities. Can they be superstars? Solid pros? Decent rotation players? Utter busts? We don't really know yet, not like we do about the Basses and Humphries. So why not see what they can do while tempering expectations? If they're great and carry us, that's awesome. If they don't, we know not to keep them or play them big minutes. We always have Bass and Humphries and the other vets to fall back on, but what's wrong with making the focus on playing the young unproven guys?
And, while I'm not suggesting we shouldn't play hard, why is player development somehow less important than wins? Candidly, we're not going to win the NBA title next year, not with the roster we've constructed. I like our players, but it's just not going to be our year. And that's OK; you can say that about a lot of talented teams every year. Is there some moral victory to losing 95-90 instead of 95-75, assuming everyone's playing hard while they're on the court? Why is it suggesting that we play all our young players is somehow tantamount to trying to get a Wiggins, Randle, or Parker? If we do, sure, that's awesome, but why can't it just be about seeing what we've got now and what we still need to get?
Maybe I'm full of crap. I don't know. I just wonder if there isn't merit to worrying more about what these guys can do rather than the final record