2. I highly doubt there is a better player to fill out the last spot than Shavlik for the vet min.
It's not necessarily about who is more useful for this season. Sometimes, that spot is better off going to whoever is more likely to be useful in, say, 2015-2016.
Shavlik Randolph will be 32 in 2015-16. My guess is he will still be an extremely productive vet. and a sought after trade chip by contenders.
On the small chance that there is a young player with that kind of potential available he would be invited to our summer league and training camp.
Which one of our summer league guys would you rather have than Randolph? Tony Mitchell, Courtney Fells, Nolan Smith, Tim Abromatis or Odom-Johnson?
The Celtics currently have 16 players under contract, so it is a question of waiving Randolph vs getting rid of another player with a guaranteed contract.
I think that if it was a question of waiving Shavlik Randolph's contract or cutting Fab Melo and swallowing his guaranteed contract, keeping Melo is a no-brainer. The same with Phil Pressey. I'd be happy to waive Jordan Crawford if there weren't luxury tax implications. Would you be willing to send out a second-round pick with Crawford so that you can keep Shav?
Shavlik Randolph is a Dukie with a high bbiq (I think he's been described that way) who might be a good fit if Brad Stevens requires intelligence to function in his offensive and defense systems. He's a nice player and I like him, but players like Shavlik Randolph are the sort of players who get over-valued and eventually handed long-term contracts by teams on the so-called treadmill of mediocrity.
Unless you can imagine him having the upside of possibly becoming the kind of player who the Celtics should lock up with something like a two-year, $7 to 10 million contract after next season, then he's not some who you are desperate to save from being a salary cap casualty.
I like him, but a good GM won't be sentimental about players like Shavlik Randolph.