Let me rephrase.
After the Perk trade, the Celts were left with no legit center. Shaq was injured, Jermaine O'Neal did return afterwards but does not have Perk's toughness and Krstic never really seem to find his niche on the team.
Maybe on paper, the deal made sense (maybe.)
But leading into the February 2011 deadline, that team should not have been altered and should've been left the way it was.
Sometimes it still pains me to think what could've been had that 2010-11 team been left alone. Remember, the Celts were 3-0 vs Miami in that season series before the Perk deal and got off to a 38-10 start.
Yes I know Perk was out for most of that season and Shaq was our guy in the beginning of the year.
But, by the time the Celts played Miami in the playoffs that year, you could tell something wasn't right.
Miami was good, but there is no way they should've beaten the Celts in 5 games in that series.(though I am sure everyone will point to the Rondo and Shaq injuries.)
And furthermore, I definitely agree with Doc that dealing Perk put a much greater strain on KG because he had no other back-up in the paint.
Remember Pierce's quote the day of the Perk deal, "man I hope Danny and Doc know what they are doing."
Well, I don't think Danny does.
AND, 2 1/2 years later, I still fail to see what the big benefit was in getting Jeff Green. No doubt he's a good player. But was it worth jeopardizing the Celts chances of a title in 2011? No.
Your recollection doesn't really gel with what actually happened, though.
Shaq was out, as stated, but when he was healthy we were absolutely murdering people. JO broke his wrist in the first round of the playoffs against the Knicks. Krstic picked up bone bruises in both knees within the last couple games of the regular season. Rondo had his elbow broken by Wade. For Christmas's sake, Perkins got injured AGAIN (MCL sprain) almost immediately after he came back.
Perkins on OKC the rest of that season was a shell of his former self, and let's be frank here, his former self wasn't even that great to begin with. We play 4 on 5 offensively with him on the floor, he can't hit free throws, and Miami's small ball line-up doesn't even make him an asset defensively.
And you can't ignore that Rondo injury. Don't forget that the year following, after having lost everyone and their brother to injury, with PP/Judas playing hurt and KG out of gas, we still came within a nosehair of knocking Miami out in the ECF. Why? Because Rondo was lighting them up and having the series of his career, that's why.
Everyone loves Perk, I get it. I love the guy too. But not as a basketball player.
I think in a way we are both saying the same thing but differ on how the Perk deal negatively affected the Celts playoff run in 2011.
Yes, I do realize in the first half of the season, we were rolling with Shaq as our center and Perk still injured.
And yes, I do realize that Rondo's injury dented our chances even more.
HOWEVER, as you said yourself, by the time the Miami series came around that year, JO's wrist was hurt and Krstic had knee bruises.
Don't you think as a result, we could've used Perk in that Miami series?
Also, though it's not guaranteed we beat Miami with Perk, can you imagine how sweet it would've been to see Perk avenge Rondo's injury and hunt down that punk Wade?
If Perk was still on the team, I am not so sure Wade has the balls to break Rondo's arm.
Hence if Rondo doesn't get injured and we still have Perk manning the center spot, I say there's a good chance we would've been too much for Miami.
As for Perk being a shell of himself in OKC that year, who's to say that trade didn't affect him the same way it affected the Celtics chemistry?
Also, for all the talk of how badly we needed a backup SF that season, Jeff Green didn't really contribute much in the playoffs, so what was the point?