These "tanking" rotation differences some of you are advocating would make little difference (our team is just not good enough even with optimal rotations) and possibly hurt the development of our young players with promise.
The way people talk about this draft class, if it really is that awesome at the top, I'd expect some people to think that the difference between the 9th-worst and 3rd-worst records is worth pushing back the development of players such as Olynyk back a year.
And yet we know Olynyk is on our team. We could have the worst record and not get the top picks (or further down). "A Bird in the hand" as they say.
There are about 5 very promising players at the moment in this draft (and maybe more... or hell less, we will have to see this college season).
And again, as I say, I don't think it matters to our record anyways. When it comes to Sully in particular, keep the man at PF as much as you possibly can. And Avery at SG on offense too (he just isn't a point).
I'd agree with that, and also with the idea that even with our ideal rotations in place, we're not winning many basketball games until Rondo returns... and probably not many after that, either.
This team, as it stands, has about 7 quality bench players and a pair of NBA starter. One of whom is out for (probably) another month at the earliest.
Yeah I agree.
I also have to say, developing our young talent and showcasing our young talent as best we can and at the best position only improves trade value, a big part of building all these assets.
Everyone should keep in mind this is not just about the picks. First, Ainge has said he doesn't think this draft is all its cracked up to be (maybe posturing) and second, as with last time we were rebuilding, when we saw Ainge flip picks and young talent for players, the picks aren't necessarily the endgame.
We could be trading away our firsts and pulling a Kevin Love trade off midseason and I won't be surprised (I hope that's what happens personally).