Ainge is doing what Cherington did for the Red Sox.
"Trading" Doc, KG, Pierce and Terry was like getting rid of Gonzalez, Crawford, Beckett and Punto.
Cherington used it to reload with solid players and brought in a new manager - Farrell.
Everyone said it was a rebuilding year or a bridge year. And everyone was wrong.
The Sox didn't tank. They were trying to improve immediately and in the future. Those aren't contradictory ideas. It's a false choice to be bad now to get better later.
I don't think the Celtics will come close to a Championship this year. The Sox had a core of Ortiz, Pedroiz, Lester and Ellsbury who were already Champions.
But this team now looks like an eight seed on its way to a five or six seed if Rondo comes back and if Sullinger, Olynyk, Bradley and Crawford keep developing.
With Crawford/Pressey the TO's are cut in half. That right there changes the team.
Bradley has been solid the last two games. He's essentially starting his second full year and first pre-season. (He lost 3 pre-seasons and 2 of 3 years to injuries and strike.) By the end of this year, his offense will be 85% of his defense. He will be a borderline all-star. I wouldn't trade him straight up right now for Dwayne Wade (who is on a fairly steep decline). We'll know what Bradley is by the end of this (his second) full season playing. IMO no way Ainge trades him. His terrible play during the losses was all caused by playing the point. Off the point, he's been great and has a lot of upside.
What will Ainge do? The same as he's always done. Improve the team now, improve the team in the future. There's no conflict. Tanking for high picks and hoping for a Championship is a mirage. And it would completely destroy the development of Sullinger, Olynyk, Bradley and Crawford.
I see a lot of parallels between what Cherington did and what Ainge did.
I think the Celtics will be an enjoyable team to watch this year. Let's see how far they get and then decide late in the year which positions need an upgrade. We might be one or two pieces away from a contending team. Impossible to say now. Better to make a decision with much more information later.