Okay, some people in this thread need to calm down and take a step off the ledge. Take a look at this sentence
"I would like a high draft pick, because I think it increases our odds of drafting an impact player or making a meaningful trade for one."
That is a reasonable thing to say. But, that is a very different thing from saying,
"It will be an unmitigated disaster if we don't get a high draft pick, it will ruin this franchise going forward, because the only possible route to salvation is to draft [Jabari/Embiid/insert your favorite college player here]."
If you can't tell the difference between these two statements, you need to go look up the word "hyperbole" in the dictionary. Too many people in this thread are saying the latter, which is patently absurd. There are numerous paths to "salvation" in the NBA, as history has proven time and time again. There is no such thing as a 100% in the lottery; look at every draft in NBA history. At least one player in the top 5 is a bust, guaranteed. In some drafts it is more. But there has never been an NBA draft without a bust in the top 5.
The path to a championship is through overall good management. This INCLUDES the lottery, but is not EXCLUSIVE to the lottery. Good management, as Danny Ainge, Larry Bird, Daryl Morey, and others have proven, is NOT following some pre-determined boilerplate template for success - in fact, that is the route to failure. It is inflexible and idiotic. Good management is the process of reacting to new situations and making the best out of them.
If you honestly think that there is any player in this draft that is a 100% sure thing, you are insane, because those don't exist. For every Lebron there is a Darko. If you honestly think that not getting this supposed sure thing means this championship never wins another title ever, you are also insane, because that assumes you can see the future.
Everyone is entitled to their opinion on what is best for this franchise. But stop acting like you are the only prescient one and that nobody else knows or cares as much about this franchise as you, and spewing wild vitriolic hyperbole is not conducive to having an enjoyable or productive discussion about our team.
Remember, say this:
"I would like a high draft pick, because I think it increases our odds of drafting an impact player or making a meaningful trade for one."
NOT this:
"It will be an unmitigated disaster if we don't get a high draft pick, it will ruin this franchise going forward, because the only possible route to salvation is to draft [Jabari/Embiid/insert your favorite college player here]."
One is the well-thought out opinion of a basketball fan, the other are the ramblings of a lunatic.
TP A+++++
I understand the difference, but have to respectfully disagree a bit. First, the "obliterate" being used in the subject of this thread doesn't denote that the Celtics chances for success are obliterated. It is specific to the lottery, and given how close the bad teams are to each other in record, it is very possible that this 10-game stretch will determine if we draft in the top 5 or 5-12 range.
The reason people have an element of hyperbole here is because there is a historic chasm between drafting in the top 5 and the 5-12 range. For those, like myself, who believe that the draft (and specifically THIS draft) is the best way to draft an impact player or obtain a trade asset, then where we draft is very important.
Of course there are no guarantees, everyone recognizes that. And failure to get a top 5 pick doesn't ensure that we're ruined for 10-years.
However, where the hyperbole is somewhat acceptable IMO is that it is ridiculous to think that a couple of extra wins against horrible teams (when we are already horrible) is better than a much higher value top 5 draft pick when we know that this one of the surest ways to re-build.
But ... we don't know that.
If by "this" you specifically mean "having a top-5 pick" (and I admit I'm making that assumption based on your text that I put in italics up above), then I think you need to review just how 'sure' the correlation has been between "teams making a top 5 pick" and "re-building".
My assumption is that by "re-build" you mean "win a title". If so, then the correlation is simply very, very weak.
If by "re-build" you have more modest goals, say, of simply returning to the playoffs, then the correlation is a little better.
The one "sure thing" about winning a title is that the vast majority of title teams have, indeed, had 'top 5 (drafted)' talent on them.
But another 'sure thing' about those 'top 5(drafted)' players that have won a title, is that the vast majority of them did NOT win a title on the team that draft them.
This is a fact and an important one because it establishes right off the bat that top draft talent moves around and is more likely to end up on a title team through trade / FA than via the draft itself.
There is nothing 'bad' about having a high draft pick, in itself. But it is not at all the most 'sure way' to rebuild. And being bad enough to get that pick may not be a good thing.