I understand that at the time the Celtics got pretty good "value" if you consider losing two iconic players who were the heart and soul of the Celtics to be inanimate objects.
My contention is that in order to reach the state where Pierce and Garnett had to be traded, Ainge went through years of massive fail at his job to add viable players to carry the team through to the next Celtics era. People say "You don't understand how hard it is to stay relevant." I think it is Ainge's job to overcome the obstacles and stay relevant....or....he is not as good as people seem to think.
c's have been way over the cap for many years now. they've also been picking late in the draft for many years. who was ainge supposed to get?
if anything, he's done a good job landing rondo, sully, bradley, and olynyk. all those guys were mid-to-late 1st round picks. the only other way to land talent is through the mid-level exception, minimum contracts, and trades.
and he did turn perkins (currently considered one of the very worst contracts in the NBA) into green and 2 draft picks.
i would admit that ainge's mid-level exception deals have been poor. but if you look around the league, that's really par for the course, MLE really just buys overpriced roleplayers.
to be fair you could have put together a pretty solid team with late first rounders and second rounders. I mean 4 of the first 6 picks of the 2008 2nd round were Nikola Pekovic, Mario Chalmers, Deandre Jordan, and Omer Asik (Boston took JR Giddens with the last pick of the 1st round). Luc Mbah a Moute was the 7th pick of the 2nd round and Goran Dragic went in the middle of it. Any one of those 6 players would have been a pretty nice addition to the Celtics title hopes, and it isn't all hindsight. A large percentage of this board wanted Deandre Jordan, who while raw looked like he could be a great defensive big off the bench and who would have really supplemented the interior.
Boston didn't have a 1st rounder in 2009, but Jodie Meeks, Patrick Beverly, Marcus Thornton, and Chase Budinger went in consecutive picks in the 40's.
Avery Bradley was a very strong pick in 2010, but it would have been nice to swing a way to get Landry Fields or Lance Stephenson who went 39 and 40 that year (Greivis Vasquez at 28 would have also been nice).
JaJuan Johnson in 2011 was a terrible pick especially with Jimmy Butler and Chandler Parsons on the board. Parsons especially thought he was coming to Boston. Isaiah Thomas was the last pick in the draft that year. Lavoy Allen was also a late second rounder.
2012, Sullinger was great but Fab Melo was an unmitigated disaster.
You can't do hindsight obviously, but there were plenty of moves out there, some of them seemed like no brainers, Jordan and Parsons are especially painful since a lot of fans and analysts thought Boston would take them. Either one, or both, might have yielded a second title.