Not sure. It can be an endless guessing game from now till end of Bogans' contact.
Edit: Also I never said it had to be for one guy either. Can be a combination of things. Maybe a partial salary dump ect that scores a lower lottery pick.
It's always fun to play the game of what we "could/should" have done, especially when we have NO inside information on what can actually be done.
But this is twice in a row a seemingly good chip/asset gets little in return. The Pierce TPE and now Bogans non-guarantee. Ironically both go while in Cav dealings.
What did you think we were going to get? Seriously? Given that Kevin Love went for the past 2 numbers 1 overall and an extra 1st round pick to boot, what trade that has happened this summer do you think the Celtics should have made with either of these two assets? Were you willing to give up a first round pick to get Asik? Certainly they could have gotten a 1st rounder for Lin, but that's what they got for Cleveland, plus Tyler Zeller. Probably the C's could have traded Bogans, CJ, and Babb and used the trade exception to acquire Lin and Asik straight up. It's up to you as to whether you'd have one year of those two players or a future first, two future seconds, a young cost-controlled center, a prospect big, a chucker, and a $5M+ trade exception. Not to mention that Asik and Lin would have cost about $6M more in cap space/luxury tax space, thus putting the C's well into the luxury tax and making them eligible for the repeater tax next year, and costing them about $18 million more in actual salary.
Was there another trade that someone made that you wish we had done? We weren't getting LaMarcus Aldridge. I'm sure we checked in on Greg Monroe, but Detroit overplayed their hand. We could have acquired Thaddeus Young for a 1st, but I don't know to what end. Chandler Parsons and Gordon Hayward both got max deals, which you couldn't get with Bogans or the TPE.
Again, for these two trade chips we got:
A 1st
2 2nds
Someone with 2 years left on his rookie deal who could be our starting center
A prospect big on a minimum contract
An overpaid scorer on an expiring contract (but we couldn't score last year, so he has potential value to the Celtics)
A $5.3 million trade exception
All of those have varying degrees of use, and put the Celtics in better position going forward than they were in April. For giving up no one with any actual on-court value, nor any draft picks, the C's did just fine for themselves, improving this year's team, acquiring future draft picks, and maintaining flexibility down the road.
EDIT: You people post quickly!