in the history of the Celtics. Why are we winning on the road against elite Western Conference teams?
Do we want to stay in the basement of the NBA for years to come. Even the Lakers are Tanking.
What is wrong with the people running the Celtics?
Why are we winning games we ought to lose?
For the life of me I don't understand this thought process. Why do we want this team to lose? If they start winning lots of games, even with players like Bass and Prince getting some minutes, doesn't that mean the team is better than we think they are?
Wouldn't you rather have a team of 20-24 year olds who win 40 games versus a similarly aged team that wins 14? Why do you believe that we have to draft in the top 5 to get an impact player? Why can't we add solid mid-draft talent and one potential FA/trade veteran to put this team back in contention?
Granted this Celtics team is probably not going to win 40 games, but what if they went .500 after the All-Star break. Why is that BAD??
I can't see why people get so worked up about a bad team winning games. The Celtics will never win the lottery. History has show that you could find quality talent in the 5-10 slot and that any pick in the draft(even the first) does not guarantee anything. 2-5 extra wins doesn't really mean any thing right now.
Exactly:
Damian Lillard: 6th pick
Stephen Curry: 7th pick
Joakim Noah: 9th pick
Gordon Hayward: 9th pick
Paul George: 10th pick
Brook Lopez: 10th pick
Klay Thompson: 11th pick
Kawhi Leonard: 15th pick
Roy Hibert: 17th pick
Eric Bledsoe: 18th pick
Tobias Harris: 19th pick
Serge Ibaka: 24th pick
Kyle Lowry: 24th pick
Jimmy Butler: 30th pick
DeAndre Jordan: 35th pick
Chandler Parsons: 38th pick
Goran Dragic: 45th pick
Marc Gasol: 48th pick
How many of those guys are franchise players?
Gasol and Steph Curry? Maybe Paul George.
Your list just proves a point.
Now list the best two players on championship teams over the last 20 years and see where they were picked.
Here's a list of guys who have been among the top two players on a champion in the last twenty years picked outside the top 5:
Clyde Drexler, 14th
Kobe Bryant, 13th
Ben Wallace, undrafted
Tony Parker, 28th
Manu Ginobili, 57th
Paul Pierce, 10th
Dirk Nowitzki, 9th
Kawhi Leonard, 15th
Here's a list of guys who were drafted in the top five, but were top two players on championship teams other than the one they were drafted by:
Shaquille O'Neal, 1st
Chauncey Billups, 3rd
Kevin Garnett, 5th
Pau Gasol, 3rd
Tyson Chandler, 2nd
Lebron James, 1st
Here's a complete list of players who were among the top two players on championship teams who were drafted in the top five by the team they won a title/s with over the course of the past twenty years.
Hakeem Olajuwon
Michael Jordan
Scottie Pippen
Tim Duncan
David Robinson
Dwayne Wade
*Note that only two of the six players on this last list have won titles in this century.
Ok I'm liking the lists. For the sake of the argument, let's change that list that's bolded and look at players that
Either won, or made the NBA finals in the last 25 years, with the team that drafted them with a top 5 pick:
Hakeem Olajuwon
Michael Jordan
Scottie Pippen
Tim Duncan
David Robinson
Dwayne Wade
+Dwight Howard
+Lebron James
+Anthony Hardaway
+Shaquille Oneal
+Kenyon Martin
+Gary Payton
+Patrick Ewing
+James Worthy
+Isiah Thomas
+Magic Johnson
+Russell Westbrook
+Kevin Durant
(Could include Harden but won't because we're saying top 2 players)
If we went back 10 more years, we'd see Magic Johnson appear 7 more times, and James Worthy another 3 times.
We'd also see Kevin Mchale and Larry Bird (the 6th pick so doesn't count) quite a few times too.
If Kobe Bryant entered the league out of college, there is zero doubt he would have gone top 5 either, and he's had 7 (?) finals appearances to ad to the above list. Just food for thought.
In the last 25 years, that's 18 players picked in the top 5, that made the NBA finals as a top two player on the team that drafted them. how many finals appearances do they count for?
- I won't bother working out how many of those guys went to the finals more than once, because you get the picture. Instead we'll just look at Celtics18's original list that I added to and work out how many championships in the last 20 years were won by teams with their own top 5 pick/top 2 player on that championship team:
Hakeem Olajuwon x2
Isiah Thomas x2
Michael Jordan x6
Scottie Pippen counted in Jordan's 6 above so won't count twice.
Tim Duncan x5
David Robinson 1 of the above so won't count twice.
Dwayne Wade x3 We can see that of the last 25 NBA championships, 18 of them were won by teams that had their own top 5 pick/franchise player that they drafted.Now imagine if the NBA had the age or college rule and Kobe Bryant had come through the NCAA system and we added him in there?
The argument is ridiculously one sided and if you think that having a top 5 pick doesn't mean anything, you're ignoring the numbers. If we made the criteria as having a top 10 pick then it just makes it amazing by adding guys like Pierce, Nowitzki etc..
Furthermore, what makes me laugh is that people say 'that's fine, we don't need a top 5 pick, we'll just draft a franchise guy with our 12th pick and then sign another franchise guy via free agency' as if the 2008 scenario happens on a regular basis, and it's the better road to take- like it's easier than drafting a franchise guy.
As Danny Ainge says,
Transcendent superstars win NBA championships, and usually teams with more than one superstar. If you look at that list of teams that made the NBA finals in the last 25 years, you'll see that superstars also attract other superstars.