Last season, the Hawks were a sub.500 team that got bounced in the first-round of the playoffs. Sucks to be them.
Amazing what an all-star defensive center can do for a team, eh?
i guess the lesson there is that if we can play .500 ball we'll be a franchise big man away from relevance.
The lesson is that squeaking into the playoffs and losing in the first round doesn't put you in no man's land. The problem is when you barely make the playoffs, can't get out of the first round,
and have no avenues for improvement. The Celtics can improve through free agency, the draft, and trades. The Celtics can also get better through the improvement of young players already on their roster.
The Pacers made the playoffs in 2010-2011 with a 37-45 record, signed David West (and traded for George Hill), and went to the Eastern Semifinals the next season and the conference finals the year after that. Sure, some of that was the improvement of Paul George, but the Pacers retooled their roster after the Malice at the Palace without ever drafting higher than 10th.
David West chose noted free agent destination Indiana because it looked like a young team on the rise which would have a longer window of contention. At the time, I actually though he might have made the right decision in choosing the Pacers over the Celtics if he had winning in mind.
If Brad Stevens can lead a strong push towards the playoffs that makes the Celtics look like a team on their way up, they can be attractive to the right kind of free agents. Not the guys looking for money and nightlife, but guys like West or Paul Millsap who seem to have more of a blue-collar mentality.
There's no sure path back to contention, but I would argue that Danny Ainge has put together a collection of players and assets that allows for multiple ways to a title. If Plan A doesn't work, he has a Plan B and a Plan C.