BDeCosta26, I'm going to respond here instead of quoting everything so as to not take up too much space, lol
.
Anyway, in fairness, I didn't even look at clips of Giannis, and the guy I who thought was the bpa at 16 was Tim Hardaway JR, and he's turned out to be much better than I anticipated; but no, to answer your question, I wasn't a Giannis guy (and I would never try to rewrite history like chad ford, haha
), although I was deeply disappointed that Ainge actually traded up to get Kelly Nolynyk, of all people. I mean, really? *facepalm*
As far as the draft goes, I don't see why including guys like Harangody and Joseph is ridiculous, because we're talking about Danny's ENTIRE draft record, not just when he has the chance to pick between 15-20. Additionally, people like to say that he has a knack for finding guys in the second round, so that's why I brought said players up. I know that you can't hit a home run with every pick, but what really bothers me about Ainge's selections isn't just that they're bad players, it's that they're so horrible that many of them are out of the league before the end of a typical rookie contract, and there's no way to sugarcoat that, I'm sorry. As you said, though, even the best screw up, like Buford did with Kyle Anderson. His skill set is fine, but his physical attributes will likely never allow him to be even a serviceable backup in the NBA, because he's simply too slow with zero lateral quickness. He reminds me of KO in that respect.
Btw, do you happen to know if Jim Sciutto likes melon (sarcasm), lol
?
I liked Hardaway a lot myself, and he played decently on that joke of a Knicks team this year. I understand you must not be high on KO, to put it nicely. But Olynyk is certainly at least a "serviceable back-up" big man in this league. I think that much isn't very debatable anymore. True 7 footers with point guard skills and a good 3 point shot just don't come around very often. He's has his issues, mostly with consistency and aggressiveness, but he's proven he can not only hit 3's but consistently beat guys on the dribble for drives to the hoop. He'll be in an NBA rotation for a while, especially the way the game is evolving. Plus, Olynyk is one of our more valuable trade chips because nearly every team can use a guy like him. With consistent playing time and some more confidence he could be a real weapon on offense. But even as is, he's got a place in this league for some time to come.
Yeah, I've heard that before to. And I don't think that's true, but he hasn't been bad their either. Every GM misses more than hits there, and he's had some hits too. I do wish he would take a stash guy once in a while but, oh well. When your picking in the middle of the second round, as long as we find a few guys we can use, which we have, I'm happy. Hitting on 2nds, especially ones that aren't 31-36 or so, just doesn't happen much.
The record shows that Ainge is a good, solid drafter. Better than most others in the league. Not the best, but good. Certainly likes certain kinds of players. He loves highly rated guys who fall in the draft (Young, Sullinger, Bradley, Jefferson, Green) and tough, under-sized PF's who were well decorated in college (Sully, Davis, Harangody). But most of those guys went on to good, if not star-level careers.
When you consider everything a GM does, He's pretty clearly one of the best in the league.
I guess I just don't understand, with so many franchises run in near perpetual darkness, how anyone can not be happy with what Ainge has done here.

Woop dee freakin' doo, a 'serviceable backup taken at 13,"
. How is he a 'true 7 footer,' btw, when he never plays under the basket, blocks shots, or rebounds well, which are all attributes of 'true 7 footers?' The fact that he's a big guy who can shoot the 3 is not unique, either. 30 years ago, yes, but today, do you know what's truly rare? Traditional big men, like Hassan Whiteside.
Who area all of these draftees of his who have gone on to have star-level careers, btw, because I can only think of two (and only one if we're going by the guys from your list) - Rondo, although cue the backlash because nothing he ever did here seems to count to most people on this site
, and Big Al. Unless you define 'star' differently from everyone else, who amongst Danny's selections have ever even made an All Star team?
I'm in agreement with you on his preference for certain types of players, though. Usually, they're undersized pf's, lol
. Ugh.
I think I must have missed a comma. I was saying that a majority of his picks have had good, though not star-level, careers. Sorry bout that.
True 7 footer just means he's legit 7 feet. Not 6'11 with shoes, but 7 feet standing. And while it is more common now than ever before for a big guy to have "Three Point Range", a 7 footer who can consistently hit the 3 at an above average clip is still quite rare. Plus, that's not all Olynyk can do. The dude has real PG-like skills. He's an above-average passer, a great shooter, and he can beat most opposing bigs off the dribble for drives to the hoop. Just by being as tall as he is, he's about an average rebounder (albeit one that, as Evan Turner puts it "Couldn't box his way out of a paper bag"), and he's fairly athletic. Not supremely so, but he's quick enough to be effective at his kind of game. Nevermind the kind of spacing he provides. Why would he play under the basket much? That's not his game. You only want one guy down near the basket on offense most of the time anyway. That's why Noel-Embiid will never work in today's game. One of your bigs has to at least have a knockdown mid-range shot for acceptable spacing. A guy with Olynyk's skill set is the perfect match for a guy like Drummond.
The C's get calls about KO all the time, Zarren said as much earlier in the year. Most coaches would love a guy on their team with his skill set. On the right team, he could start. But even if he doesn't, he's a major weapon. I've seen a bunch of games where Olynyk was a glaring match-up nightmare, he took advantage, and scored a very efficient 15-20+ points. His problem is certainly not a lack of skills, it's a lack of aggressiveness. Even with that, he's a productive NBA-level player who would be in a whole lot of teams top 7 or 8 player rotations. If he can become consistent (with consistent minutes), at his best he could start on teams with a rim-protector around him. That's good for a guy picked 13th in one of the weakest, most poorly regarded draft classes in the past 10 years. You cant, and shouldn't, expect to get an all-star at that spot.
I think these other folks are being a bit hard on you, but they're right. Pretty much universally, no ones saying he's some kind of draft guru with magical power, but he's a dang good drafter. And when you factor in all the other things he does well, he's one of the best in the business. So I guess the question were asking is, who are these GMs your comparing Danny to that find gems at 30 and 58? And if we fire Ainge, as I must assume you've mentioned before, who do we get to replace him? I think it would be funny if we got the other Isiah Thomas to do it. How could anyone beat us with those two? He did a good job when he was a GM didn't he?
No problem

, and thanks for clearing up your definition of a 'true 7-footer,' because I honestly thought that you were talking about the way in which such a guy plays the game. Speaking of which, you honestly don't believe that a Noel-Embiid duo would work in today's game? Not even defensively? Wow. I know that you were only talking about offense, but still.
As for Nolynyk, I think you're the only person I've ever seen on here who would call him athletic in any way, shape, or form, lol

. Even for his position - no. Just no, haha

. I'll give you his passing ability, of course, but he seems to think too much out there. It really is paralysis by over analysis, imo, especially when he continues to use the pump-fake as a weapon, which is great, don't get me wrong, and it can be very effective, but only if using it is predicated by him actually taking shots, never mind making them. Honestly, the only time I ever saw him just play was in game 1 against the Cavs, and he looked great (at least offensively), but then he reverted back to form. I was really hoping that he'd have a great series just so we could sucker some other team into taking him, lol

, but even that didn't happen. Sigh.
Finally, who am I comparing him to? Hmm, probably Bird, Buford, Presti, Morey, the guys in Sacramento (sorry I don't know their names, lol

), Chicago, Portland, any team with Jerry West, haha

, Utah, and Minnesota, off the top of my head. Pat Williams always seems to draft well, too, iirc. In short - the best, but again, imo; and while I would never hire Zeke as our gm, I must say that if you go back and look at the guys he's drafted - the guy certainly knows talent (Channing Frye aside, ahaha

). After all, he got Trevor Ariza at 44 in 2004, didn't he? Sure, he's made mistakes, but he's gotten a lot of good players from where we were drafting during the Big 3 era, and if he wasn't a Pistons legend, I'd at least hire him as a scout, but seeing Isiah Thomas working for the Celtics just doesn't compute. I'd be like Bird working for the Lakers.
Oops, I almost forgot - with whom would I replace Ainge? You know, I've actually never thought of that, unless of course Larry wants to take over, haha

. Dam you Pitino!