If we wanted to, we could offer Smart, Young, Sullinger, Olynyk and 2 Brooklyn picks and have Cousins in green tomorrow.
So what you propose is essentially trading the vast majority of the roster and coffer of assets for Cousins.
The question is really, then, would the Kings want to swap rosters and draft assets with the Celtics?
We spend so much time puffing up our plucky young team, our boy wonder coach, and our fearless GM that we have to believe that this moribund franchise in Sacramento would want to switch places with us, right?
But of course, the reason the Celtics would consider doing such a deal is because one great asset in the NBA is always worth more than a cascade of lesser assets. Quality wins out over quantity, pretty much always. That's the hole in which the Celtics find themselves. Nobody is swapping quality for the Celtics' quantity.
Agree to disagree. If the Kings find a Wiggins for their Love, we'll likely be defeated once again. If they can't - and the Lakers report was just fabricated by Sacramento to drive up Cousins' price - then we will absolutely be in play.
Also, that's not what I propose, I'm just saying that we
could beat anybody's offer if we chose to reach into the depths of our asset bin. Ainge won't go that far, just as he resisted giving up a hefty amount of picks and prospects for Love.
Edit: just to affirm my suspicions that the Lakers report is made up, colincb posted this in another thread:
Brian K. Schmitz ?@MagicInsider 2h2 hours ago
League source tells Orlando Sentinel that Magic are not part of proposed 3-way trade that includes Nik Vucevic, contrary to ESPN's report.
We saw this a few times last summer with Love, when one report would come out saying Klay Thompson was on the table and even going so far as to suggest that Harrison Barnes could be added to a potential deal, only to find out later that this was BS and likely originated from Flip Saunders to drive up Love's price.