There was SO much Celtics chatter from reporters, and so many rumors, not to mention Celtics brass talking a big game in recent months (looking at you, Wyc), that it was hard to believe there WOULDN'T be something big happening on draft night. Sure, there are always rumors, and they each need to be taken with a big grain of salt, but this was it, right? Tonight was the night SOMETHING wonderful was finally going to happen. I mean, how many offseasons and trade deadlines can Danny go without making a big splash?
I think in a rebuilding process like the one Ainge has undertaken
* Where Ainge refuses to bottom out and build via high draft picks
* Where the team has no established star talent (like Pierce last time around)
* When the team has no clear up-and-coming star talent
* When Ainge acquires as many quality role players as possible to win-now with a limited squad
* When Ainge stockpiles future picks
For any team in a situation like this, I think that team is:
(1) most likely going to be facing a 4-6 year rebuild.
(2) is going to be hunting deals every summer and every trade deadline for those 4-6 years and 90+% of the time they are going to fall flat. Especially in the early years when the roster is at it's thinnest.
(3) they will come close to deals on several occasions but just be a little short in their trade proposals and lose out to someone else. It'll be heart-wrenching at times.
(4) the rebuild won't fully take off until Ainge manages to acquire a genuine star. Until then, a lot of teeing-and-tooing around. After that, there will be much more purpose and direction. Ainge will be able to attract other big name players (FAs) to the team.
I think these are just the types of things we should expect with this type of rebuild.
We have had some quiet trade deadlines, drafts and offseasons already ... and to be honest, I think we'll have a couple more before Ainge finds a way to make a splash with his collection of trade assets.
I think we should try to accept that in this type of rebuild -- progress will be slower in the early stages and there will be moments where things stagnate and fail to take shape. That there will be several frustrating trade deadlines, drafts and free agency periods. That this team is still looking for a direction and that it won't truly find that direction until Ainge can find a way to turn those assets into a genuine star talent who will help create some of that direction.
I think this is just the way of life for rebuilds like this. They're ugly. Annoying. Irritating. Uncomfortable. And carry on for much longer than we hope or expect.
Until that singular moment when things change. And often that moment is hard to see in the distance. You just know that at some point the right opportunity is going to be there ... and Ainge is nothing if not a fantastic opportunist.
... which is also why I prefer building through high draft picks vs what Ainge is doing. Acquiring top talents, individual development and team building. Young players you can really get excited about. Guys with All-Star talent. Visible progress year-on-year as those young guys improve and the talent base grows considerably with each draft.
Thank you for a reasonable and well-thought-out response from "the other side" of this debate.
I'm still processing everything—all the emotions, and all the information about the players we drafted. I'm sure my initial reaction was mostly knee-jerk, and I understand that if Danny truly felt Rozier was BPA at 16, then he did the right thing drafting him.
So, all of your reasoning above makes total sense to me. Yet I also wonder if our expectations were artificially raised—not just by the media, but by many people associated with the Celtics: Danny's predraft talk about aggressively trying to move up (probably should've kept his lips sealed on that until
after the draft), and how so many Celtics fans and beat reporters have been pumping up the value of all the team's assets (draft picks and young players) over the past year.
It's like the Celtics are in basketball limbo right now—severely unbalanced roster, with no stars (or anything even close to it). And if all the unfounded rumors of the past week and the lack of draft-night trades are any indication, there's seemingly little to no chance of acquiring anyone truly good in free agency or via trade, because no one around the league thinks that highly of any of our players.
I'm probably just being impatient and unnecessarily pessimistic. Only time will tell the true value of these picks. And I actually was trying to not get my hopes too high, remembering the relative quiet of recent offseasons and trade deadlines. Obviously that didn't work.

Ah, well. As the kids like to say, "What are you gonna do?"