I don't think either will end up being part of the long-term future of this team. Maybe K.O. as a rotation guy down the road but, more likely than not, I see them being gone within a season or two.
One, if not both, will be used as parts in trades.
It just really hurts my head to think this team could have had a young core of the Antetokounmpo, Smart, Sully, and Winslow, but instead we have Olynyk, Sully, Smart, and Rozier.
Excedrin please. Extra Strength.
Yup. Rebuilding takes luck. Also requires a GM not to totally miss on a top prospect when one falls in the draft. Being a bit worse record-wise both of the last two years wouldn't have hurt, though.
Seems kinda like the Celts have given up on rebuilding after just two years of doing it and have decided to make it work with the assets they have, hoping for a trade miracle to occur.
I don't really think so. The only real difference between now and the 2005-2007 era is we don't have a Paul Pierce, and our rookie-scale players aren't quite as good (Rondo, Big Al, Gerald Green v. Smart, Sully, KO, etc), yet our draft pick stash is better, and our contract situation is outstanding.
My point: ALL of Ainge's deals in the past 18 months have been about asset collection, including the Lee deal. He's basically keeping his fingers crossed that a meaningful vet will become available via trade between now and next summer, so he can start to build a decent looking layout for Durant and another max guy this time next year.
People thought he had no chance then, and he proved folks wrong.
I don't gripe about Ainge that transactional GM -- he's smart and aggressive and fearless. And I an even understand not doing the Winslow deal. But missing on Giannis in lieu of Olynyk really hurts. His draft record is... good... but far from great.