Rondo was part of something special at one time for the Celtics.
This part of his legacy I'll always appreciate and never forget.
It's almost as there was TWO different Rondos.
I admired the one when Perk was here the most
The Rondo that was traded .....I didn't know him
Had we not traded Perk, we may have squeaked out a second chip (should've been 3, if not for that game 7).
If Quis doesn't go down because of that freak Arenas collision, we don't trade Perk.
Can't tell if you are being sarcastic of not.
Ainge was right on that Perk trade in that Perk value dropped quickly after. If Green didn't have that heart condition it might have all been different. The other thing I don't know is how much trading Perk really hurt the team moral. I know it was reported a lot, but I don't remember any players saying that much, so it may have been blown out of proportion. In any event, I don't think MD, Perk or Green mattered enough change things. It was sad that we couldn't win 2 or 3, but after sucking for soooo long, the happiness I got in 08 overshadowed any pain for not winning it in the years after.
No sarcasm involved -- we traded Perkins because we had no wing depth after Quis's neck injury, and it completely destroyed the moral of the team: that and the fact that neither of the O'Neal Brothers were able to stay healthy totally affected the team on the court. If you think otherwise I would question how closely you were following the team at the time.
Yes, though it wasn't just the wing depth that was at issue. We also had no healthy center. Perkins was injured (again) at the time of the trade. So were both O'Neals as well as Erden.
We didn't just make the trade to get Green as a replacement for MD to back-up Pierce. We also acquired Krstic to shore up the center position.
I think it was the combination of desperately needing help at
both the 3 and the 5 that caused Danny to pull the trigger.
And given that both Perkins and Nate were injured and barely played through the rest of the season (and would have been lost as FAs after it anyway) I can't see how it could be seen as a bad trade. Green and Krstic gave the Celtics far more value than Perkins and Nate gave OKC.
What made it not a fantastic outcome were other things that happened after the trade. Shaq never getting fully healthy obviously hurt tremendously. Rondo's injury (the DWade take-down). Those were probably the two biggest factors in not winning in the playoffs. And then, after that, the lockout caused Krstic to go back to Russia. And then Green's heart condition lost him for the next season.
If those things don't happen, it would have been a fantastic trade outcome. But they did. And so it wasn't. But that doesn't mean it was a bad trade at the time.