Glad Danny doesn't care what you few think. The KG,Ray, and PP teams were only good enough once, must have cost like 5 lottery picks! If your argument is that they kept going further than we did, that means nothing, the end result was "good but not good enough!"
That team was robbed of at least 2 Titles due to injuries and won their only title in the FIRST year together.
It was a historically GREAT team in YEAR ONE.
The end result was a Championship....more than good enough!
I agree with you in that a Championship is the goal and if that was achieved, it's hard to say that any price was too high of a price.
Not to mention that the only way it would have cost "5 lottery picks" would be for the Cs to lose a LOT the next 4 years. After all, the only direct lottery pick as part of the Allen and KG trades was the #5 for Allen. KG was Jefferson (15th pick), Green (18th) and a host of late round 1sts.
Of course, the team wasn't "robbed" of titles due to injuries. The simply fact is that injuries happen, especially to older players (or big guys named Perk). That's the big risk when you trade for an older player. Or two.
They won one Championship and that was a great accomplishment. Danny was exceptionally smart that year and took a giant gamble. He recognized that there were some very unique circumstances in regards to KG, PP and Basketball Jesus. That's 3 HOFers who all were still very good but clearly on the downside of their careers who had never won a title. That's not a normal occurrence. He had one. He couldn't get #2 (KG). So he made the deal to get the third (Ray) giving away his #5 pick to do it with the hope that that would be enough to get KG to move. It was a HUGE gamble and one that could have cost him his job had he failed. After all, a team of PP and Ray Allen wasn't going to make much noise in the playoffs. Danny rolled the dice and it came up big. It took smarts and guts to make that call and Danny can't be praised enough for doing it.
At the same time, that kind of opportunity is rare. Danny knows this. So he's slowly improving the team without sacrificing assets or future flexibility so when the opportunity does come around again he can jump on it. He's been smart (and lucky) enough to give himself a real chance to hit the jackpot in either the draft, trades or even free agency.