No. Biyombo is a fine defender, but useless on offense. Our defense is not lacking on this team. Offense sometimes is. We were short in roster spots, and Ainge was correct in trying to find players who could help in both ends of the floor, such as Amir.
This.
This Celtics team needed (& still needs) more offensive firepower. Not another defender and certainly not someone who basically has zero offensive game.
These things don't exist in a vacuum. Example: I'd be very happy to have Biyombo playing Sullinger's minutes -- essentially adding defensive length, while removing the worthless jumpers Sully takes -- for the cheap price BB comes at, then trading Sully for somethig so we don't waste money on his this summer.
If Sully is that worthless, a) he's not tradeable and b) he's just taking the qualifying offer this summer. So no major lost opportunity.
I imagine Ainge could convince an inferior GM that Sullinger has upside (by comparison to the pure defensive role of Biyombo), at least beyond what he currently is.
But that may be getting more difficult.... he's already looking tired after <2 months of the season.
Can we please put a stop to this whole belief in the concept that NBA GM's know absolutely nothing about players who are not on their own team?
We are Celtcs fans. We have no professional NBA involvement whatsoever. Yet just from being fans and watching games, we have a very good knowledge of what Sully's strengths/weaknesses are, and we have a pretty decent idea of his potential.
To try and suggest that any of the NBA's opposing GM's (guys who are paid hundreds of thousands, if not millions, purely to know everything there is to know about the league) would be gullible enough to allow Danny Ainge to falsely "convince" them them of Sully's potential is not only laughable, it's a borderline insult to the intelligence of everybody on this forum.
Yet people continue to make such comments.
Let me just get this straight for everybody here. Every single NBA GM has an entire team of employees at their disposal.
* They have scouts who are entirely responsible for knowning everything there is to know about every college/high school/international/NBDL/NBA players on the planet who might potentially fit their needs.
* They have financial advisor's who can provide them with advise on contracts
* They have coaches who can provide them with advise on which players out there may/may not fit their teams and play styles
* They have medical teams dedicated to assessing the health risk of other players around the league
You can take the person on this forum with the greatest level of basketball knowledge, and you can guarantee you that even the WORST GM in the entire league has at least 10x more knowledge of the NBA than that person.
NBA GM's make bad calls all the time - gambles on players / trades that don't work out. I can assure you that in most (if not all) of these cases, those GM's are well aware of the risks presented, and decided to gamble on the hope that the benefits outweigh the risks. They just happen to lose on that.
I assure you that if there is any team out there who takes a flyer on Sully it's going to be because their own staff / advisors recommended it, not because Danny Ainge convinced them of it. If Ainge was THAT high on Sully's potential then he wouldn't trade him / let him go, would he?
So to all the people who do this whole thing of:
"Danny should showcase player X to increase his trade value"
"Danny is just saying this in media to try to increase the players trade value"
"Danny should tell opposing GM this guy has huge potential"
Please, stop. No offence intended by all this, but the whole idea of GM's being so gullible is just laughable. The NBA's opposing GM's know a hell of a lot more about Sully than any of us does.