Amir Johnson has plantar fasciitis. He is also a form of truth. People said he was the advanced stats kind of player. I agree with the person above who classifies him as a Crowder, a vital piece to this year's team, rather than say a Jordan Crawford we throw out there because the games must still be played.
Sully was not drafted with the future Celtics in mind. He was selected in a past context when we still had Pierce and KG.
One by one all the players from the old team have left except for Avery and Jared.
Bradley apparently fits in with the new team identity.
If Smart is not capable of playing pg, then there could be another logjam. But that is an unfolding story.
Sullinger is also an unfolding story. Apparently he cannot get into shape or feels having extra pounds is the only way he can make it in the NBA.
As someone mentioned above, Danny and the team are not happy with his conditioning.
You can't force someone in your life to act the way you want them to. I saw Rondo trying to incorporate Brad's style. He just wasn't very effective. Green we all know just never made the leap and he too was traded.
Bass turned it around last year. We probably didn't resign him for the same reason we let Humphries go, the power forward logjam.
Now it is Jared Sullinger's turn.
The question Danny must be pondering is, is this the final Sully we are getting?
Guys like Amir, Turner, and Lee are off the books, as is Sullinger, after this season. Maybe Amir is also on the clock for evaluation as much as Sullinger. The key question is will there be regret if Sully is moved? Will he haunt us as Chauncey Billups did? Olynyk and Smart are in that category. Look at Dallas. They lost the trade last year more because Crowder has emerged than that Rondo was a failure as a Maverick.
They currently play Dwight Powell extra minutes in a last ditch effort to save face.
I understand Danny's motivation for squeezing all he can out of various so-called assets. I also understand he'd rather we miss the playoffs than run on a treadmill. Ainge is unpredictable. The only thing he is consistent with is he doesn't throw players under the bus except for Bogans.
If Sullinger isn't traded by the deadline, then he will have the second half to show he can get into shape. If it's true he is going to stop shooting threes, that is good considering he has always shot them around 25%. It may make him a better player, but apparently Brad Stevens wants to give every player the green light for three pointers. Otherwise, how does one explain Evan Turner shooting threes?
I expect Sullinger to be traded soon. Or I could see him signing with a team like Brooklyn next year. Sacramento wanted Rondo and finally got him. Maybe the Lakers also wanted Rajon? Other than those teams, did anyone want Rajon Rondo?
It's going to be the same with Sullinger, especially if he plays the second half the same as the first with no improvement in conditioning.
It's said when looking for an apartment, never choose the first option. We are turning into a running team which plays tough defense. Sully as constituted does not fit into such a philosophy. It's not because he's short. Height is no longer such a big factor in basketball. It's just the way the league has evolved.
But that doesn't mean the new NBA center prototype is going to be an overweight six foot eight power forward.
It would be a guy like Bill Russell, a man in shape.
The debate has always been can Sully and Olynyk play together. If they can't, then having both on the roster is a dead end. Blocking shots might be overrated, but like said above somewhere if you can avoid the thread hijacking by that other person, you need guys who can rotate fast for team defense. It is annoying that Olynyk has short arms which don't allow him to block many shots, but at least he can rotate because he's not thirty pounds overweight playing a game that depends on speed and flexibility.