If we're just speculating for the sake of speculation... if Bulpett was just Ainge's media guy it's FAR more likely that we actually tried shopping the Brooklyn pick and nobody wanted it. Or that we were targeting someone far less exciting like Gordon Hayward or even a Horford/Howard rental... and Ainge floated the Okafor rumor, because Okafor is a legit 20 year old star prospect and it helped the value of the Brooklyn pick to believe we were actually close to landing a star prospect for a draft pick that could end up being a dud.
Or perhaps the WHOLE THING is made up by Ainge... even the story in the radio interview about being "close" to moving the pick... because Ainge was trying to create the illusion that we had options when perhaps nobody at all was interested in our assets. "You hear that Cleveland!? We Totes had options!... Srsly! We might even continue those discussions in the offseason, so you better man up or lose out on our super valuable brooklyn pick... For realz!"
This is partly true, and partly nonsense. Yes, we quite obviously shopped the BKN 1. "No one wanted it"... in the trades we were proposing. It's ridiculous to think Ainge offered the BKN 1 for Horford/Hayward and ATL/HOU turned it down. It's a little less ridiculous but still unlikely that Ainge offered the BKN 1 for Hayward and Utah turned it down. Since there was no deal between the two for Hayward, my guess is Ainge never offered a package around the BKN 1 for Hayward or for anyone in his talent/production tier.
Ainge probably offered the BKN 1 to the Kings for Cousins, the Clippers for Blake, the Bulls for J. Butler, etc. He said multiple times, and I don't think he was being facetious, that he would absolutely part with the BKN 1 for a young All-Star.
There's many reasons why a GM would want to leak a general rumor that the team is active on the superstar market. I have been to many Celtics games this year and attendance is not quite the level it was when, say, KG & Pierce were fueling the Celtics to a top 3 conference finish in February. Fan interest in this team is not as it would be if we were the 3 seed with a legitimate superstar. It is rational to consider that Ainge may be continually hinting at accelerating the process ("fireworks") to keep a hungry fanbase at bay in case the Celtics continue on "the long road." Even though Okafor isn't currently a superstar, he's not an unknown. Fans can check ESPN and see he scored 20 the other night, or grabbed 10 rebounds last week. They can go on YouTube and watch highlights of him lighting up DeAndre Jordan and other premier centers in the league. Maybe a few more guys and gals start tuning into the Celtics and saying, "hey, this guy Isaiah Thomas would be sick with the player we're probably going to get, Jahlil Okafor." Fans can't do that with the 2016 BKN 1. A "probable lottery pick" is nothing more than abstract idea to casual (most) fans. Okafor is not, he's an up-and-coming player whose promise and upside is tangible to the average fan.
That makes a lot more sense. But nah... we offered the Brooklyn 1st in a package for Okafor and Philly backed out.
Your unwavering faith in this Bulpett report/Okafor narrative seems contradictory to when you were skeptical of the many well-respected journalists that reported Philadelphia's unofficial demotion of Sam Hinkie upon hiring Colangelo. All I'm suggesting is that the truth is a fickle thing in the NBA.
And by the way... you can't have your cake and eat it too. If you believe 100% in this narrative, then Ainge offered Okafor for a package based around the BKN 1 and Philadelphia seriously considered it before turning it down and adding that they would reconsider it down the line. Or, Philadelphia flatly turned us down, and the BKN 1 doesn't have as much value as we'd like to think it does, proving you right (this is what I have an easier time believing). But if the latter is true, that calls into question the whole narrative that we came "very close" to acquiring a player with the BKN 1 at the deadline. If the whole narrative doesn't really add up, or is called into question, it's understandable why some people are pondering what "really happened," and things like that, though we agree it's nonsense to suggest that the target definitely wasn't Okafor and definitely Butler based on RealGM posters.