For the first month of the season in 2012, 2013, and 2014, Turner also had people saying "Finally, Turner is playing like an All Star/#2 overall pick!", with a TS% in those months in the .530-545 range, a sizable positive net rating (except for November of 2013), and per-36 averages in the range of 15-20 pts, 7-9 reb, 4 ast. This February (and January, first back-to-back months like this ever) the TS% is up in that range again (as opposed to the usual sub-.500 atrocities), his net rating (111-105) is the best it's been since January of 2012 (101-93), only the third month of his career with a sizable positive net rating, and his per-36 averages are 15.7 pts, 8.3 reb, and 7.2 ast. Of course, the stats don't show how ballsy and clutch and smart he's been in the fourth quarter, lol. I think you're right, rollie, he really is playing like a #2 pick (roughly) now, but not just temporarily, has actually passed a turning point, thanks to the restoration specialists at Ainge & Stevens Inc. And I think you're right that we really need to keep him, unless renouncing him is the only way to get Durant. This free agent class blows, and if it weren't us he were doing this for, we'd all be looking at him as one of the hidden gems of the summer, like, "Hey, let's sign Turner, it looks like he finally figured things out and is [roughly] fulfilling his #2 pick potential as a late bloomer"...and what's satisfying as a fan is knowing that Ainge was already two or three steps ahead of all of us on this when he first signed Turner as an even more hidden gem-like substance, probably figured this as one of the workable trajectories for Turner. Why would we ever want to let go of a 16/8/7-caliber player who plays good defense and isn't inefficient anymore and is not just willing but comfortable coming off the bench? Turner Point for rollie, haha!