The expectations are inflated this summer, but to be honest, Danny Ainge has done everything to jack those expectations up, as he does almost every summer.
At some point, he is going to have to deliver. Yes, rationally, we cannot "expect" Danny to make great things happen if the stuff seemingly outside of his control (the lottery, free agent priorities, etc) don't go his way.
Still, I think if you continually raise the stakes, and premise your whole rebuild plan on setting your team up for a big move, you've got to come through sooner rather than later. You can't simply continue acquiring assets and maintaining flexibility in perpetuity.
If the team looks more or less the same headed into next season, save the addition of a few rookies, that has to be seen as a pretty significant failure.
Isn't it the GM's job to create excitement within the fan base for the upcoming season?! What do you expect him to do... He has proven that he has been able to turn assets into better ones. Let's see what he does before we count him out.
Underpromise, overdeliver is more my kind of style.
Ainge has a lot to work with this summer, and the team as constituted for the last season and a half or so is good, but not good enough to do more than lose in the first round in convincing fashion.
If "fireworks" are not possible, my minimum expectation is that Ainge will make bold, creative moves to refashion the team in a way that provides at least the chance that the team will take a step forward next season.
The status quo doesn't interest me. Having flexibility and assets to work with doesn't mean a darn thing if it serves as an excuse to endlessly wait for the best case scenario.
TP for an excellent post.
Ainge and Grousbeck have made their own bed with their voluntary hyperbole. And they've come up empty on more than one occasion.
Now, the pressure's on them to significantly upgrade the talent on the floor, from their fanbase and I would hope from their head coach. One would hope that Stevens would make it clear that he didn't come into the association to coach an overachieving crew of bricklayers indefinitely.
And as I've said before, draft choices and players are not assets if they cannot be converted into on-floor improvement.
This is a big summer, credibility-wise, for Ainge and Grousbeck. If nothing happens - again - the only people who are going to take them seriously going forward are the ill-informed fans happy to continue muddling through first-round wipeouts with this current, deeply-flawed roster, out of the equally flawed notion that a better deal is just around the corner - after years of talk about fireworks and nothing resulting.
Knowledgeable Celtics fans already recognize crying wolf for exactly what it is.