[/move]msg2105010 date=1466027409]
What if this is a three team deal where Celtics get Butler + next years Chicagos 1rst round pick, Minnesota gets #3, Bradley and Chicago gets IT and Wiggins. It may need a third team to happen.
Thomas and Wiggins??? For Butler and a 1st!!! That's the biggest overpay I've heard yet!
Not really. Bulls get IT and Wiggins, Minnesota gets #3 and Bradley but at least Boston would get more then just Butler, we'd also get another 1st rd pick next year. It probably won't be the case but I can't see trading the 3+IT+ Bradley just for Butler. There would have to be something else or its not worth it
I do not believe the Bulls posses an asset big enough to make it worth it.
The Bulls get away with absolute highway robbery here. You must have a low opinion of Thomas and Wiggins.
I take it back LarBrd, you are correct! people really overate Jimmy Butler
TP dude
I just don't get when there are many possible moves to be done and especially moves that can upgrade us at CENTER. Why give up so many assets for a "pretty good" upgrade at shooting guard?
I get if we sign someone and that would allow us to keep assets for a trade, but if Ainge is smart he should be looking for a trade to get a guy like Cousins only so we can sign Durant. That's what I think is the best but since we did not get a top 2 pick, OKC did so well in playoffs, and SAC has made 0 comments about Cousins status nor have we heard of them making him available in trade talks with other teams.
I think you're looking at this from the wrong angle.
It doesn't matter that Jimmy Butler is not that big of an upgrade to Bradley, stats-wise. You can't attribute a certain value to each player, add them all together, and the team with the highest combined value wins it all, that's not how it works.
Let's say we upgrade our two weakest positions with above-average players. I think most people would agree that's Center and PF. Let's assume a hypothetical scenario in which we add, say, Steve Adams at Center, and Ryan Anderson at PF. I think most people would also agree that those two are pretty darn good players for their respective position.
Our team would be
Adams
Anderson
Crowder
Bradley
Thomas
That team, while formidable, has not a snowball's chance in hell to win a championship.
It doesn't matter what kind of upgrade, in total production, Butler would be to Bradley. What matters is that in close games, in a playoff series, with only a few minutes to go, can this guy give you buckets? Is this guy dangerous enough that the opposing team has to gameplan for him specifically? Does he make the other team spend their ressources trying to contain him, thus opening up space for the other players on the team?
The answer is, Jimmy Butler is such a guy, Avery Bradley is not.
We can't keep this game of incremental value gain up forever, it'll lead nowhere. We have already won 48 games this season. We have to start dealing in absolutes when we evaluate a player's value to our team, when we ask ourselves "how does this guy help us win", not in relatives, anymore.
And speaking in absolutes, Jimmy Butler is a clear upgrade to Avery Bradley.