I think the results would have been different have been different if you had done the poll before Danny traded for him, ha ha.
It obviously depends upon what your definition of superstar is. If there are around five superstars in the league, obviously not. If there are 15 to 20, then yes.
Werent you a fan of Irving? Even before Lebron re joined the Cavs?
Why the change of heart
I'm still a fan of Kyrie, although I was wrong about his defense and passing. Im disappointed they haven't improved.
My problems with the trade are:
1. Kyrie vs. last year's IT is basically a lateral move;
2. We gave up somewhere around a 25% chance to add a generational talent in Bagley or Porter;
3. We passed on deals where we could have retained IT and added another superstar at a cheaper cost;
4. Kyrie has clashed with multiple teammates, even before Lebron got there. Our team had amazing chemistry, which is now an unknown
Kyrie is a game-changing scorer, but he hasn't shown the ability to carry his team, to run an offense, or to play defense. He's a great player, but his game is remarkably similar to the guy he's replacing, minus the leadership and durability.
As argued in other threads, I can't think of a trade in the past 20+ years that involved paying this much value. There's a reasonable chance that we gave up Crowder, Zizic, and the rights to Bagley / Porter for an incremental upgrade.
Now, if the hip injury limits IT going forward, it looks better for us. If Kyrie makes an almost unprecedented leap, it's better for us. If everyone stays at about the level they were last year, though, this is a big loss.
I'm pretty sure retaining IT was not an option. The max is to much and also his age doesn't align with the Celtics plan
It seems weird that a 28-year-old would be aged out of our plan, after giving max contracts to a 30-year-old and a 27-year-old these past two summers.
Depends on whether you believe in NBA history or not, since no guard under 6-feet has ever made an All-Star appearance aged 30 or older.
That's a rather dubious threshold.
For one thing, the total selection pool of players listed at 5' 11" or less' who have even been good enough to play in the NBA _at all_ past the age of 30 is incredibly tiny. Just 37 such players are in the basketball-reference.com database!
Any larger pool of players is more likely to have more AS representation.
Even so, that tiny pool includes players like Calvin Murphy, Avery Johnson and a few others who posted seasons that were certainly all-star caliber past the age of 30.
And considering how prevalent it has been for shorter players to be generously listed at taller heights, if you just barely bump your threshold by one single inch to 6' 0" or less, the numbers jump dramatically. The selection pool doubles to 79. And 11 of those players combined for 25 All-Star appearances.
And that doesn't even include Nate (Tiny) Archibald or AI because they were both 'listed' as 6' 1".
Chris Paul is listed at 6' in the database and just played in the 2016 All-Star game at age 30. And arguably had an All-Star caliber season just this year at age 31. Kyle Lowry is listed at a very generous 6' 0" and played in this year's AS game.