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Is Kyrie a superstar?

Yes
113 (81.9%)
No
25 (18.1%)

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Re: Is Kyrie a superstar? (poll)
« Reply #105 on: August 25, 2017, 10:43:49 AM »

Offline smokeablount

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We can he can be a Robin but can he be a Batman?

That's the key question.  The game is a lot easier with LBJ on your team.

Agreed.  Roy, I respect your opinions and I'd say 8 or 9 times out of 10 I agree with you on whatever the discussion is, but I think in the case of this Kyrie trade, it's worth taking a step back. 

This trade was a gamble and it relies a ton on luck and speculative forecasting.  Luck about the Nets pick, luck with our Lakers pick conveying, speculation about IT's injury, and speculation that Kyrie will evolve and be better for us than he has been up to this point, which makes his past performance less important to focus on rigidly. 

The Warriors got incredibly lucky after skillfully building their core, with the cap spiking and landing Durant.  I think Danny has realized that his risk tolerance needed to increase if he wanted to be a true title contender, and he thinks really really highly of Kyrie, so he bit the bullet and knows that to some degree he needs luck to get where he needs to go, just like the Warriors needed luck to get where they are.

I would advise you obviously to express your opinion, but to acknowledge that this is a gamble that we don't have the data we need yet (even Danny doesn't).  We should watch how the team starts to gel in the regular season and give it until at least this year's playoffs to see what we can expect of Kyrie moving forward. 

I think he's at absolute worst a top 15 player, but I think if things break right, his offense alone could put him in the top 8.  IT just wasn't that guy.  Let's see the how the playoffs go and where the Nets pick lands, and hope that the LA pick conveys and that we have things to celebrate.
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Re: Is Kyrie a superstar? (poll)
« Reply #106 on: August 25, 2017, 11:24:58 AM »

Offline Roy H.

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We can he can be a Robin but can he be a Batman?

That's the key question.  The game is a lot easier with LBJ on your team.

Agreed.  Roy, I respect your opinions and I'd say 8 or 9 times out of 10 I agree with you on whatever the discussion is, but I think in the case of this Kyrie trade, it's worth taking a step back. 

This trade was a gamble and it relies a ton on luck and speculative forecasting.  Luck about the Nets pick, luck with our Lakers pick conveying, speculation about IT's injury, and speculation that Kyrie will evolve and be better for us than he has been up to this point, which makes his past performance less important to focus on rigidly. 

The Warriors got incredibly lucky after skillfully building their core, with the cap spiking and landing Durant.  I think Danny has realized that his risk tolerance needed to increase if he wanted to be a true title contender, and he thinks really really highly of Kyrie, so he bit the bullet and knows that to some degree he needs luck to get where he needs to go, just like the Warriors needed luck to get where they are.

I would advise you obviously to express your opinion, but to acknowledge that this is a gamble that we don't have the data we need yet (even Danny doesn't).  We should watch how the team starts to gel in the regular season and give it until at least this year's playoffs to see what we can expect of Kyrie moving forward. 

I think he's at absolute worst a top 15 player, but I think if things break right, his offense alone could put him in the top 8.  IT just wasn't that guy.  Let's see the how the playoffs go and where the Nets pick lands, and hope that the LA pick conveys and that we have things to celebrate.

I appreciate the kind words, and I agree, Danny gambled.

I understand the gamble, but I disagree with it, for the following reasons:

1. IT and Kyrie are remarkably similar players. They're great at scoring, both are roughly average passers, and they're both terrible defensively. Not surprisingly, of all the players in NBA history, IT's first six seasons are most similar to Kyrie's first six years (source: bbr similarity scores).

The gamble is that Kyrie will improve, while IT will regress. That's far from a given, though. IT should have several years of his prime left, and he is an insanely hard worker. When you have an All-NBA player, it's a huge gamble to trade him for somebody who could be better, but also might not fit as well.

2. Injuries. We all know about IT's hip injury. It should be fine, but there are concerns about missed target dates, etc., and labrum tears can be slow to heal. But, in terms of durability, Kyrie was hurt in college, and he's missed on average 10 games per year more than IT. Expecting durability from Kyrie is a gamble.

3. The draft pick. Next year's draft has two guys who many consider to be generational talents. Both guys could be better than Kyrie. Let's say there's a 15% chance of getting one of those two picks. What's the value of a 15% chance of the next Anthony Davis?  There are another three guys or so who project to be all-stars.

4. Character. I don't think there are any real questions about IT or Crowder here. For Kyrie, there's a gamble. He refused to talk to  teammates in the playoffs, he has clashed with teammates in the past, there were rumors several years ago that he was trying to force his way out of Cleveland, and now he demanded to trade to assume a bigger role. There's also the gamble that we do not know if Kyrie can Carrie 18. The Cavaliers were terrible before LeBron, and they were terrible when LeBron sad.

5. The perception among players. I have no idea about this, but it should be factored in. You are starting to see players point out Danny's lack of loyalty. Avery Bradley seemed to do this, Caron Butler did, and of course Ray chimed in. Danny had seemed to put the "Danny is a snake" reputation behind him, but are we starting to see a rehash of it? And does that matter to potential free agents?


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Re: Is Kyrie a superstar? (poll)
« Reply #107 on: August 25, 2017, 11:36:21 AM »

Offline smokeablount

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We can he can be a Robin but can he be a Batman?

That's the key question.  The game is a lot easier with LBJ on your team.

Agreed.  Roy, I respect your opinions and I'd say 8 or 9 times out of 10 I agree with you on whatever the discussion is, but I think in the case of this Kyrie trade, it's worth taking a step back. 

This trade was a gamble and it relies a ton on luck and speculative forecasting.  Luck about the Nets pick, luck with our Lakers pick conveying, speculation about IT's injury, and speculation that Kyrie will evolve and be better for us than he has been up to this point, which makes his past performance less important to focus on rigidly. 

The Warriors got incredibly lucky after skillfully building their core, with the cap spiking and landing Durant.  I think Danny has realized that his risk tolerance needed to increase if he wanted to be a true title contender, and he thinks really really highly of Kyrie, so he bit the bullet and knows that to some degree he needs luck to get where he needs to go, just like the Warriors needed luck to get where they are.

I would advise you obviously to express your opinion, but to acknowledge that this is a gamble that we don't have the data we need yet (even Danny doesn't).  We should watch how the team starts to gel in the regular season and give it until at least this year's playoffs to see what we can expect of Kyrie moving forward. 

I think he's at absolute worst a top 15 player, but I think if things break right, his offense alone could put him in the top 8.  IT just wasn't that guy.  Let's see the how the playoffs go and where the Nets pick lands, and hope that the LA pick conveys and that we have things to celebrate.

I appreciate the kind words, and I agree, Danny gambled.

I understand the gamble, but I disagree with it, for the following reasons:

1. IT and Kyrie are remarkably similar players. They're great at scoring, both are roughly average passers, and they're both terrible defensively. Not surprisingly, of all the players in NBA history, IT's first six seasons are most similar to Kyrie's first six years (source: bbr similarity scores).

The gamble is that Kyrie will improve, while IT will regress. That's far from a given, though. IT should have several years of his prime left, and he is an insanely hard worker. When you have an All-NBA player, it's a huge gamble to trade him for somebody who could be better, but also might not fit as well.

2. Injuries. We all know about IT's hip injury. It should be fine, but there are concerns about missed target dates, etc., and labrum tears can be slow to heal. But, in terms of durability, Kyrie was hurt in college, and he's missed on average 10 games per year more than IT. Expecting durability from Kyrie is a gamble.

3. The draft pick. Next year's draft has two guys who many consider to be generational talents. Both guys could be better than Kyrie. Let's say there's a 15% chance of getting one of those two picks. What's the value of a 15% chance of the next Anthony Davis?  There are another three guys or so who project to be all-stars.

4. Character. I don't think there are any real questions about IT or Crowder here. For Kyrie, there's a gamble. He refused to talk to  teammates in the playoffs, he has clashed with teammates in the past, there were rumors several years ago that he was trying to force his way out of Cleveland, and now he demanded to trade to assume a bigger role. There's also the gamble that we do not know if Kyrie can Carrie 18. The Cavaliers were terrible before LeBron, and they were terrible when LeBron sad.

5. The perception among players. I have no idea about this, but it should be factored in. You are starting to see players point out Danny's lack of loyalty. Avery Bradley seemed to do this, Caron Butler did, and of course Ray chimed in. Danny had seemed to put the "Danny is a snake" reputation behind him, but are we starting to see a rehash of it? And does that matter to potential free agents?

#5 is the most concerning to me.  The other one that is at the forefront of my mind is #3, but even if we had a 15% chance of landing one of those guys with the Nets pick, what are the odds that they're better than Kyrie?  30-60% for Porter and 40-70% for Bagley?  Multiply those odds and it looks like roughly a 7-8% chance we whiffed on the next Davis, which isn't great because it's higher than 0, but I can live with single digits... until it actually happens of course.

I am not a Danny apologist.  I am very critical of his drafting because I'm one of those guys that goes on record on Facebook with his picks when the Celtics are on the clock every year.  I'm one of those guys who claims he wanted Giannis, DeAndre Jordan, and some other high upside guys we passed on for college juniors or seniors with limited upside.  It's tougher to be critical of his trades, because he usually wins, but at the time I wasn't high on the Rondo trade or the Perkins trade, among others. 

So I'm not one who blindly follows DA.  Due to my basketball background and career as a data scientist, I'm even cocky enough to actually believe I might be smarter than Danny at times (please don't laugh).  But with this trade, while I was dismayed that the Nets pick was unprotected, I'm at peace with it and saw a lot of logic behind quickly after it happened.  I'm cautiously optimistic, but I can absolutely see where you're coming from.  Let's hope for good health and more of a commitment on D from Kyrie.
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Re: Is Kyrie a superstar? (poll)
« Reply #108 on: August 25, 2017, 11:50:58 AM »

Online Moranis

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We can he can be a Robin but can he be a Batman?

That's the key question.  The game is a lot easier with LBJ on your team.

Agreed.  Roy, I respect your opinions and I'd say 8 or 9 times out of 10 I agree with you on whatever the discussion is, but I think in the case of this Kyrie trade, it's worth taking a step back. 

This trade was a gamble and it relies a ton on luck and speculative forecasting.  Luck about the Nets pick, luck with our Lakers pick conveying, speculation about IT's injury, and speculation that Kyrie will evolve and be better for us than he has been up to this point, which makes his past performance less important to focus on rigidly. 

The Warriors got incredibly lucky after skillfully building their core, with the cap spiking and landing Durant.  I think Danny has realized that his risk tolerance needed to increase if he wanted to be a true title contender, and he thinks really really highly of Kyrie, so he bit the bullet and knows that to some degree he needs luck to get where he needs to go, just like the Warriors needed luck to get where they are.

I would advise you obviously to express your opinion, but to acknowledge that this is a gamble that we don't have the data we need yet (even Danny doesn't).  We should watch how the team starts to gel in the regular season and give it until at least this year's playoffs to see what we can expect of Kyrie moving forward. 

I think he's at absolute worst a top 15 player, but I think if things break right, his offense alone could put him in the top 8.  IT just wasn't that guy.  Let's see the how the playoffs go and where the Nets pick lands, and hope that the LA pick conveys and that we have things to celebrate.

I appreciate the kind words, and I agree, Danny gambled.

I understand the gamble, but I disagree with it, for the following reasons:

1. IT and Kyrie are remarkably similar players. They're great at scoring, both are roughly average passers, and they're both terrible defensively. Not surprisingly, of all the players in NBA history, IT's first six seasons are most similar to Kyrie's first six years (source: bbr similarity scores).

The gamble is that Kyrie will improve, while IT will regress. That's far from a given, though. IT should have several years of his prime left, and he is an insanely hard worker. When you have an All-NBA player, it's a huge gamble to trade him for somebody who could be better, but also might not fit as well.

2. Injuries. We all know about IT's hip injury. It should be fine, but there are concerns about missed target dates, etc., and labrum tears can be slow to heal. But, in terms of durability, Kyrie was hurt in college, and he's missed on average 10 games per year more than IT. Expecting durability from Kyrie is a gamble.

3. The draft pick. Next year's draft has two guys who many consider to be generational talents. Both guys could be better than Kyrie. Let's say there's a 15% chance of getting one of those two picks. What's the value of a 15% chance of the next Anthony Davis?  There are another three guys or so who project to be all-stars.

4. Character. I don't think there are any real questions about IT or Crowder here. For Kyrie, there's a gamble. He refused to talk to  teammates in the playoffs, he has clashed with teammates in the past, there were rumors several years ago that he was trying to force his way out of Cleveland, and now he demanded to trade to assume a bigger role. There's also the gamble that we do not know if Kyrie can Carrie 18. The Cavaliers were terrible before LeBron, and they were terrible when LeBron sad.

5. The perception among players. I have no idea about this, but it should be factored in. You are starting to see players point out Danny's lack of loyalty. Avery Bradley seemed to do this, Caron Butler did, and of course Ray chimed in. Danny had seemed to put the "Danny is a snake" reputation behind him, but are we starting to see a rehash of it? And does that matter to potential free agents?
1. While they put up similar stats, they aren't really all that similar in their actual style of play.  Now maybe some of that is system, but maybe not.  Irving is a much better ball handler than Thomas is, which allows him to do things Thomas can't do (his size helps with that also). 

As for the fit issue, the team is so different that you really don't know how Thomas would fit either, so I think the fit issue is a bit of a wash.  Also, Irving is 3 years younger so it is entirely reasonable project a 3 year longer prime at a minimum, but that takes you to #2 with one guy currently hurt and the other not. 

2.  Irving has basically had 2 injuries that wiped out large portions of multiple seasons, but is currently healthy.  Thomas seems to always have a nagging injury and currently isn't cleared for basketball play.  So I'd put the bigger concern on the currently injured player, which also can reasonably lead to the conclusion that older smaller injured player might have his prime significantly reduced.

3.  15% seems pretty high.  Even if Brooklyn is again the worst team in the league, there is still less than a 50% chance they get a top 2 pick.  And I'm personally of the belief Brooklyn won't even be a bottom 5 team (I was before the trade and there are plenty of posts on here showing this).  Even if 15% is accurate, you can't just assume Bagley or Porter is Anthony Davis.  I mean Wiggins and Parker were supposed to be the next big thing and neither one is as good as Irving and likely never will be.  Say there is a 15% that one of Bagley or Porter is the next Anthony Davis, you then still have to draft the right one (or have that one fall to your pick at 2).  There is just so much uncertainty.

4.  Thomas doesn't have much aside from his constant talking about brinks truck money.  What happens if it became clear he wasn't getting the brinks truck.  Crowder has been complaining a lot and him moving to bench here I think would have caused some issues at some point.  And sure it isn't a good look on Irving not talking to teammates (though no one has really confirmed this is true), but I don't think Irving really wanted a bigger role, he just wanted away from James and the dumpster fire that is Cleveland's management.  Remember he didn't leak the trade demand and thus didn't control the narrative.  And if you look at the teams leaked they included both San Antonio and Minnesota, two places he would be playing at best 2nd fiddle. 

5. I've always had a concern about this.  I think I even made a thread about this a couple years ago before Horford signed stating my concern that Danny's reputation would hinder the teams ability to sign players.  Clearly that hasn't happened yet, but it certainly could at some point. 


That said, you seem to be ignoring the plenty of reasons to make the trade.  First, the obvious Irving is better than Thomas.  Second, Irving is younger than Thomas.  Third, Irving is bigger than Thomas.  Fourth, Irving is signed for 2 years while Thomas is signed for 1.  Fifth, because Thomas is due for a contract next summer, Boston wasn't going to financially be able to keep Thomas and Smart, now Boston can keep Smart if it chooses because of the salary savings in not having the BKN pick, Crowder, and the presumed 5-10 million difference between Thomas and Irving next summer.  Sixth, that salary savings likely allows Boston to avoid the luxury tax next summer (maybe even with Smart coming back), which means the team would be more likely to go into the tax when the team might actually be a contender in a couple of seasons.  Seventh, Irving is the more respected player around the league and the player more likely to be seen as a draw for other free agents.

I'm sure there are other reasons.

At the end of the day I didn't like the inclusion of the Brooklyn pick, but I'm glad Ainge finally picked a direction and Ainge acquired the best player in the trade.  That has to count for something.
« Last Edit: August 25, 2017, 01:02:19 PM by Moranis »
2025 Historical Draft - Cleveland Cavaliers - 1st pick

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Deep Bench - Korver, Turner

Re: Is Kyrie a superstar? (poll)
« Reply #109 on: August 25, 2017, 12:07:57 PM »

Offline Jon

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I don't think he's a transcendent player like LeBron or Larry Legend in the sense I don't think he makes nearly any team a contender simply by being on it.  But I think he can be a Paul Pierce caliber player that can be the go to guy on a championship team if he's surrounded by the right cast.

Now we just need a KG...

Re: Is Kyrie a superstar? (poll)
« Reply #110 on: August 25, 2017, 12:48:53 PM »

Offline hwangjini_1

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We can he can be a Robin but can he be a Batman?

That's the key question.  The game is a lot easier with LBJ on your team.

Agreed.  Roy, I respect your opinions and I'd say 8 or 9 times out of 10 I agree with you on whatever the discussion is, but I think in the case of this Kyrie trade, it's worth taking a step back. 

This trade was a gamble and it relies a ton on luck and speculative forecasting.  Luck about the Nets pick, luck with our Lakers pick conveying, speculation about IT's injury, and speculation that Kyrie will evolve and be better for us than he has been up to this point, which makes his past performance less important to focus on rigidly. 

The Warriors got incredibly lucky after skillfully building their core, with the cap spiking and landing Durant.  I think Danny has realized that his risk tolerance needed to increase if he wanted to be a true title contender, and he thinks really really highly of Kyrie, so he bit the bullet and knows that to some degree he needs luck to get where he needs to go, just like the Warriors needed luck to get where they are.

I would advise you obviously to express your opinion, but to acknowledge that this is a gamble that we don't have the data we need yet (even Danny doesn't).  We should watch how the team starts to gel in the regular season and give it until at least this year's playoffs to see what we can expect of Kyrie moving forward. 

I think he's at absolute worst a top 15 player, but I think if things break right, his offense alone could put him in the top 8.  IT just wasn't that guy.  Let's see the how the playoffs go and where the Nets pick lands, and hope that the LA pick conveys and that we have things to celebrate.

I appreciate the kind words, and I agree, Danny gambled.

I understand the gamble, but I disagree with it, for the following reasons:

1. IT and Kyrie are remarkably similar players. They're great at scoring, both are roughly average passers, and they're both terrible defensively. Not surprisingly, of all the players in NBA history, IT's first six seasons are most similar to Kyrie's first six years (source: bbr similarity scores).

The gamble is that Kyrie will improve, while IT will regress. That's far from a given, though. IT should have several years of his prime left, and he is an insanely hard worker. When you have an All-NBA player, it's a huge gamble to trade him for somebody who could be better, but also might not fit as well.

2. Injuries. We all know about IT's hip injury. It should be fine, but there are concerns about missed target dates, etc., and labrum tears can be slow to heal. But, in terms of durability, Kyrie was hurt in college, and he's missed on average 10 games per year more than IT. Expecting durability from Kyrie is a gamble.

3. The draft pick. Next year's draft has two guys who many consider to be generational talents. Both guys could be better than Kyrie. Let's say there's a 15% chance of getting one of those two picks. What's the value of a 15% chance of the next Anthony Davis?  There are another three guys or so who project to be all-stars.

4. Character. I don't think there are any real questions about IT or Crowder here. For Kyrie, there's a gamble. He refused to talk to  teammates in the playoffs, he has clashed with teammates in the past, there were rumors several years ago that he was trying to force his way out of Cleveland, and now he demanded to trade to assume a bigger role. There's also the gamble that we do not know if Kyrie can Carrie 18. The Cavaliers were terrible before LeBron, and they were terrible when LeBron sad.

5. The perception among players. I have no idea about this, but it should be factored in. You are starting to see players point out Danny's lack of loyalty. Avery Bradley seemed to do this, Caron Butler did, and of course Ray chimed in. Danny had seemed to put the "Danny is a snake" reputation behind him, but are we starting to see a rehash of it? And does that matter to potential free agents?
good points and well argued. tp for the good work. but i would add a couple of points to your discussion. i think another key factor in the trade is ainge seems to have decided that paying the max to IT at age 30 and beyond was not a good decision.

IT has a sensational year, fabulous. but can he repeat it for the next 5 years? i am doubtful. he may have had his career year.

irving? i believe he is more likely to repeat his performances for the next 5 years, and maybe beyond.

i can understand the level of dismay here, and i share it to a degree. i like IT as a human being far more than i do irving. however, let's also realize that IT injury may be the first of many. when IT started became a starter, i voiced my concern over how his type of game and stature scared me.

such a body being pounded by giants repeatedly each night, both on offense and defense. it takes a toll. and while his spirit may be willing each night, his body will eventually protest. is the hip problem simply the foreshadowing of more to come? ainge may have thought this.

final point, i am hopeful the CBS can have irving improve his game by having him play within a system, and, design a system for him to play within. my god, if CBS could turn evan god all mighty turner into a productive nba player, i am willing to trust that CBS has at least an equal chance to make irving better.

better perhaps not in counting stats, but a better as a team player for the celtics.

i hate to lose IT, but the more I read and think about it, the more i can see ainge's reasoning.
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Re: Is Kyrie a superstar? (poll)
« Reply #111 on: August 25, 2017, 01:06:19 PM »

Offline smokeablount

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We can he can be a Robin but can he be a Batman?

That's the key question.  The game is a lot easier with LBJ on your team.

Agreed.  Roy, I respect your opinions and I'd say 8 or 9 times out of 10 I agree with you on whatever the discussion is, but I think in the case of this Kyrie trade, it's worth taking a step back. 

This trade was a gamble and it relies a ton on luck and speculative forecasting.  Luck about the Nets pick, luck with our Lakers pick conveying, speculation about IT's injury, and speculation that Kyrie will evolve and be better for us than he has been up to this point, which makes his past performance less important to focus on rigidly. 

The Warriors got incredibly lucky after skillfully building their core, with the cap spiking and landing Durant.  I think Danny has realized that his risk tolerance needed to increase if he wanted to be a true title contender, and he thinks really really highly of Kyrie, so he bit the bullet and knows that to some degree he needs luck to get where he needs to go, just like the Warriors needed luck to get where they are.

I would advise you obviously to express your opinion, but to acknowledge that this is a gamble that we don't have the data we need yet (even Danny doesn't).  We should watch how the team starts to gel in the regular season and give it until at least this year's playoffs to see what we can expect of Kyrie moving forward. 

I think he's at absolute worst a top 15 player, but I think if things break right, his offense alone could put him in the top 8.  IT just wasn't that guy.  Let's see the how the playoffs go and where the Nets pick lands, and hope that the LA pick conveys and that we have things to celebrate.

I appreciate the kind words, and I agree, Danny gambled.

I understand the gamble, but I disagree with it, for the following reasons:

1. IT and Kyrie are remarkably similar players. They're great at scoring, both are roughly average passers, and they're both terrible defensively. Not surprisingly, of all the players in NBA history, IT's first six seasons are most similar to Kyrie's first six years (source: bbr similarity scores).

The gamble is that Kyrie will improve, while IT will regress. That's far from a given, though. IT should have several years of his prime left, and he is an insanely hard worker. When you have an All-NBA player, it's a huge gamble to trade him for somebody who could be better, but also might not fit as well.

2. Injuries. We all know about IT's hip injury. It should be fine, but there are concerns about missed target dates, etc., and labrum tears can be slow to heal. But, in terms of durability, Kyrie was hurt in college, and he's missed on average 10 games per year more than IT. Expecting durability from Kyrie is a gamble.

3. The draft pick. Next year's draft has two guys who many consider to be generational talents. Both guys could be better than Kyrie. Let's say there's a 15% chance of getting one of those two picks. What's the value of a 15% chance of the next Anthony Davis?  There are another three guys or so who project to be all-stars.

4. Character. I don't think there are any real questions about IT or Crowder here. For Kyrie, there's a gamble. He refused to talk to  teammates in the playoffs, he has clashed with teammates in the past, there were rumors several years ago that he was trying to force his way out of Cleveland, and now he demanded to trade to assume a bigger role. There's also the gamble that we do not know if Kyrie can Carrie 18. The Cavaliers were terrible before LeBron, and they were terrible when LeBron sad.

5. The perception among players. I have no idea about this, but it should be factored in. You are starting to see players point out Danny's lack of loyalty. Avery Bradley seemed to do this, Caron Butler did, and of course Ray chimed in. Danny had seemed to put the "Danny is a snake" reputation behind him, but are we starting to see a rehash of it? And does that matter to potential free agents?
good points and well argued. tp for the good work. but i would add a couple of points to your discussion. i think another key factor in the trade is ainge seems to have decided that paying the max to IT at age 30 and beyond was not a good decision.

IT has a sensational year, fabulous. but can he repeat it for the next 5 years? i am doubtful. he may have had his career year.

irving? i believe he is more likely to repeat his performances for the next 5 years, and maybe beyond.

i can understand the level of dismay here, and i share it to a degree. i like IT as a human being far more than i do irving. however, let's also realize that IT injury may be the first of many. when IT started became a starter, i voiced my concern over how his type of game and stature scared me.

such a body being pounded by giants repeatedly each night, both on offense and defense. it takes a toll. and while his spirit may be willing each night, his body will eventually protest. is the hip problem simply the foreshadowing of more to come? ainge may have thought this.

final point, i am hopeful the CBS can have irving improve his game by having him play within a system, and, design a system for him to play within. my god, if CBS could turn evan god all mighty turner into a productive nba player, i am willing to trust that CBS has at least an equal chance to make irving better.

better perhaps not in counting stats, but a better as a team player for the celtics.

i hate to lose IT, but the more I read and think about it, the more i can see ainge's reasoning.

Agreed, TP.  I mentioned several of these points in other threads and I'm glad you added them into this discussion as well. 

This is such an impactful trade with so many narratives, and we are such a knowledgeable, obsessed and opinionated fanbase, it's hard to list out everything that's in play even in the 30-some page original trade reaction thread.
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Re: Is Kyrie a superstar? (poll)
« Reply #112 on: August 25, 2017, 01:31:45 PM »

Offline mmmmm

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IT has a sensational year, fabulous. but can he repeat it for the next 5 years? i am doubtful. he may have had his career year.

I don't think that's a correct way to look at it.

Isaiah didn't just have a career year.  He had a historically unique year.   No other player has ever posted a scoring efficiency over 60% TS while also carrying a super-heavy USG over 30%, an AST rate over 30% and a turnover rate under 11%.   He also once again joined only Bird and Havlicek in Celtic history with his points and assist totals.

So, when you suggest that you are doubtful that he can repeat it, that's fair.  But it is also fair to doubt that anyone will repeat it.   Because statistically, no one has before.

I doubt Isaiah will ever have a year like that again and I also doubt Kyrie will ever have a year like Isaiah just did.

But the thresholds for whether either player is going to be worth having shouldn't be a historically elite season.  Even if Thomas were to just revert to the numbers he posted the prior few years, that still makes him a 24/6 super-high-efficiency low turnover player and those numbers are max-contract player numbers.    Thomas' per-36 rates and efficiencies have been incredibly consistently high since he entered this league 6 years ago.  If he simply fades over the next 6 years back to the levels he was at as a rookie, he will have accrued more than enough win shares to justify a max contract.

In the case of Irving, if he, too, simply maintains what he's been doing, he'll be worth a max contract signing on his next deal.   But unfortunately for Kyrie, life isn't simply about the dollars.  Because the cost for Irving isn't going to be just the dollars.  The cost for his production also includes the opportunity cost of Jae, Zizic, the BKN18 pick and the net of whatever value we might have gotten from Thomas.

So it is very important for Irving to out-produce Thomas over the next few years by a fairly significant margin in order to justify this trade.

Of course, if Thomas' is unable to come back strong from his hip injury, maybe that threshold isn't too high.  We'll just have to see.
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Re: Is Kyrie a superstar? (poll)
« Reply #113 on: August 25, 2017, 01:41:44 PM »

Offline Androslav

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Fast forward the deal 1 year. Meanwhile we are a top 4 team and we gave up:

1) IT that we don't want to resign, due to injury, defense and age concerns. We can just deduct him from the roster if he walks. It is widely know that IT, though an all star, has small trade value.
2) Replaceable Crowder; as we want to develop 2 no. 3 picks and improve their value. Also we signed the best FA of the summer at his position. Crowder is on a great contract and a starter. He is valuable, but we are talking about Kyrie here, so a lot more assets are needed to match the deal. Like in ITs case, I am affraid Crowders best days are behind him.
3) Brookyn 2018 pick, this is the piece that has the most trade value going Clevelands way. It will surely be a top 10 pick. How high is debatable, I would put it in a 5/7 range, as there will be some pedant tanking, due to top heavy upcoming draft. Chicago, Atlanta, Sacramento/Phoenix, Orlando/Indiana are my 4 candidates to be worse than 5. Keep in mind that the Nets have no incentive to bottom out near the end of the season.
4) Ante Žižić, a 23rd 1st round prospect center that will need some minutes and time to adjust. A year or two perhaps. He won't get minutes this year with Cleveland competing for a title. His value is that of the late 1st round pick.

In return we get:

Kyrie Irving;
1) We are solving the longterm problem at the delicate primary guard position. We got, by pure Kyries will, and by far, the best one on the market. 25 years old is young.
2) An unstopable scorer, closer. We all know of his playoff track record. Our Harden, our Nowitzki, our Paul Pierce, our Kyrie.
3) A respected Allstar and USA player, that has its own worth in baiting the truly best players to Boston. We have two new recruiters there. It will pay its dividends in 2/3 years.
4) Defense is something IT was dreaded for and KYs reputation is not much better. But he has the size, the age and some playoff track record of being decent at times to promise at least some upside there. This is something IT couldn't overcome, size and defensive upside.
5) Kyrie entering prime in the hands of Brad Stevens. If IT's roof got that higher playing under him, I am curious what could he do with Kyrie. So far Brad has never dissapointed.
6) The best player in the deal. That is often a simple yet telling fact.

By the time the summer of the 2018 comes.
I think that this is another great Danny Ainge trade. With higher stakes this time, but solving the longterm primary scorer in the procces. Cleveland got a more than a fair value, but we got what we needed to build a champion.
« Last Edit: August 25, 2017, 01:51:35 PM by Androslav »
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Re: Is Kyrie a superstar? (poll)
« Reply #114 on: August 25, 2017, 01:48:47 PM »

Offline The One

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Go back and watch what he did REPEATEDLY against the Warriors on the biggest stage...

That will give you your answer.


Re: Is Kyrie a superstar? (poll)
« Reply #115 on: August 25, 2017, 02:22:53 PM »

Offline Tr1boy

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Go back and watch what he did REPEATEDLY against the Warriors on the biggest stage...

That will give you your answer.

Exactly

But no ,he is not perfect....so forget him

Re: Is Kyrie a superstar? (poll)
« Reply #116 on: August 25, 2017, 08:56:37 PM »

Offline Spicoli

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I'm leaning towards YES of Irving being a superstar. If Curry is a superstar then so is Irving IMO. Curry breaks the game open with his shooting, while Irving breaks the game open with his dribbling. Curry is the greatest shooter of all time, and Irving is the greatest ball handler of all time. If you have a guy on your team who is the best of all time at a specific skill, then you're probably looking at a superstar or close to it.

Re: Is Kyrie a superstar? (poll)
« Reply #117 on: August 25, 2017, 10:39:24 PM »

Offline chambers

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Some excellent points by Hwang and Androslav here among others. I'm on the pro-Kyrie train myself.

Emotionally this one hurts us all. We've now lost AB, IT and Crowder. It stinks and it sucks.
We have however, replaced those guys with

Hayward
Kyrie
Morris
Tatum

Overall, these are upgrades and make us younger, add more size, and most importantly, they make us a better team.

I'd say Kyrie is now in the tier 2 superstar point guard category with guys like John Wall and Isaiah. He's not on the Curry/Westbrook level yet, but he's also only 25 years old. Kyrie is literally 3 years younger than Isaiah and 2 years younger than John Wall. Think about that for a minute.

This trade was about adjusting our timeline.

The biggest difference between the PG and Butler trades is that Kyrie had 2 full seasons on his deal and he maxes out at 20 million a year whilst being only 25.

He's now going to have one of the best coaches in the NBA teaching him as he enters his prime. He's got a fellow All Star in Hayward of similar age, and he's got a core of young guys like Brown and Tatum who should be excellent complementary pieces, if not stars in their own right within 2-3 years when Kyrie is literally in his prime.

Giving up the Brooklyn pick is the sticking point for a lot of people, but we've basically given up an expiring Isaiah (with injury concerns), an elite role player in Jae, and the Brooklyn pick for a locked up young star who's averaged 28ppg in the last 2 NBA finals series against the greatest NBA team of all time.

Jae is amazing, but his presence just keeps Brown and Tatum on the bench for longer while we wait to trade him for a player like Kyrie. To add my own personal speculation, I don't think he would have appreciated coming off the bench for Hayward and then losing further minutes to Brown or Tatum either over the next 3 years. He was on the way out either way.

Now Brown and Tatum will get legit minutes. Our other young guys like Semi and Nader will even get some burn. This trade extends our championship window to a solid 7 years if we manage to retain Kyrie.
We don't have to sign IT to a Kyle Lowrie contract of 3 years 100 million and hope he makes it through the season without needing hip surgery, wondering if his game will deteriorate in year 2 or 3 of his monstrous deal that's taken up 33% of our cap space.

Most people seem to be overlooking another important factor for Ainge here...this move also lets us re-sign Marcus Smart if we want to at the end of this year, and gives him the opportunity to become the NBA's defensive player of the year with increased minutes and role.

Another factor? Horford will be coming off the books one season after Kyrie is up for a new 5 year deal. That will give us near max cap room for 2 max players (with Kyrie being one of them) and works perfectly with our timeline to re-sign Brown to a max deal or find another star free agent at the time.


Yeah this trade hurts. We've lost a lot of the grit and toughness that we have recently become famous for after losing Bradley, IT and Crowder.
But we got younger, we got taller/bigger and again, we got BETTER.
Our coach installed the grit and toughness and the players bought into it.
That's not going to change because Stevens is a leader. His Butler team was pure grit. He is a defense first, team oriented coach and Kyrie Irving understands this and he wants this. He wants to learn Brad's system and style because he's seen it work. It's why he said he wanted to play for Popovich or Brad.

This move has given us a plan and timeline. We've cleaned house with the veterans that were excellent players but we were probably not ever winning a championship with.
We've got
Kyrie at age 25
Hayward at age 27
Marcus at age 23
Rozier at age 23
Jaylen at age 21 (when season starts, he's currently 20 lol)
Tatum at age 19!!!

with grandpa veteran Horford at age 31.

We are building something here. To get Kyrie Irving at age 25 is a gift from the rafters.
He's 2 years older than Marcus Smart and he's averaged 28 ppg in the NBA finals twice in a row. That is unreal.

Get excited, get pumped and stay patient.
« Last Edit: August 25, 2017, 10:51:29 PM by chambers »
"We are lucky we have a very patient GM that isn't willing to settle for being good and coming close. He wants to win a championship and we have the potential to get there still with our roster and assets."

quoting 'Greg B' on RealGM after 2017 trade deadline.
Read that last line again. One more time.

Re: Is Kyrie a superstar? (poll)
« Reply #118 on: August 25, 2017, 10:48:29 PM »

Offline Phantom255x

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I'm just curious, do people here consider Isaiah Thomas a superstar?

This poll is lopsided for 'Yes' lol...
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Re: Is Kyrie a superstar? (poll)
« Reply #119 on: August 25, 2017, 10:54:48 PM »

Offline Somebody

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We can he can be a Robin but can he be a Batman?

That's the key question.  The game is a lot easier with LBJ on your team.

Agreed.  Roy, I respect your opinions and I'd say 8 or 9 times out of 10 I agree with you on whatever the discussion is, but I think in the case of this Kyrie trade, it's worth taking a step back. 

This trade was a gamble and it relies a ton on luck and speculative forecasting.  Luck about the Nets pick, luck with our Lakers pick conveying, speculation about IT's injury, and speculation that Kyrie will evolve and be better for us than he has been up to this point, which makes his past performance less important to focus on rigidly. 

The Warriors got incredibly lucky after skillfully building their core, with the cap spiking and landing Durant.  I think Danny has realized that his risk tolerance needed to increase if he wanted to be a true title contender, and he thinks really really highly of Kyrie, so he bit the bullet and knows that to some degree he needs luck to get where he needs to go, just like the Warriors needed luck to get where they are.

I would advise you obviously to express your opinion, but to acknowledge that this is a gamble that we don't have the data we need yet (even Danny doesn't).  We should watch how the team starts to gel in the regular season and give it until at least this year's playoffs to see what we can expect of Kyrie moving forward. 

I think he's at absolute worst a top 15 player, but I think if things break right, his offense alone could put him in the top 8.  IT just wasn't that guy.  Let's see the how the playoffs go and where the Nets pick lands, and hope that the LA pick conveys and that we have things to celebrate.
The thing is, we could've gotten Kyrie for less since by the point we were talking every team had been blown out of the water. If the Cavs insisted on such a package we could've waited till Kyrie finally destroys the locker room, then send a pu pu platter for him that Cleveland has to accept (ofc send lower and lower bids periodically to make Kyrie know that we want him). In the meantime, tell Crowder and Thomas that they may get traded and show them the appreciation they deserve instead of shipping them out of the blue, just like Ray leaving us.
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