BigHustle wrote:This makes no sense. Danny left. Kid stayed gainfully employed for a few years. Natural talent. What am I missing?
beefman wrote:you're not missing something, the other guy is
Let me explain this a bit further. I’m not going to waste too much of my energy trying to explain the topic.
Danny hired his own son, Austin, when he was head of Basketball Operations in Boston. When Austin’s only prior experience was a short stint as an assistant coach at Southern Utah University. This is where he got the leg up aka Nepo flag #1. Austin first started coaching Boston’s G-League team before moving into the Celtics front office. Like a lot of Nepo Babies, it’s the initial hiring that get’s their career going... They can earn the rest. It’s the doors they have available that others don’t that gives them privilege…
And now, Danny has hired his son away from Boston, where his credentials were in Scouting to become President of Basketball Operations. That is a giant step up! Not saying it doesn’t happen but it raises Nepo flag #2. A strong argument can be made that this is nepotism, he’s gotten his most significant hires from his dad.
The thing about nepotism, especially in the public space, is that it’s never quite conclusive to outsiders. A kid grows up around their parents, they see them operate, they tend to imitate them. They can often be around them in professional closed door environments. That level of insight is not available to the average person. That’s privilege. That, though, doesn’t in itself lead to nepotism. It’s largely when they are able to benefit from it professionally or through opportunity by bypassing normal formalities.
Being a Blazer fan isn't exactly healthy.