zoyathedestroya wrote:Beal to Lakers then recruits JT after finishing his rehab. JT demands a trade and we get Austin Reaves as new face of the franchise.
And the #1 pick is secretly guaranteed.
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zoyathedestroya wrote:Beal to Lakers then recruits JT after finishing his rehab. JT demands a trade and we get Austin Reaves as new face of the franchise.
CelticFaninLBC wrote:zoyathedestroya wrote:Beal to Lakers then recruits JT after finishing his rehab. JT demands a trade and we get Austin Reaves as new face of the franchise.
And the #1 pick is secretly guaranteed.
jfs1000d wrote:brackdan70 wrote:Jellybeans wrote:The same people who where **** on Dame for his non D and mid seasons now want him here
Right!
We have a full roster and are over the Apron. WTF are we doing here. Is dame going to sign for a two year minimum and do w have a trade in place to get back under the Apron? Thats the only possible logic I can see here, but IDK, it makes very little sense to me. He will be 36 before he is on the court.
That's nuts to me that you don't see it.
24 ppg at 34. One year off on a rehab. Couldnt we expect 16 ppg? Like he isn't getting a foot cut off.
We have plenty of assets to get under apron even further.
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Reported trades that have not yet been made official:
BOS-POR: Holiday for Simons
ATL-BOS-BKN: Porzingis for Mann, Niang
BKN-DEN: Johnson for Porter Jr
DEN-SAC: Saric for Valanciunas
DET-MIA: Fontecchio for Robinson (S&T)
The trades involving the Nets are a bit more complicated, because they'll be renouncing free agents to clear cap space before the trades.
The other deals could be in process. There's always a chance something is being held to expand a deal. We'll see!
yeleven11 wrote:Alright the Holiday and Porzingis trade both not being announced yet is officially in fishy land. What’s going on?
bigfoot_cryptozoology wrote:Ladies and Gentlemen,
Your Boston Celtics Venture Capitalists at work...
SuperDeluxe wrote:yeleven11 wrote:Alright the Holiday and Porzingis trade both not being announced yet is officially in fishy land. What’s going on?
They may still be maneuvering to make them part of larger deals. (For reference, the Durant-to-Rockets deal officially announced today ended up involving a league-record 7 teams.)
Gant wrote:KeithSmithNBA
Reported trades that have not yet been made official:
BOS-POR: Holiday for Simons
ATL-BOS-BKN: Porzingis for Mann, Niang
BKN-DEN: Johnson for Porter Jr
DEN-SAC: Saric for Valanciunas
DET-MIA: Fontecchio for Robinson (S&T)The trades involving the Nets are a bit more complicated, because they'll be renouncing free agents to clear cap space before the trades.
The other deals could be in process. There's always a chance something is being held to expand a deal. We'll see!
yeleven11 wrote:Alright the Holiday and Porzingis trade both not being announced yet is officially in fishy land. What’s going on?
gizardoe wrote:Dont have a good feeling on the new celtic ownership. All 30 of them.
hugepatsfan wrote:Celtics right now are like $300K over the 2nd apron once they process their moves. They will be the 3rd highest payroll team in the whole NBA. The only tow above them are Phoenix, who by all accounts is working on a Bradley Beal buyout and/or trades with Grayson Allen/Royce O'Neale/Nik Richards to duck the 2nd apron themselves, and then the Cavs who project to stay in the 2nd apron. Once the dust settles, unless they make another move, they figure to have the 2nd or 3rd highest team salary in the whole sport, depending on what the exact 2nd apron-ducking moves are for Phoenix. And the Cavs are not a repeat tax offender, so even with a higher team salary the Celtics (and the Suns) are likely going to have higher overall payroll unless they duck the 2nd apron by well more than ether side is set up to right now.
Crying about new ownership being cheap, at this point, seems pretty silly to me. We'll see what happens the rest of the way this offseason and into next. It's possible that they end up ducking the tax this year and next, at which point I think it'd be fair to start sounding some alarms. But even then, if they end up ducking the tax this year (25-26) and next (26-27) but then g back up to league high payrolls in the following years (27-28, 28-29, etc.) then is it even being cheap or is it just concentrating a still high level of spending all in the same years to try and have a true championship team once as opposed to being annually close to that?
I just think people are jumping the gun here with the ownership criticism.
Smart2Nesmith43 wrote:hugepatsfan wrote:Celtics right now are like $300K over the 2nd apron once they process their moves. They will be the 3rd highest payroll team in the whole NBA. The only tow above them are Phoenix, who by all accounts is working on a Bradley Beal buyout and/or trades with Grayson Allen/Royce O'Neale/Nik Richards to duck the 2nd apron themselves, and then the Cavs who project to stay in the 2nd apron. Once the dust settles, unless they make another move, they figure to have the 2nd or 3rd highest team salary in the whole sport, depending on what the exact 2nd apron-ducking moves are for Phoenix. And the Cavs are not a repeat tax offender, so even with a higher team salary the Celtics (and the Suns) are likely going to have higher overall payroll unless they duck the 2nd apron by well more than ether side is set up to right now.
Crying about new ownership being cheap, at this point, seems pretty silly to me. We'll see what happens the rest of the way this offseason and into next. It's possible that they end up ducking the tax this year and next, at which point I think it'd be fair to start sounding some alarms. But even then, if they end up ducking the tax this year (25-26) and next (26-27) but then g back up to league high payrolls in the following years (27-28, 28-29, etc.) then is it even being cheap or is it just concentrating a still high level of spending all in the same years to try and have a true championship team once as opposed to being annually close to that?
I just think people are jumping the gun here with the ownership criticism.
There's like two dozen people in the ownership group. We know they are all interested in owning an NBA team otherwise they wouldn't be there but also nobody structures a deal that complex with that many people in it unless they have to. Which means they didn't have the money to afford the team with fewer investors. Which means they don't have the money to shell out for high payrolls either. Even if they did, the biggest investor being a PE firm that cares zero for championships because they don't appear on balance sheets tells you everything you need to know about where their priorities are.
Yes they'll pay a ton this year but they aren't stupid, they knew that going in and that was priced in accordingly. The aprons restricting the Celtics flexibility and the salary matching rules made it difficult to scale back spending too much in one summer but this is just the beginning. They are already cutting corners everywhere they can, including trying to underpay their first round draft pick.
If y'all are mad when players leave for a better paycheck elsewhere then y'all should be mad at Grousbeck for selling out the Celtics to a terrible ownership group when he had other slightly less lucrative offers on the table from better ownership groups.
bigfoot_cryptozoology wrote:Ladies and Gentlemen,
Your Boston Celtics Venture Capitalists at work...
Here's a more detailed look:
Bill Chisholm:
.
While not originally from Boston, Chisholm has developed strong ties to the city and is a passionate Celtics fan.
Bruce Beal Jr.:
.
Beal, part of the new ownership group, comes from a prominent Boston real estate family.
Aditya Mittal:
.
Mittal, CEO of ArcelorMittal, is another key investor with family ties to Harvard University and a long-standing connection to Boston.
Wyc Grousbeck:
.
The current lead governor, Grousbeck, will remain involved in the team's operations for at least the next three years as part of the transition.
Other Investors:
.
Chisholm has been "curating" a group of around two dozen investors, including individuals with ties to Boston.
Sixth Street:
This private equity firm will be a silent partner in the ownership group.
winsomme2 wrote:Smart2Nesmith43 wrote:hugepatsfan wrote:Celtics right now are like $300K over the 2nd apron once they process their moves. They will be the 3rd highest payroll team in the whole NBA. The only tow above them are Phoenix, who by all accounts is working on a Bradley Beal buyout and/or trades with Grayson Allen/Royce O'Neale/Nik Richards to duck the 2nd apron themselves, and then the Cavs who project to stay in the 2nd apron. Once the dust settles, unless they make another move, they figure to have the 2nd or 3rd highest team salary in the whole sport, depending on what the exact 2nd apron-ducking moves are for Phoenix. And the Cavs are not a repeat tax offender, so even with a higher team salary the Celtics (and the Suns) are likely going to have higher overall payroll unless they duck the 2nd apron by well more than ether side is set up to right now.
Crying about new ownership being cheap, at this point, seems pretty silly to me. We'll see what happens the rest of the way this offseason and into next. It's possible that they end up ducking the tax this year and next, at which point I think it'd be fair to start sounding some alarms. But even then, if they end up ducking the tax this year (25-26) and next (26-27) but then g back up to league high payrolls in the following years (27-28, 28-29, etc.) then is it even being cheap or is it just concentrating a still high level of spending all in the same years to try and have a true championship team once as opposed to being annually close to that?
I just think people are jumping the gun here with the ownership criticism.
There's like two dozen people in the ownership group. We know they are all interested in owning an NBA team otherwise they wouldn't be there but also nobody structures a deal that complex with that many people in it unless they have to. Which means they didn't have the money to afford the team with fewer investors. Which means they don't have the money to shell out for high payrolls either. Even if they did, the biggest investor being a PE firm that cares zero for championships because they don't appear on balance sheets tells you everything you need to know about where their priorities are.
Yes they'll pay a ton this year but they aren't stupid, they knew that going in and that was priced in accordingly. The aprons restricting the Celtics flexibility and the salary matching rules made it difficult to scale back spending too much in one summer but this is just the beginning. They are already cutting corners everywhere they can, including trying to underpay their first round draft pick.
If y'all are mad when players leave for a better paycheck elsewhere then y'all should be mad at Grousbeck for selling out the Celtics to a terrible ownership group when he had other slightly less lucrative offers on the table from better ownership groups.
I agree with a lot of what you’re saying but a PE firm caring ONLY about the bottom line isn’t necessarily a bad thing for a sports team.
The Celtics aren’t the Red Sox where the stadium will sell out regardless of how the team is playing. If this team turn mediocre and it’s clear that it’s not just a rebuild and is due to crappy owners, fans won’t go, the local media will kill them, and fans will boo. That’s not going to make for a profitable enterprise.
chrisab123 wrote:winsomme2 wrote:Smart2Nesmith43 wrote:There's like two dozen people in the ownership group. We know they are all interested in owning an NBA team otherwise they wouldn't be there but also nobody structures a deal that complex with that many people in it unless they have to. Which means they didn't have the money to afford the team with fewer investors. Which means they don't have the money to shell out for high payrolls either. Even if they did, the biggest investor being a PE firm that cares zero for championships because they don't appear on balance sheets tells you everything you need to know about where their priorities are.
Yes they'll pay a ton this year but they aren't stupid, they knew that going in and that was priced in accordingly. The aprons restricting the Celtics flexibility and the salary matching rules made it difficult to scale back spending too much in one summer but this is just the beginning. They are already cutting corners everywhere they can, including trying to underpay their first round draft pick.
If y'all are mad when players leave for a better paycheck elsewhere then y'all should be mad at Grousbeck for selling out the Celtics to a terrible ownership group when he had other slightly less lucrative offers on the table from better ownership groups.
I agree with a lot of what you’re saying but a PE firm caring ONLY about the bottom line isn’t necessarily a bad thing for a sports team.
The Celtics aren’t the Red Sox where the stadium will sell out regardless of how the team is playing. If this team turn mediocre and it’s clear that it’s not just a rebuild and is due to crappy owners, fans won’t go, the local media will kill them, and fans will boo. That’s not going to make for a profitable enterprise.
When John Carroll was the interim head coach I remember a game I went to in college where there had to be like 4,000 people and they were all rooting against the Celtics. Celtics always have a risk of dropping to 4th in the Boston sports pecking order. Depends on how garbage this new ownership is but Chisholm better not be anything like Paul Gaston.