Agree or disagree?
In my opinion, I don't see how this is a discussion. Nearly every trade and signing by Ainge yielded a positive impact on this season's win total with the exception of Pollard. Not to mention, Ainge trusted Rondo to be the full time starter at point guard after a promising rookie year. And the acquiring from Seattle the draft rights to Davis helped to round out a solid bench. Pruitt could be a good player in time or a future trade chip. Like Pollard, he hasn't added much to the team overall. Nevertheless, he's a young chip and the team is afforded time to bring him along slowly if he's a part of the team long term. Lastly, I'm uncertain of who hires those on Rivers' coaching staff. But, kudos to Rivers and/or Ainge for hiring Thibodeau if that factors into this argument for Executive Of The Year as well.
My vote goes to Danny Ainge without hesitation.
Note: That first point is weak. He found a way to keep Kobe happy. Huh? And what the hell did Ainge do by acquiring both Ray Allen and Garnett in separate trades? I say, that trumps the Lakers acquiring Gasol via trade any day. I mean Kobe, like LeBron, still has to score like a hundred points in order for the team to win games more times than he might want to. But, yet Boston and teams in the western conference should be concern about the Lakers. Blah. No, I get what the writer's saying... But, that point isn't that valid that you can use that to begin your argument in favor of Kupchak without some Celtics fans thinking: And what of Pierce's feelings on his future as a Boston Celtic after they'd missed out on the top two players in last year's draft. Remember those rumors or rumbling in the media about Paul wondering about his future in Boston prior to Ainge getting Ray Allen. Many felt uncomfortable before all knew what would come later as help for Paul. And boy did it come...
Executive of the Year race
Here is my ranking of the leading candidates for NBA Executive of the Year (the award is voted on by front-office officials):
1. Mitch Kupchak, Lakers: Found a way to keep Kobe Bryant and make him happy, in what looked not long ago like an either-or situation.
2. Danny Ainge, Celtics: The two biggies (Kevin Garnett, Ray Allen) get all the attention, but the moves that brought some role players were critical too.
Here's where Kupchak is, whether he likes it or not: challenging Boston's Danny Ainge as the favorite for NBA Executive of the Year (see chart above). If the Celtics' boss deservedly cleared space on his bookcase for the award through the season's first half -- a 34-7 seal of approval stamped on his offseason acquisitions of Kevin Garnett, Ray Allen and others -- Kupchak has pulled even with about a quarter of the schedule left. In a tougher conference, with Bryant's trade demands as a loaded gun to his head, he has matched and maybe even surpassed Ainge's impressive work.
The Lakers are good to go for a deep playoff run this spring and they're set up for seasons to come with their deep, talented and young roster. By the time Boston's facelift, in a year or two, starts looking Joan Rivers-ian, Kupchak's crew figures to still be pert and lively.
http://sportsillustrated.cnn.com/2008/w ... index.html