Banks2Pierce wrote:soxfan2003 wrote:And let's face it, the only way that a huge salary for an aging IT can even begin to be justified is he is the teams leading scorer and getting 25+ PPG.
I don't get the logic of a statement like this. It's about the team's whole salary structure and not just zooming in on one piece. Cleveland is paying Tristan 17m a year because the alternative was that he would walk and leave them with vet mins/buyouts. You can justify paying a guy over market or for his decline if you have the right situation. It's not a vacuum argument. Also very dependent on ownership's tax willingness. They have no doubt been banking the last 5+ seasons, but that doesn't always mean they'll cut big checks if/when we're a repeat tax team.
I think it's likely that Isaiah's next contract is in Boston, but that's still dependent on this FA/draft/trades. Just think the deck's stacked in our favor to be the next contender and IT's probably the 1b offensive option from 2017-2019 in most of those scenarios. Will fall off, but I think we can manage it.
Cleveland has Lebron James which is a player that gives them about 85-100 million of value for an average of 34 million or whatever he is paid. They have a few lowly paid ring chasers. Irving/Love are not truly great players IMHO but are on team friendly deals right now. Tristan is actually a good role player who signed a 5 year deal paying him 16.4 million a year. It did seem high at the time but thanks to the cap increase is a reasonable deal. In building a championship team, I'd rather have TT at 16.4 million a year on a 5 year deal when he was signed than IT at 30 million on his next one. TT was signed for his prime/peak years and IT will be on his decline years during his next deal.
I don't think Boston can take down Cavs and GS within the next 3 years unless they trade away IT or get him on a deal that pays him as a bench guy. Math doesn't add up.
Fans have to acknowledge Wyc won't pay a huge tax luxury tax. Very few owner's nowadays do. This means signing IT to max slot or even near max slot for 2017-18 season has immediate real consequences. Realistically it means getting rid of a couple of rotation players not named Crowder. Bradley and Smart haven't played that well in this series but Boston probably not even in this series without them helping out against Bulls. Realistically speaking they would have to be gone if they get could offers from other teams. Or C's could choose to get rid of KO/Smart and choose to go into next year without Amir as well. KO played well vs Bulls.
I agree with you that its about the teams whole salary structure but Horford the year after next year probably won't be as good as he is now. Same with IT.
60 million for IT/Horford in 2017-18 is roughly half the cap before the luxury tax kicks in. Even factoring in the rookies and possible signing of someone like Hayward, really makes it close to impossible to compete for a championship unless that last max roster spot is filled with a Lebron clone or K Leonard.
IT may want a 4 year deal and it would run from 2018-19, 2019-20, 2020-2021 and 2022-23. Horford's deal if he opts in and I believe he will should pay him a max slot until 2020-21 when he will be 33.
It is to early to tell for sure but I see J Brown's realistic upside capped at perhaps the level of current J. Butler. And he obviously may not reach that if he ever does for another 3-4 years.
I am not the first to state it on this forum and I am no genius basketball analysis for suggesting it but just chances are the contributions of the 2016-2018 picks won't be high enough in the _short term_ to put the Celtics over the top while IT/Horford are leading the Celtics. Ainge will probably be drafting college freshman and not college junior/seniors that historically have been more able to make significant immediate contributions.
If K. Leonard was the Celtics best player and George was the 2nd best player more realistic that those picks put the Celtics over the top against Cavs and allow the C's to compete with the Warriors.
Celtics current plan may work in a league without Lebron and in a league without Golden State but I don't see it working against those teams without a ridiculous amount of luck.
76ers in all honestly probably have a better chance to win a championship in the next 5-6 years than the Celtics do if they sign IT at the max.
It is not Ainge's fault or at least not a huge fault of his that KD signed with Golden State but it is his fault if he pretends that teams like Golden State and Cavs are both likely to go away over the next 2 years.
And if the Celtics are seriously competing over the next two years, it does beg the question, why keep IT when his trade value is probably at an all time high?
I don't think the Celtics should be playing to become the 3rd to 5th best team in the mid 80's when teams like LA and Boston are dominating.