HartfordWhalers wrote:Homerclease wrote:HartfordWhalers wrote:
They were essentially the same team in net rating, going from +3.0 to +3.1.
One team won 49 games and got bounced in the first round. The other won 53 and made it to the eastern conference finals. LMFAO at the net rating arguement.
I think this summarizes very nicely how incredibly differently we view some things.
And I think your view might be a bit myopic and shortsighted.
The Celts are between 2nd and 5th best in a league where only one team matters. They are already this good despite being a rebuilding team that is playing for the long-term. If they felt like it, they could be 2nd best by a mile with a wave of their hand. That's an unbelievable, and unprecedented thing for a rebuilding team to say. All pretty similar to the Patriots being 13-3 while rebuilding their defense 4-5 years ago. And if the Ws slip at all, they are likely better-positioned than anyone else to make the moves that are a kill shot on them.
The point right now isn't to "address rebounding issues" (which you strangely seem to think Amir was good at). Again, that is something they can do with a wave of their hand. It's also incredibly unimportant in the scheme of things in a year where they are not contending, and a "weakness" they strangely share with lot of other top teams.
Even in the short-term of assessing an offseason, my concerns for Boston or anyone else are long-term. I am far less worried about roster fit/balance, rebounding and RAPM and net ratings for a work in progress. That's trees, not forest.
The bigger question is whether they are doing the structural things that will put them closer to a potential championship someday. In Boston's last two offseasons, that's absolutely the case. Adding Horford and Hayward simply with cap room they hoarded for a couple of years is pretty optimal, actually. I would say the same of getting a future likely top 5 pick just for trading down to take a guy they wanted anyways. It might work out for Philly too, but that's a phenomenal trade on our end.
Maybe you grade on the curve, I dunno. But I will take our offseason all day over Houston's. They did fine in their own right, but whether they get Melo or not, they are now all-in on pretending to contend over the next 1-2 seasons before it all falls apart. The moves Ainge had made, including this offseason, have us poised to be legit contenders for 5-10 years starting in 2018-19 or so. Rockets offseason was sizzle to our steak. Even if they finish above us this year. Even if they do better in net rating or grab more rebounds this year.