Fencer reregistered wrote:After years of preserving optionality, the Celtics may have gotten themselves committed to a single strategy.
-- They don't have an MVP candidate or a likely path to getting one.
-- They do have 5 very, very good players ...
-- ... each of whom is making an 8-digit salary ...
-- ... none of whom is a center ...
-- ... who collectively have a lot of positional versatility.
-- They have been reminded that team chemistry matters a LOT, at least when attempting to play in styles that the coaching staff has determined are appropriate for this group of players.
-- They have a deep set of currently cheap role players who started the season with 0-2 years of experience in the league, a bunch of whom either or or look like they soon may be contributors.
Put all that together, and the only reasonable strategy may be Stay The Course! It's hard to trade for impactful players without greatly damaging what's already in place. The kinds of schemes this roster structure seem to call for seem pretty well suited for today's league. Depth and chemistry fit well with high-energy play which fits well with team-first play which fits well with the lack of transcendent stars.
And by the way -- we think of Red as this great wheeler-dealer because of how he put the 80s team together. But really, almost all his important players were guys he developed from their rookie season. Chief and DJ were major trade acquisitions, as we some major 80s reserves (Wedman, Walton). But who else? He traded or otherwise cleverly maneuvered for the draft rights to Russell, Bird, McHale and Ainge. He lucked into Cousy. But he did get all those guys as rookies (I think even Cooz).
Obviously, that was before the free agency era. Ainge already got one championship by trading for two obvious HoFers the same offseason, and even the current Celtics have two all-star-caliber players who arrived via FA. But the idea of proceeding from here mainly via internal development has a lot of historical merit.
Stay the course for sure....but with Hayward, Tatum, Brown, Smart and Romeo all best suited to 2/3 ... and plenty of depth there with Grant, Green.... I think we should try to balance the roster by getting a much better swing PF than Semi who has more length than Grant. If we can somehow swap one of our talented wings for a talented 4 in the mold of Siakam .... even if that guy is also not a future HOFer but just very good.....I think this team can have a really fun 4-8 year run.
Tatum, Hayward and Brown together is just killing it this year together. Their offensive and defensive rating together is off the charts. But when one of Brown or Hayward is out, the team doesn’t miss a beat. It means Danny can afford to make a move of a great one comes along or can stand pat.
"I think the criticism's stupid," Stevens said. "So I don't care. I'm with Jaylen (Brown) on that. Those two had achieved more than most 25 and 26 year olds ever had. I'd rather be in the mix and have my guts ripped out than suck."