Camden wrote:KG4Ever wrote:I don't think the IT situation is comparable. Brad Stevens has a long time relationship with Hayward and had to fight Utah to get him to sign. Who knows what assurances or promises were made to Hayward to get him to sign. Plus, given the injury Hayward endured, I really don't think they want to deal with any bad PR. Hayward stays in Boston. Boston probably wants to keep both Tatum and Brown as their salaries are very attractive. If Boston wants a deal it will have to fork over Brown or the Sacremento pick and I'm sure we'd ask for both.
Assurances and promises went out the window as soon as he got injured and a better, elite player in the league became available. Everyone knows business is business and people move on. Additionally, Danny Ainge doesn't care about potentially bad PR. He is the ultimate move maker -- no emotions whatsoever, which is probably how it should be. Ainge traded Paul Pierce and Kevin Garnett out of Boston in order to rob Brooklyn of those picks. That move couldn't have been easy from a moral standpoint. Then just a year ago Ainge dealt Isaiah Thomas after a career year in which Thomas led the team to the Eastern Conference Final and was rehabbing from a severe hip injury. Oh, not to mention Thomas' sister died in a car accident during the playoffs and he played the day after. Ainge was brutal in his decision making there. If there's a move that can make the Celtics better, I have no doubt that Ainge is the guy that will make it regardless of morality and PR. Adding Jimmy Butler makes them a no-shit, serious contender to take down the Warriors.
And Brown's salary is attractive now, but he'll be a restricted free agent after next season. That decision is coming soon. They could give Brown the likely $20M+ annually that he'll command and hope he'll be better than Butler down the road or they could flip him before he gets a payday and get an in-his-prime talent and make a real run at a championship. The latter seems like something Ainge would do.
PS: My proposal of Butler, Gibson, and a first-round pick for Hayward and Brown is a pretty good deal for the Wolves all things considered.
Well said, Cam. I'm a bit amused that people actually believe Danny Ainge, with his track record, wouldn't trade Hayward because of some perceived credibility issue. There is no credibility issue. Hayward's agent got his client a very, very lucrative contract. Hayward got paid last season under that contract and the contract will travel with Hayward as part of any trade. Agents understand that the promise is the contract, not an agreement never to trade their client absent a no-trade clause. Note that the contract negotiated with the Celtics did NOT contain a no-trade clause. Hmm. Agents and players know full well that, unless you're LeBron James, you're subject to being traded every year of your career in the NBA. If Ainge things it would help his team win, he'll trade Hayward to any team any time.