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9 days ago

Paul Pierce’s Contract: Dispelling The Myths and Stating The Facts

The first domino to fall this offseason is Paul Pierce’s contract. Until Danny Ainge figures out what he’s doing there, little else matters. As we wait for this decision, we also must face the rest of the offseason, which means it is also rumor season. With that time of year, comes plenty of information floating [...]

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9 days ago

Final Grade: Avery Bradley (C+)

In his third year in the league, in which promising players often make brash leaps from benchwarmer to starter, from starter to star, Avery Bradley took a big step back. But his regression might be deceptive. When he returned to the Celtics’ lineup on January the 2nd after two in-season months recovering from offseason shoulder [...]

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10 days ago

Danny Ainge Expects Doc Rivers & Kevin Garnett To Return, Unsure About Paul Pierce

A long, challenging offseason awaits Danny Ainge this summer. Before he dives in head first, he joined Salk and Holley on WEEI-FM 93.7 to discuss the multitude of decisions facing him this offseason, as well as the progress of Rajon Rondo in his rehab from ACL surgery. A few of the notable highlights from the interview. Ainge [...]

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10 days ago

Suns Hire Away Celtics’ Assistant GM Ryan McDonough

In one way or another, there will be change this offseason in Boston. That process started in the past couple days, with the first piece moving out coming as a name most C’s fans might not be familiar with. Yet, it was Celtics’ assistant general manager Ryan McDonough, one of Danny Ainge’s top lieutenants, who [...]

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11 days ago

Doc Rivers Finishes 13th in Coach of the Year Voting

It was a tough season for the Boston Celtics, and that includes for head coach Doc Rivers. The long-time coach battled to find the right fit for a lot of new pieces that were both underperforming and/or failed to pick up his schemes on both ends of the floor. Naturally, an unfortunate plethora of injuries [...]

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12 days ago

Overconfident Answers To Offseason Questions (Part 1)

It seems like every offseason since 2010 we’ve been through this: a myriad of questions and concerns about the Celtics’ roster that usually involve the possibility of the core of the team being dismantled. As we head into the summer of 2013, we’ve got a whole batch of questions, many of which will be familiar.  [...]

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Joakim Noah’s Value

It’s tough being the Chicago Bulls’ front office lately.  Despite having a solid offseason by plundering the Utah Jazz for two useful players and a semi-superstar (Kyle Korver, Ronnie Brewer, and Carlos Boozer) they now find themselves in a bit of a pickle regarding Joakim Noah.  The mercurial center is undoubtedly productive.  He provides energy, hustle, points, rebounds, and headaches for opposing teams.  Lately, however, the Bulls’ suits are feeling the pain.

It’s been reported that the Chicago Bulls are interested in acquiring Carmelo Anthony from the Denver Nuggets.  Unfortunately, the Nuggets would like a young asset in return- namely Joakim Noah.  The Bulls are reluctant to give up a player with so much potential.  I understand their dilemma.  Carmelo Anthony is a superstar but Joakim Noah plays a role that most teams would covet.  He is a defensive minded center that has an unstoppable motor.  He also has the potential to be great.

What makes their decision even more difficult is that even if they decide they want to keep Noah no matter what, that “no matter what” may end up costing the Bulls 13 million dollars.  Noah is currently in line for a contract extension and right now the negotiations are not close.  The Bulls front office feel Noah is worth 57 million while Noah feels he’s more in the ballpark of 65-70 million dollars, according to Alex Kennedy of HoopsWorld.com.

The real question becomes, “is Joakim Noah really worth 70 million dollars? Is he even worth 65 million dollars?”  Noah is a productive player but to me, no hustle player/ third banana is worth 14 million dollars a year.  14 million dollars is the type of money a proven star earns.  Noah may have the potential to become a dominant post presence in this league, but I would not be comfortable giving him that kind of money.

This all brings me to my larger point.  Why would I spend 300 words discussing Joakim Noah’s contract negotiations?

The answer, my friends, is to remind everyone about just how awesome Danny Ainge is.  Sentence-ending verbs aside, it was nearly one year ago when Ainge locked up a young, budding superstar in Rajon Rondo for a measly 55 million dollars.

Just imagine how the contract negotiations would go this year if Ainge and Rondo had not reached an agreement.  The Celtics did not sign anyone this offseason that did not involve some sort of exception (Bird, Semi-Bird, Veteran’s minimum, Mid-level) so the raw numbers may not have affected the this year’s offseason signings.  That said, it certainly would have affected the salary cap in 2012 when the majority of Celtics’ roster comes off the books.

Rajon Rondo is clearly worth more than Joakim Noah and should be paid as such one way or the other.  Since Rondo has already signed his contract there is no way Noah should get 70 million.  Luckily for the C’s, this is not something with which they have to concern themselves.  They can just sit there and pat themselves on the back knowing that they signed Rajon Rondo for way less money than he is worth.

Just for fun, let’s look at the numbers that are not skewed by position.  Last season, Rajon Rondo had a player efficiency rating of 20.5.  Noah’s was 17.8.  Rondo averaged 14 points per game while Noah chipped in 11.  The only number Noah has in his favor is his long-two shooting percentage (33% for Rondo, 43% for Noah), which is admittedly pretty sad when you consider their respective positions on the court.*

There is really no contest.  Next time you hear any criticism of Danny Ainge, think of the Rajon Rondo signing to put things in prospective.

* All player stats are courtesy of HoopData.com.

**As a bonus, Andray Blatche just recently agreed to a five year, 28 million dollar contract.  Attitude aside, his production is worth way more than 5.6 million dollars a year. If you do not believe me, check out the numbers.

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