Well in my opinion to many things have to go the Celtics way in order for this trade to pay off. Your getting 1 extra 1st round pick and we have no idea where that pick is. Anything beyond the #2 pick is usually a huge drop off. If you hit on a player at #4 or past that its a total crap shoot.
Like I said I don't know about these college guys but trading the #1 pick you should be getting something great in return.. not a maybe.
Picks aren't the problem, identifying and drafting talent for the Celtics is.
2012 - Pick 21 Jared Sullinger wasn't half bad but we knew the issues at draft time.
2013 - Pick 13 Kelly Olynyk could have been Giannis Antetokounmpou who went at 15.
2014 - Pick 6 Marcus Smart could have been Dario Saric (12) and if you want to be a real ass, Nikola Jokic was pick 41.
2015 - Pick 16 Terry Rozier has shown glimpses but he's not exactly shown starter calibre potential.
2016 - Pick 3 Jaylen Brown looks a franchise type player.
FTR, the following were picks 1 and 3 in the corresponding drafts:
2012 - Anthony Davis & Bradley Beal
2013 - Anthony Bennett & Otto Porter
2014 - Andrew Wiggins & Joel Embiid
2015 - Karl-Anthony Towns & Jahlil Okafor
2016 - Ben Simmons & Jaylen Brown
Unless pick 1 is a generational talent, Ainge made the right move. There's a heap of talent available in the draft after pick 4 it's more trusting your talent evaluators get it right. Missing on Giannis for Kelly ****ing Olynyk is the one that gripes me. It pissed me off draft day and continues to piss me off until today. Now, if you'd like to argue about the pick protections the Celtics and Philly agreed to, that's a different kettle but I suspect the Lakers will be in the top 5 this season so I'm not too concerned. There's the very real possibility the C's will have 2 top 5 picks next season.