For all the speculation surrounding the
Portland Trail Blazers — Monday’s meeting between general manager Joe Cronin,
Damian Lillard and his agent, Aaron Goodwin, only added to the noise — there’s been little chatter of substantive movement for the Blazers outside of Portland’s well-known intention to re-sign versatile forward
Jerami Grant.
The Blazers were resistant to trade the No. 3 overall pick that became Scoot Henderson, league sources told Yahoo Sports, for any return outside of packages that would have netted a select group of second stars to pair with Lillard. Even after dangling the No. 23 pick in last Thursday's draft, Portland stood pat and chose Iowa forward Kris Murray, the identical twin of Sacramento standout
Keegan Murray, who helped the Kings right away as a starter last season. Now Portland appears to be moving forward into the offseason quite similarly to how Brooklyn proceeded last summer following
Kevin Durant’s trade request that came an hour before free agency.
The Blazers don’t appear to be in panic mode to restructure their roster around Lillard. Far from it. Portland officials believe that a strong offseason of additions will further reinforce Lillard’s longstanding commitment to the franchise and essentially call Lillard’s bluff — like the
Nets did with Durant — even if Lillard hasn’t played his trade request trump card just yet — and maybe never will. What additions are coming for Portland is a little more challenging to figure out.
There’s been plenty of other trade conversations across the league, most notably with the
Houston Rockets continuing to gauge rival teams’ interest in young players like K.J. Martin,
Usman Garuba and
Josh Christopher on Tuesday, sources said. The Hawks, as another example, have made well-known contact with various teams about De’Andre Hunter.
The Clippers continue to canvas the league, seeking what a trade package of
Marcus Morris and
Norman Powell can return to Los Angeles, sources said.
But there’s yet to be any type of list forming for teams interested in Portland’s best trade asset at the moment: 24-year-old guard Anfernee Simons, who’s entering the second season of a four-year, $100 million contract. There were brief discussions with Cleveland about Portland forward Nassir Little before the draft unfolded, sources said, but no deal structure ever gained real traction there. An expected increase in league-wide trade calls Wednesday and Thursday before free agency opens Friday night can certainly bring more developments for the Blazers.