Article: The Trail Blazers Are Finally Having the Postseason They’ve Waited For

Welcome to our community

Be a part of something great, join today!

Minstrel

Top Of The Pops
Global Moderator
Joined
Sep 16, 2008
Messages
26,226
Likes
14,407
Points
113
Courtesy of The Ringer:

So this is what it’s like, Portland, to be enough. To be validated. To lead a series 2-0 for the first time in five years, and to do so with Damian Lillard and CJ McCollum and no other star, a duo that has long faced skepticism in—and in the aftermath of—the playoffs. Not to get ahead of myself: No, the Blazers have not advanced to the second round yet. After beating the Thunder 114-94 on Thursday, they’re still a minimum of two games away. Pitted against another two-star team that’s falling short, Portland is, for once, the organization playing up to its potential.

McCollum and Lillard combined for 62 points, 11 assists, 12 rebounds, four steals, two blocks, and just one foul. They sunk more 3s (Lillard shot 4-for-8; McCollum 3-for-7) than OKC did as a team (five), including McCollum’s buzzer-beating trey to close the half, which seemed like the turning point in the game. With five seconds left, Lillard drove right, losing Dennis Schröder along the way, and curled under the basket, drawing the attention of all five defenders. He shot the rock out to McCollum, who was waiting on the perimeter with no one but a leaping Steven Adams to try to close him out. Paul George, McCollum’s defender, slipped watching Lillard whip the ball around. It was like watching two guys hustle five in a pick-up game in real time:



Of course, Portland is playing at this level because of more than just two guys. The Blazers don’t have Golden State depth, Toronto depth, or even full-health Denver depth; what Portland has is a fairly decent group that’s capable of enhancing its two premier players. Seth Curry is a go-to spot-up shooter—he went 3-for-4 from deep—with both Lillard and McCollum on the floor; he can play backup in their absence. Mo Harkless added 14 points; Enes Kanter, who regressed to his mean because of early foul trouble after a huge Game 1 against his former team, contributed six points and five boards in 20 minutes.

Compared to Oklahoma City’s help, Portland’s looked pristine. The Thunder’s prevailing, season-long issue is a lack of shooting; against the Blazers, they shot 17.9 percent from deep. OKC has no perimeter threat without George fully healthy—he was icing his right shoulder before the game, and though he hasn’t verbally indicated anything is wrong, his shooting numbers say enough.

Throughout this season, the Thunder were regarded as a more legitimate threat to the Warriors than the Blazers ever were. Even before Jusuf Nurkic’s season-ending leg injury in March, Portland seemed like it needed another piece to truly compete. Its first-round sweeps in 2018 and 2017 were damning evidence.

But try telling Lillard that this team couldn’t compete in the postseason. He’s been outspoken about Portland’s chances against Western Conference teams—including Golden State—for two years. In 2017, Lillard went on the record saying the Blazers could beat the Warriors just weeks before the Warriors ousted them. The following summer, Lillard argued with a reporter on Twitter who suggested that the organization would be better off waiting out Golden State, that there was no chance for the Blazers during Steph and Co.’s reign of terror in Oakland.

Portland is a ways away from its second-round matchup, let alone the Western Conference finals. At minimum, six games stand between the Blazers and the chance to even contend for Lillard’s vision. While it still seems like a fantasy everywhere except Dame’s head, it’s an idea that’s never been closer to reality.
 
I'm really happy Portland is up 2-0, but for chrissakes, that's only half of the wins needed to win the series and 3 of the remaining 5 games are on the road. Get those two other wins first, then celebrate a little playoff success
 
I'm really happy Portland is up 2-0, but for chrissakes, that's only half of the wins needed to win the series and 3 of the remaining 5 games are on the road. Get those two other wins first, then celebrate a little playoff success
I'm not gonna lie - before they started just getting A WIN in the POs was gonna be cause for celebration. But now that we got a couple I'm not satisfied, and advancing to the 2nd is a must.
 
It's not an article declaring the playoff greatness of the Blazers. It would be too early for that. It's an article about how the Blazers are finally looking as good in the playoffs as they often do in the regular season. That doesn't mean they'll win this series or go further than the second round, it just means that they finally don't look shellshocked and are playing their game well.

Honestly, even something like a 7-game series loss to the Thunder would be something of a success with Nurkic lost for the season. The fact that they're playing smooth, clean basketball in the playoffs finally is worth talking about.
 
I'm really happy Portland is up 2-0, but for chrissakes, that's only half of the wins needed to win the series and 3 of the remaining 5 games are on the road. Get those two other wins first, then celebrate a little playoff success

Who's celebrating? Dame surely isn't.
 
I'm hesitant to point out that the Blazers franchise is presently 14-14 in series when winning the first 2 games...and 14-15 happens to be 93%

Really? I just saw a stat that says only 20 of the 282 7 game series' has been lost by the team up 2-0.
 
Really? I just saw a stat that says only 20 of the 282 7 game series' has been lost by the team up 2-0.
You're not reading @PtldPlatypus' post correctly again. He's agreeing with you that it's 93% (20/282).

The Blazers are 14-0 when going up 2-0.

He's pointing out that if they lose their franchise would also be 93% in that situation but currently are 100%.
 
Really? I just saw a stat that says only 20 of the 282 7 game series' has been lost by the team up 2-0.
That stat is correct. And of those 282, 14 have been the Blazers winning the first 2, and they've won all 14 of those series'. And were they to lose this series, that would drop their win percentage in those situations to 93%.
 

Users who are viewing this thread

Back
Top