Draco
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http://espn.go.com/nba/insider/stor...ard-portland-trail-blazers-making-history-nba
Here's some highlights;
Here's some highlights;
Back before the start of the 2015-16 NBA season, some four months ago, it would have been hard to imagine that a March matchup between the Houston Rockets and Portland Trail Blazers would be key to the playoff race in the Western Conference.
While nobody envisioned back then that Houston would be ninth in the West, outside the playoffs if the season ended today, Portland's relevance was even more difficult to foresee. After losing four starters from last year's team that won 51 games, the Blazers were originally given a line of 26.5 wins at the Westgate SuperBook Las Vegas -- a total they surpassed by beating the Rockets in their last game before the All-Star break.
No team in modern NBA history has rebuilt on the fly quite like Portland. How have the Blazers done it?
Portland could become the second team in the last three-plus decades to make the playoffs, have so much turnover and then return to the playoffs the following season.
The other one deserves a big asterisk. The only reason the 1985-86 Chicago Bulls returned so few starts was because their second-year shooting guard started just seven games due to a broken bone in his foot. As it turned out, that shooting guard's return was pretty important, because his name was Michael Jordan. (The Bulls also won only 30 games that season.)
The Blazers' story is a bit different.
By RPM, Portland has gotten better production from its three newcomers while paying them virtually the same amount combined as Matthews is making this season, as he struggles in Dallas less than a year removed from his Achilles' tendon surgery. The difference enabled the Blazers to take on salary at the trade deadline, acquiring a first-round pick and a second-round pick in return.
Portland's backcourt has drawn comparisons to the Golden State Warriors' duo of Stephen Curry and Klay Thompson. In one regard, the Blazers actually do the Warriors one better. Both Lillard and McCollum are pick-and-roll threats, giving Portland more perimeter balance.
According to Synergy Sports tracking on NBA.com/Stats, Lillard (second) and McCollum (sixth) both rank among the league's leading scorers on pick-and-rolls. In fact, both have outscored Curry (ninth), let alone Thompson (102nd).
The conservative defense Stotts favors tends to force opponents into lower-value shots at the expense of gambling for steals. When the Blazers can also force turnovers, they thrive defensively. Over the last month, their opponents' turnover rate has gone from 28th in the league to third.
Can Portland keep it up?
The friendly schedule will soon come to an end. After hosting Houston tonight, the Blazers will leave the Rose City for a six-game road trip. Altogether, 11 of Portland's next 13 games will be on the road. And eight of those 11 games are against teams that would make the playoffs if the season ended today. We'll know a lot more in a month about whether the Blazers are really the .500 team they've played like all season or the juggernaut they've been of late.
If Portland can survive the next month, the schedule will flip down the stretch. Seven of the team's last nine games are at home, four of those against lottery-bound opposition. And the Blazers might have a cushion to start. If they can beat the Rockets, they'll be three games up on the ninth team in the West with the head-to-head tiebreaker.
As a result, projections using ESPN's Basketball Power Index give Portland a 78.5 percent chance of making the playoffs. FiveThirtyEight's CARM-Elo projections are even rosier, showing the Blazers in the postseason 91 percent of the time.
That makes Portland heavy favorites to defy history and get back to the playoffs with nearly an entirely rebuilt starting five.


