KingSpeed
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Yeah, me too.Ok let me sum up the reasons to keep CJ according to that wonderful piece.
- Great scorer (really bad on defense)
- Good in community (that's great...I'll be nice in the community, try not getting blown out by the Nuggets)
- No need for a panic trade (over a 1/3 of the way through the season and 1.4 of the 20 point losses in the league belong to the Blazers)
Really convinced me.

You are right.It makes more sense to trade Lillard IMO. He has a lot more trade value and CJ is a lot more efficient.
I'm not for trading either though.
It makes more sense to trade Lillard IMO. He has a lot more trade value and CJ is a lot more efficient.
I'm not for trading either though.
Their on court value MIGHT be debatable, but their value to the team and the city cannot. There is no way to get equal value in return for Dame. CJ is a different story imo
Dame is our Curry, CJ is our Ellis... it's clear that if either of the two are traded, it needs to be CJ.
I'm okay with trading CJ IF we get a huge need met.
I just don't see how you can trade either right now. First, Stotts needs to change his scheme and hire a defensive expert as assistant coach. If that doesn't work, you fire the head coach and hire a defensive minded guy. If that doesn't work, you do everything to get a premier rim-protector. If that's not enough, you get rid of more of the other guys and find better defensive players to surround them.I mean...if someone made a gigantic offer for Lillard, at least on paper it makes a lot of sense.
We should make clear, though, that McCollum simply isn't as good. He's actually a bit less efficient than Lillard, though both are hyper-efficient (Lillard has a .607 TS%--which accounts for threes and free throws--while McCollum has a .592 TS%), they have similar Turnover Rate (despite Lillard having a larger Usage Rate) and McCollum isn't in Lillard's neighborhood for Assist Rate. Beyond all of that, Lillard is the closest thing to Steph Curry in terms of having unlimited, scheme-busting range. McCollum is a great shooter, Lillard can hit shots that can't be credibly defended.
That said, there's reason to believe that McCollum could grow into more if given the lead role. He'll never be Lillard as a shooter, most likely, but he can probably up his play-making for others if he was the main initiator. He could probably provide 80-90% of Lillard, which is really good.
But since Lillard provides the type of unguardable long-range scoring that only Curry and perhaps Durant can offer, a team might be willing to pay a premium for Lillard that McCollum would never generate. Portland can better absorb the loss of Lillard with McCollum there as a replacement and if you get a Godfather return...
The problem is what that might do in the locker room unless you're getting back a top-five superstar, which you wouldn't be. Maybe you deal with that blowback. It would certainly create shockwaves in Portland. I don't know what kind of offer makes sense, but I am pretty sure that--at least on paper--there could be a circumstance where you keep McCollum and trade Lillard. Keep the almost-Lillard and get a Lillard-premium return.
There's nothing inherently wrong with the scheme, it's a fairly conservative approach that values taking away high value shots and tries to limit opponents to long two-pointers (the least valuable shot in basketball). The same personnel (more or less) executed this very same scheme a year ago to "average" results. The bottom line is that even if they adopted your approach, how are they supposed to get these supposedly superior defensive players (who can also shoot) without giving up anything of value? The Blazers roster isn't exactly inspiring other GMs to sell the farm to get ahold of our underachieving, one-trick pony players like Crabbe, Leonard, etc.I just don't see how you can trade either right now. First, Stotts needs to change his scheme and hire a defensive expert as assistant coach. If that doesn't work, you fire the head coach and hire a defensive minded guy. If that doesn't work, you do everything to get a premier rim-protector. If that's not enough, you get rid of more of the other guys and find better defensive players to surround them.
You really think the Blazers can Win a championship with Lillard and CJ up top?It makes more sense to trade Lillard IMO. He has a lot more trade value and CJ is a lot more efficient.
I'm not for trading either though.
There's nothing inherently wrong with the scheme, it's a fairly conservative approach that values taking away high value shots and tries to limit opponents to long two-pointers (the least valuable shot in basketball). The same personnel (more or less) executed this very same scheme a year ago to "average" results. The bottom line is that even if they adopted your approach, how are they supposed to get these supposedly superior defensive players (who can also shoot) without giving up anything of value? The Blazers roster isn't exactly inspiring other GMs to sell the farm to get ahold of our underachieving, one-trick pony players like Crabbe, Leonard, etc.
If the goal is a more balanced roster then CJ and Damian are probably always going to be a problem that no amount of coaching, scheming, or ancillary trades are ever going to remedy -- A team's two best players can't be this shit at defense and ever expect to do a damn thing.
You really think the Blazers can Win a championship with Lillard and CJ up top?
Dame is our Curry, CJ is our Ellis... it's clear that if either of the two are traded, it needs to be CJ.
I'm okay with trading CJ IF we get a huge need met.
CJ is way better than Ellis was and is. Send CJ to Orlando or Brooklyn and he's an All Star. Ellis has been a journeyman since GS traded him.
CJ is way better than Ellis was and is. Send CJ to Orlando or Brooklyn and he's an All Star. Ellis has been a journeyman since GS traded him.
Their situation is entirely different. They also had Klay Thompson. We do not. And we've been to playoffs. They had not.He is, I'm not denying that. I'm strictly speaking in terms of their situation, my friend.
Their situation is entirely different. They also had Klay Thompson. We do not. And we've been to playoffs. They had not.
A top 3 backcourt in the league? Most definitely. They just need the right pieces around them and a better scheme.You really think the Blazers can Win a championship with Lillard and CJ up top?
Are they really, though, when defense is considered?A top 3 backcourt in the league? Most definitely.
and is perhaps CJ's "efficiency" related to the fact that Lillard commands so much attention?It makes more sense to trade Lillard IMO. He has a lot more trade value and CJ is a lot more efficient.
I'm not for trading either though.
Make no mistake, CJ is a very gifted offensive player in his own right; he'd "get his" on most teams and in most situations. The trouble is that he and Lillard are both ball-dominant guards that prefer to shoot off the dribble. This tends to make the offense look a lot more one-dimensional than it should and it's the kind of offense that good defensive teams (ergo playoff teams) tend to be able to mute or take away with enough time to scheme and gameplan (like in the playoffs). If CJ and Damian, or just one of them, was a plus defender then it might be salvageable . . . but it is a problem. A big problem that isn't going to magically get better with a new coach or a few new faces thrown in around them.and is perhaps CJ's "efficiency" related to the fact that Lillard commands so much attention?
In this analogy, seems like CJ is Cash and Stennett is Crabbe. Question is, who is the Ken Brett in this scenario?Back in the olden days, the Pittsburgh Pirates had two phenomenal second basemen. Dave Cash was the established starter, but they had Rennie Stennett, an up and coming youngster with star written all over him.
The Pirates traded Cash to the Phillies (for Ken Brett) so Stennett could be the full time second baseman. Their reasoning was that Cash brought more back in trade because he was the better, more established, player. Brett was an all-star his first season with the Pirates.
The World Series champion (with Cash the year before) Pirates won the NL East in Stennett's first season, and again in his second. The Pirates won the East for several more seasons with Stennett.
Cash went on to make the all-star team 3 times, his first three seasons with the Phillies. The Phillies went from 3rd in the East to 2nd to 1st in those three seasons. That was a great Phillies team.
The moral of that story is on the sport alone, you'd trade the better of the two because you get more in return.
But I go with Dame being the heart and soul of this team, no matter who his teammates might be. He's important to the fans and the city as well.
If, and only if, one of the two is to be dealt, I'd have to be overwhelmed to deal Dame, but would be somewhat willing to trade CJ if the deal makes sense.
Crabbe is no star, and will never be a star.In this analogy, seems like CJ is Cash and Stennett is Crabbe. Question is, who is the Ken Brett in this scenario?
In this analogy, seems like CJ is Cash and Stennett is Crabbe. Question is, who is the Ken Brett in this scenario?
Yes. One player has more if an impact on offense than defense, especially as a guard. If you put Avery Bradley and Tony Allen in the backcourt they'd still suck.Are they really, though, when defense is considered?
Not arguing one way or the other, just asking.
