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I think they are are capable of beating the team that won in New Orleans tonight.Don’t tell me we’re beating the Grizz too
I know I'm gonna get killed for this because there's no way of knowing for sure either way but we definitely will have a lot better shot at it if Ja isn't playing... and I still won't know just how real this win streak is if we get another win with the opponent's all star sitting out. I really want to win this game and I really want Ja to be playing in it.Don’t tell me we’re beating the Grizz too
First of all, its impossible for us to beat the Grizzlies tonight because we play them tomorrow. They play tonight and then they play us tomorrow.
But I sort of agree with Eric on his point though. The Blazers have 3 quality wins in a row and those teams were trying to win. LeBron and Davis wanted to win and the two of them alone should trump whatever else is on these rosters. Middleton was trying to carry the load offensively, he won a title with Jrue but we shut him down.
I don't see you posting a bunch of reasons about why our prior losses had factors assisting the opponent, in that case the Blazers just suck. So why do the wins need to discount our opponent?
The Knicks are a 5 game winning streak from contending for home court in the east.I don't necessarily disagree with the philosopy. I just wanted to set the Laker win off to the side because the Lakers have lost 8 of their last 10, and one of those wins was against the Blazers. Lakers are one of the worst teams in the league right now and I would not call that a quality win. I also would not call the Knicks win a quality win. They have close to the same record at Portland, but have lost 6 of their last 7, 9 of their last 11, and 12 of their last 15. They suck right now, maybe worse than the Lakers.
The Bucks win was the only quality win of the three, IMO, even with Giannis not playing. I didn't hear the reason he didn't play...?
So you hate when someone shortchanges a win and then go on the shortchange a win?I hate it when people shortchange wins because of the opponent. It’s like wins only matter if we beat the Suns who, by the way, we beat by 29 though we were a different team then.
The Milwaukee Bucks have gone 11 games without a quality win. They lost to Phoenix , Denver , and Cleveland in those 11 games (and Portland). Does that mean anything much?
I don't understand why people are arguing that we need to have quality wins against the top playoff teams at full strength? Do @blazerkor and @wizenheimer actually think anyone is debating about the Blazers being a contender this year?
That was what I saw and was so excited about when we played Phoenix in game 2--so much penetration and attacking the rim. It seemed like that was going to be Chauncey-ball's calling card, but then it slowly dried up.I'm going to make the argument that the Blazers shooting is sustainable to a degree, because the shots they are taking aren't being taken in a vacuum. I'm looking at how they get those shots and who's taking them.
One thing about the way the Blazers have approached the past few games is they aren't following the crowd in how they generate their 3s, or even their shots. They look more like an old-fashioned NBA team. They push the pace a lot but not looking specifically to generate 3s. For the most part, not always, but the most part, the Blazers are looking to take shots at the rim. They realize that maybe shooting 33% from 3 is as good as shooting 50% from 2, but when you have numbers and are getting right to the rim, that's not the situation -- it's more like 75% made 2s vs. 40% made 3s. That doesn't even include foul shots.
Hart's getting probably as many 3s as he's been getting in his career. He's not forcing contested shots against the shot clock. He's been getting clean, open looks that he can take in rhythm. He's a pro and a good if not spectacular shooter. If he's getting open looks that aren't tenaciously contested, I like his chances to make a good percentage of those. Our other 3s are being generated now by penetration, pitching and good ball movement. That's going to get more open looks.
"chauncey-ball" really is a thing now, huh? see this mentioned so often. I think I'm just gonna wait until we're at least .500 before making too much of it.That was what I saw and was so excited about when we played Phoenix in game 2--so much penetration and attacking the rim. It seemed like that was going to be Chauncey-ball's calling card, but then it slowly dried up.

I'm going to make the argument that the Blazers shooting is sustainable to a degree, because the shots they are taking aren't being taken in a vacuum. I'm looking at how they get those shots and who's taking them.
One thing about the way the Blazers have approached the past few games is they aren't following the crowd in how they generate their 3s, or even their shots. They look more like an old-fashioned NBA team. They push the pace a lot but not looking specifically to generate 3s. For the most part, not always, but the most part, the Blazers are looking to take shots at the rim. They realize that maybe shooting 33% from 3 is as good as shooting 50% from 2, but when you have numbers and are getting right to the rim, that's not the situation -- it's more like 75% made 2s vs. 40% made 3s. That doesn't even include foul shots.
Hart's getting probably as many 3s as he's been getting in his career. He's not forcing contested shots against the shot clock. He's been getting clean, open looks that he can take in rhythm. He's a pro and a good if not spectacular shooter. If he's getting open looks that aren't tenaciously contested, I like his chances to make a good percentage of those. Our other 3s are being generated now by penetration, pitching and good ball movement. That's going to get more open looks.
That was what I saw and was so excited about when we played Phoenix in game 2--so much penetration and attacking the rim. It seemed like that was going to be Chauncey-ball's calling card, but then it slowly dried up.
Hart has shot 53% on three's when his career mark is under 35%; and that's with a 282 game sample size. 53% isn't sustainable over the long term. Simons has shot 46% over the 3 wins. That's probably not sustainable either but there may not be much of a drop off. As a team, they shot 37.4% over the 3 wins. That's sustainable, but if either Simons or Hart have a slump, it could drag the team down a ways
Figured I'd use the term before it became passé"chauncey-ball" really is a thing now, huh? see this mentioned so often. I think I'm just gonna wait until we're at least .500 before making too much of it.![]()
You're arguing degrees, though, and partialities of my statement. I specified that they were sustainable to a point ... good, not spectacular 3-point shooting might be sustainable, especially when you consider the manner and circumstance those shots are being taken.
It's part of the reason I'm not sold on analytics as the be-all, end-all. A guy might have a great year shooting inside the 3-point line and it skews his statistics. Except then you look at the tape and see other years he was the second option instead of the third option, that he was playing with guys who couldn't get him the ball in positions where he was comfortable shooting. Suddenly he's cast in another role and he's getting the ball 12 feet from the hoop with less defensive resistance than he's faced before. Maybe he has a point guard who just sets him up really well. That can lead to a deviation from the previous norm that is reasonable to see as largely sustainable.
3ptFG% is not an analytic
If you were to ask those who truly know, because they are actually doing it, they will 100% tell you that Every Win Is A Quality Win.I'm not arguing that. It's not my gauge for Portland. I was just debating what defined a quality win, and 2 wins, at home, over 2 teams that have combined for a 7-24 record over their last 31 games are not quality wins. That winning percentage would generate 18-19 wins over an 82 game season.
Wiz, stop it. You're being unnecessarily pedantic. Every statistic is by its nature somewhat analytic, unless you are going to take the unusual position that a shooting percentage is not a measurement to analyze someone's ability to shoot 3s. The very way you presented it in your post was analytical.
opponents are admittedly taking us lightly and guys like Hart and Winslow are playing at levels they have never played before. I have a healthy dose of skepticism about its sustainability.Figured I'd use the term before it became passé
But I don't think it's unreasonable to acknowledge that the team seemed to try to play a certain way at the beginning of the season, then kinda drifted into something else, and is playing a different style now than they were 2 weeks ago.
Stats tell the entire picture.Oh, and dont forget the fun factor, Im sure stats back that up.