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I've never had a problem with KP's ability to identify and draft talent, my only complaint is that he doesn't appear to know how to balance a roster. Great work by Jeff and Dante... and this team still will have the same chemistry issues they had at the start of training camp until he thins the herd.
Bear with me a moment, I'm going to try something. Here's the Total PER for the top 6 players in each Championship team going back 8 years.
2009 Lakers: 113.7
2008 Celtics: 111.1
2007 Spurs: 119.4
2006 Heat: 114.5
2005 Spurs: 114
2004 Pistons: 104.2
2003 Spurs: 107.9
2002 Lakers: 111.5
Here's last year's Blazers: 107.2
Rudy, Joel, and Travis were the bottom three of the top 6, all hovering around 15. To go from shouting distance to really contending, we need our starting SF to give us 17 PER, our starting PG to give us 16 PER, and our fist guy off the bench to give us 16 PER.
The problem with this year is that we never got to see Batum play with the full starting lineup. Next year should be interesting: Roy and LMA are down in PER, but Oden and Bayless more than made up for it in their gains this year, giving us a net positive. If Batum can come in and be 16 PER player, we're suddenly in the 112 PER range.
How so?
In my mind, if healthy, we have:
3 point guards: Miller, Blake, Mills
1 combo guard: Bayless
2 shooting guards: Roy, Fernandez
3 small forwards: Webster, Outlaw, Batum
1 combo forward: Cunningham
2 power forwards: Aldridge, Howard
1 forward/center: Pendergraph
2 centers: Oden, Przybilla
How much more balanced can you get? If we didn't have a lot of injuries, we'd be arguably the most balanced team in the league.
PER does nothing to capture defense however.
I thought you wanted to talk PER since you were mentioning LMA's PER. That said, yeah, defense is under-appreciated in the calculation; it explains why Detroit had the lowest PER of any of the last 8 champions. That's good though, since we're getting better defensively this year over last.
Don't get me wrong, KP has done a nice job turning around a really awful team and making them good, but there's a lot of consolidation left to be done, or I don't ever see this current incarnation of the team ever being great.
I agree with this part. The difficult part is knowing exactly what we will need going into the future. we had our need addressed at center and now that position is a big question mark. we also need a SF badly. I think we might have to be patient at this point until we know what all our needs are.
I guess that is what I am saying. Right now there are so many players that are question marks. Will oden be plagued by injuries forever? will joel ever be back to full strength? bayless, rudy, batum, and pendergraph all have great potential but will they live up to it on a consistent basis? I guess that is why I would worry about a major consolidation until we know exactly what pieces we still need. We might need a center (starting or backup). we do not know just yet. The one thing that we do know if that we have way to many guards and we could still use a SF. that is the one move I would feel comfortable making right now.
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Well, if you believe that teams usually get about 80% of their production from 20% of their roster (ie their stars) then I tend to think that if Roy and Aldridge were still healthy the team might not be dominant, but they'd still be performing at a somewhat high level. If the 20% go down for an extended period it doesn't matter how much depth you have, you're going to struggle.
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I agree it's always good to add more talented players to your roster when you have the opportunity, but there is a tipping point where the law of diminishing returns kicks in. I just think he's carrying too many young or rookie scale guys that are worried about their next contract (as they should be), worried about their minutes and are at their best scoring the ball and not enough defensive minded guys, hustle guys and glue guys.
For instance I would gladly trade Webster and Rudy for Shane Battier even though he has mediocre PER of 11 but he would fill a role better than either and add veteran savvy to this roster without crowding the rotation with yet another mouth to feed.
All of these players added to our roster only make sense if KP is viewing them as trade able assets to be cashed in, so far I'm not sure KP sees it this way.
I wouldn't like that trade at all.
That seems to me to be gaining a little (maybe) in the short term, but hurting the team long term. Battier is on the downside of his career, and wouldn't improve the Blazers for long, if at all. I sure don't see him as the guy that puts the Blazers into the finals this season.
Otoh, I see Rudy as part of a championship caliber three guard rotation, getting enough minutes for him to stay happy. Rudy is young enough to fit the Blazers contender window.
Go Blazers
This technique works. Earlier in the summer, KP let the two worst PER guys go.
I'm not much of a stats guy, but unless I'm missing something, that doesn't look right.
The team plays an average of 10 players per game. 20% of those players would be two, and I'm assuming the two would be Roy and LA. They play 31% of the minutes.
Adding the 96.5 ppg, 20 apg, 41.5 rpg, 6 stpg and 5 bpg the team averages 169 'production units' (PU's) per game. Between Roy's 23/5/5/1/0 and LA's 16/8/2/1/.5, that's 61.5 PU's. 61.5/169 = 36% of the teams' production. Am I missing something, because that seems a long way from 80%.
Where does that come from?
Go Blazers
Then Bayless, not Rodriguez, should have gone. And maybe Batum.
Then Bayless, not Rodriguez, should have gone. And maybe Batum.
I didn't mean to be condescending. I come from the ESPN board, where I saved experienced readers some confusing search time by pointing them directly to what I was talking about.
Anyway, the Intel method is the slow boat to China. If I did my job by deleting the 2 most useless things every year, it would take a century to turn the company (team) around. (And the boss would still expect me to point him directly to what I'm talking about.)
I wouldn't worry too much about the trade because I'm pretty sure Daryly Morey would want no part of it.
Battier is about 3X the defender Martell is, and about 10X smarter. Battier might only be able to really provide high level play for another couple of years, but he's exactly the kind of player I want Nicolas to learn from in practice.
As for Rudy, he plays the same position as our best player; you're kidding yourself if you think he's going to be satisfied with A) 20-25 minutes a night and B) taking less money to stay here so he can be second fiddle to Brandon Roy.
While I agree that the team could add some size to their mix to achieve more balance, I'd rather that guy be a PF then center. Aldridge is a solid option guarding most Bigs and would make a fine tandem paired with another good PF. When teamed with Travis they present a tough small ball look but I'd love to see another talented good sized PF to pair LA with too.As far as balancing said roster, if some GM would just take Outlaw and Blake off our hands, and give us a backup Center in return, we'd be balanced. Regardless, both those guys are expiring, so really all KP has to do to balance the roster is wait and save Paul Allen some bucks.
I'm very curious if Freeland can be an option. How legit is his 6'10? How athletic is he?
Can he D up at all?
What about Claver?
