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I think he could score 20 ppg, but All-Star, who knows. He's still an elite PF in the league, and should've been enough for New Orleans to hold onto a 20-point lead in a quarter.
co-sign"You must spread some Reputation around before giving it to Nikolokolus again."
You could see the fear in the Hornets eyes after he went out. The Blazers smelled it and took full advantage. GOOD WIN!

Paul is a great offensive player (and an okay defender) but he doesn't mean that much to their defense. Portland ripped them apart offensively in the fourth quarter, and I'm not sure that had much to do with Paul's injury. Had Paul played the fourth quarter, New Orleans may have scored enough to hang onto the win, but Portland was a whirling dervish in the fourth quarter.
A big reason Portland was trailing by so much in the third quarter was because they had underperformed on offense pretty significantly up to that point. Paul getting hurt was the turning point for New Orleans' offensive night, but they could have survived that. What killed them was that that coincided with Portland finally waking up on offense. They couldn't survive both things.
More like Bayless showed why he is in the team's future while Sergio's weaknesses were magnified by Chris Paul. Would Paul have set an NBA assist record if Sergio had guarded him all night?

One thing that disappointed me about this game was the Batum wasn't used on Paul much. I would've liked to see what he could do.
Maybe that's a look that McMillan is saving for the playoffs?
Paul is everything to New Orleans because he's not just their best player he's the guy that controls their entire offense and sets everyone else up. Losing an important player during a game usually makes the entire team shell-shocked for awhile. The Lakers were that way when Bynum went down, but were able to regroup at halftime.
But coming back from 20 that late in the game is impressive, regardless of who's in the game. If the roles were reversed, and they have been, those POS announcers and that POS Byron Scott wouldn't care what the circumstances were, so neither do I. Man they were acting like a bunch of assholes.
I think we saw why it's good to have guys with the mentality of Bayless. That guy really hates to lose and when the team is down instead of folding or getting discouraged he gets mean, he gets pissed, and he doesn't back down.
Barrett said something about 7 assists for Paul with 6 minutes left in the first quarter. I thought he must have meant for the entire team, but no, Paul had a few baskets plus 7 assists in that time period.
Damn he's good...
lol. Has Nash even had an NBA job since he got canned?
He'll forever be branded as the guy who thought Martel Webster and Jarret Jack were better than Chris Paul.
I don't really agree with you here. What I saw last night was the same thing I saw last time we played the Cavs: As long as their superstar was in the game, we were getting beat down. The superstar would go out for a few minutes to catch a break, and next thing you know we're a juggernaut. Then the superstar comes back in and it's back to beatdown.
It really was The Chris Paul Show, with special guest appearance by the Portland Trail Blazers. Had he been able to continue to play, I think we lose by 25.
Thank you John Nash.. Every time we play Paul I hate John Nash a bit more...

Food for thought in a round about way Nash is responsible for us getting Roy, Aldridge, and Oden.![]()
I asked someone else this, but it might be interesting to get more opinions.
Assuming Chris Paul makes the Blazers too good to have the draft pick that landed Aldridge and certainly too good to have the draft pick that landed Oden, but assuming Pritchard could still have dealt Telfair for the pick that landed Roy, would you rather the scenario in which Nash selected Paul? Bear in mind that Jack (a player Portland received in the deal for the Chris Paul draft pick) was the price of swapping draft picks with Indiana to get Bayless.
So the scenario swap boils down to this:
Chris Paul and three generic first round draft picks (in 2006, 2007, 2008) for Oden, Aldridge, Webster and Bayless
The first round picks are "generic" because we don't know where the team would have selected in those years, but first round picks are still valuable.
We'd currently have Paul and Roy as our core stars, with Rudy, Batum and Outlaw as the best complementary players/prospects. Plus whoever Pritchard ended up drafting in 2006, 2007 and 2008 with lower draft slots.
Oden could be a once-a-decade center. Paul is a once-a-decade point guard. Aldridge is a near-star big man, Bayless is an excellent prospect, Webster is a decent reserve player. Could Pritchard have found players to approximate the value of those three players with the different first round picks he'd have had?
Although I'd rate Webster as starter material and Bayless as a decent prospect, I certainly wouldn't trade Oden or Aldridge for Paul even straight across as I doubt he and Roy would co-exist or even complement each other. We have more young talent than any team in the league, and they mesh quite nicely. We're not missing the playoffs for many, many years again, and they will only continue to get better.
Bake it!
I asked someone else this, but it might be interesting to get more opinions.
Assuming Chris Paul makes the Blazers too good to have the draft pick that landed Aldridge and certainly too good to have the draft pick that landed Oden, but assuming Pritchard could still have dealt Telfair for the pick that landed Roy, would you rather the scenario in which Nash selected Paul? Bear in mind that Jack (a player Portland received in the deal for the Chris Paul draft pick) was the price of swapping draft picks with Indiana to get Bayless.
So the scenario swap boils down to this:
Chris Paul and three generic first round draft picks (in 2006, 2007, 2008) for Oden, Aldridge, Webster and Bayless
The first round picks are "generic" because we don't know where the team would have selected in those years, but first round picks are still valuable.
We'd currently have Paul and Roy as our core stars, with Rudy, Batum and Outlaw as the best complementary players/prospects. Plus whoever Pritchard ended up drafting in 2006, 2007 and 2008 with lower draft slots.
Oden could be a once-a-decade center. Paul is a once-a-decade point guard. Aldridge is a near-star big man, Bayless is an excellent prospect, Webster is a decent reserve player. Could Pritchard have found players to approximate the value of those three players with the different first round picks he'd have had?
Would you trade Sergio for Paul? Straight up? Assuming we add guys like Ike and Frye as fillers.

I asked someone else this, but it might be interesting to get more opinions.
Assuming Chris Paul makes the Blazers too good to have the draft pick that landed Aldridge and certainly too good to have the draft pick that landed Oden, but assuming Pritchard could still have dealt Telfair for the pick that landed Roy, would you rather the scenario in which Nash selected Paul? Bear in mind that Jack (a player Portland received in the deal for the Chris Paul draft pick) was the price of swapping draft picks with Indiana to get Bayless.
So the scenario swap boils down to this:
Chris Paul and three generic first round draft picks (in 2006, 2007, 2008) for Oden, Aldridge, Webster and Bayless
The first round picks are "generic" because we don't know where the team would have selected in those years, but first round picks are still valuable.
We'd currently have Paul and Roy as our core stars, with Rudy, Batum and Outlaw as the best complementary players/prospects. Plus whoever Pritchard ended up drafting in 2006, 2007 and 2008 with lower draft slots.
Oden could be a once-a-decade center. Paul is a once-a-decade point guard. Aldridge is a near-star big man, Bayless is an excellent prospect, Webster is a decent reserve player. Could Pritchard have found players to approximate the value of those three players with the different first round picks he'd have had?
Paul for Oden, Aldridge, Bayless, and Webster? No.
Paul plus three first round draft picks.

