HailBlazers
RipCity
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- Nov 11, 2008
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The National Basketball Association has its own version of Newton’s law of inertia. Teams that win tend to keep winning. Teams that lose tend to keep right on losing. Each year, 16 of the league’s 30 franchises qualify for its playoffs, a simple and straightforward gauge of quality. For the past 15 years, on average, only about four teams that failed to make a given season’s playoffs improved enough to qualify the following season. In pro basketball, it seems, failure begets more failure.
The Portland Trail Blazers know this axiom very well. They made the playoffs every single season from 1983 until 2003—an epoch of sustained excellence by any sports standard. (Of course, as Blazers fans know all too well, none of those seasons yielded a league championship.) But once that streak stopped, it stopped hard: Portland missed the postseason for the next five years and has swung on a yo-yo of streaks ever since.
After missing out the past two seasons, a rebuilt Blazers team now enters 2013–14 with a clear goal: to become one of the lucky few that jump from the playoff scrap heap back into the league’s upper echelon. Hitting that mark could help revive the fortunes of a franchise that has suffered many turbulent times, including 13 straight losses to finish last season.
Can Rip City Be Redeemed?

