LaMarcus Aldridge is "taken for granted," but emerging as best power forward

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SlyPokerDog

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On one side of the Trail Blazers’ locker room, a throng of more than 15 video cameras, microphones and digital recorders hovered around Damian Lillard, eagerly waiting to document the latest exploits of one of the NBA’s most alluring new players.

Across the room, Nicolas Batum was talking in French to six or eight French-speaking reporters, dissecting his new game and his new fame while eliciting a laugh here or an animated question there.


Meanwhile, in the middle of the all the hubbub, LaMarcus Aldridge quietly slipped on his jeans, buttoned up his plaid shirt and sat down to lace up his low-top Chuck Taylor All-Stars. It was New Year’s Day at Madison Square Garden and the Blazers had just stunned the New York Knicks 105-100. But, in what has become the norm, despite his 19 points and 14 rebounds, despite his game-changing rebound put-back that helped ice the win, Aldridge was hardly a hot topic that night.


One reporter thrust a camera in his face for a brief Q&A as he dressed. Another interrupted him for three questions as he scooped up food from the post-game spread. Otherwise, it was another All-Star-like effort without the All-Star-like acclaim.


“He’s a quiet star and doesn’t attract a lot of attention,” Blazers coach Terry Stotts. “Maybe he prefers it that way, I don’t know. But I just know how important he is and I want to make sure he’s appreciated. He’s our best player. He’s our most consistent player. It seems to me that people are taking him for granted. Well, I would encourage everyone to stop and appreciate what he’s doing.”


According to those inside the Blazers’ locker room, Aldridge isn’t just making a case to be an All-Star for the second consecutive season. That, they say, is a no-brainer. Even more, he’s making a case that he’s the best power forward in the NBA.


Aldridge is averaging 20.6 points, 8.4 rebounds, 2.5 assists and 1.3 blocks per game, and is the highest-scoring power forward in the league. He is one of two players who have recorded at least 25 points, 10 rebounds and five assists in three different games this season. The other is LeBron James. And Aldridge is one of four players who are averaging at least 20 points and eight rebounds per game. The others are James, Kevin Durant and David Lee.


“That’s pretty select company,” Stotts said. “That kind of speaks for itself.”


In many ways, it might have to. Aldridge is a guarded and understated person who refuses to let too many inside his inner circle. Even on this year’s team, which is close and cohesive, he’s a loner who kind of does his own thing.


He lived in Brandon Roy’s towering shadow for years. And even now that Roy is long gone, there are new, more compelling stories on this roster.


Lillard is in the midst of an incredible debut NBA season and he’s the clear-cut Rookie of the Year favorite. Batum is flourishing under Stotts’ new system and justifying that lucrative free agent contract. Wesley Matthews is playing better and more consistent and emerging as a leader. JJ Hickson is a double-double waiting to happen.


Aldridge? Been there. Done that.


But to his teammates, Aldridge is anything but old news. They see the growth. They see the development. They see All-Star play.


“He’s just coming into his own again with the new system,” Matthews said. “The last two years under Nate (McMillan), everybody in the arena, whether we were home or on the road, knew what was going to happen. LA was going to get that ball on that block and do his thing. Now he’s in a different situation. He’s on this block. He’s on that block. He’s on the elbow. He’s in pick-and-roll situations. He’s rolling. He’s diving. He’s popping. He’s doing everything. He’s rebounding. He’s passing the ball. He’s allowing the offense to showcase everything he can do, rather than be just a back-to-the-basket kind of guy. We all knew he could pick-and-pop and shoot, but he’s playmaking for other people.”


Indeed, perhaps the area in which Aldridge has seen the most growth is in his passing. He’s recorded five or more assists seven times this season — including in each of the last two games — and is averaging 3.8 assists in five January games. As always, he’s working the ball to teammates out of the low block when he encounters double teams, but he’s also facilitating at the elbow, at the free throw line and out of pick and rolls.


“I’ve never played five years with anybody in my life, so I’ve played with LA longer than I’ve played with anybody,” Batum said. “So I can follow his progression. His passing game for me is the best thing he’s improved. He takes his time now, he’s mature, he doesn’t rush. He sees the floor and makes the right play. He’s gonna get a triple-double. Maybe this year, definitely in the next two years.”


While his passing has improved, Aldridge also says he’s a better ball-handler and better left-handed finisher on offense. He’s completing more left-handed jump hooks, layups and short shots around the basket than ever. And on defense, when the Blazers’ coaching staff breaks down game film, what they find is that Aldridge always seems to be in the correct place in whatever defensive scheme the team is running.


Two years ago, when Aldridge first started putting all the pieces of his game together and emerged as a dominant NBA player, he surprisingly did not make the All-Star Game. At the time, James, the NBA's reigning MVP, called it “biggest snub in All-Star history.” It didn’t ease the All-Star slight, but it did, in some small part, bolster Aldridge’s growing reputation.


“Coming from him, that meant a lot,” Aldridge said of James’ comments. “He’s kind of the caretaker of our game right now. It’s kind of in his hands. So for him to be of that caliber and for him to say that, that was big to me.”


Now, as James and the Miami Heat roll through Portland for Thursday’s annual stop at the Rose Garden, Aldridge has reached a new level in his evolution.


The Blazers (19-15) are having a surprisingly successful season and, as players such as Kevin Love, Pau Gasol and Dirk Nowitzki battle injuries and ineffectiveness, Aldridge is emerging as the best power forward in the NBA — even if few are noticing.


“Before the season, people probably had us winning about six games right now at this point,” Matthews said. “Where are we at? 19? That says it all. He’s an All-Star, man. Maybe the best power forward in the NBA.”


Joe Freeman; follow him on Twitter

http://www.oregonlive.com/blazers/i...tml?utm_source=twitterfeed&utm_medium=twitter
 
No argument here - he's putting up great numbers AND leading his team to wins.
 
with Love being out for potentially 25 games, that should help his chances of making the ASG again.

Sucks about Love too.
 
Now maybe we'll be able to trade him for a real power forward like Kevin Love.
 
BRO WE SHOULD JUST BLOW THE TEAM UP NOW. LOTTERY PICKS AND GET YOUNG POWER FORWARDS THAT WILL NEVER GET ON AN ALLSTAR TEAM.
 
He had a rough start to the season and was shooting more jumpers than I liked, but now I think he has a good mix of inside-outside and seems to have found a comfort zone in the new offensive scheme. He is our rock in the middle while everyone else swirls around him. Keep it up, LA.
 
Funny, the guy always seems to be in the background, even though he is obviously the focus of every opposing team's defense and is playing tough night in and night out. He really has become a force and has basically done everything asked of him.

Is he not arrogant enough or a big enough shittalker to be in a class with the 'tough' power forwards?
 
You know when you know Aldridge has truly arrived? When blue9 and jplk can't say too many negative things about him. His game right now has very little holes. And he's getting better as the season progress
 
Funny, the guy always seems to be in the background, even though he is obviously the focus of every opposing team's defense and is playing tough night in and night out. He really has become a force and has basically done everything asked of him.

Is he not arrogant enough or a big enough shittalker to be in a class with the 'tough' power forwards?

He needs to whine about his teammates and put up huge numbers on a losing team before the media will take him seriously.
 
is it far fetched to project that in a few years Lillard Batum and LA could be regarded as the best ever at their positions for Portland? Given reasonable health, I'm guessing thats the case.

STOMP
 
is it far fetched to project that in a few years Lillard Batum and LA could be regarded as the best ever at their positions for Portland? Given reasonable health, I'm guessing thats the case.

STOMP

It is possible, although I think longevity will be what puts LaMarcus over. Rasheed played in Portland what....7 years? and Maurice 4(ish) years. Buck was a great PF, but not so much when he played for Portland.

As for SF's, Batums only competition, realistically, is Kersey. Lillard could easily become the best PG to play in Portland. He's already the best PG to play in Portland since Rod Strickland/TP in the early 90s.
 
I have an idea! Let's trade Aldridge and build around Hickson!
 
is it far fetched to project that in a few years Lillard Batum and LA could be regarded as the best ever at their positions for Portland? Given reasonable health, I'm guessing thats the case.

STOMP

Along those lines, in a year, maybe 2, how far fetched is it for us to have a top 5 player in the league at PG, SF and PF? Aldridge is, Batum is awfully close, in that tier right below Lebron, Durant and then Carmelo.
 
Along those lines, in a year, maybe 2, how far fetched is it for us to have a top 5 player in the league at PG, SF and PF? Aldridge is, Batum is awfully close, in that tier right below Lebron, Durant and then Carmelo.

Rise With Us
 
HE'S ALREADY 27. OUR WINDOW WILL BE OPEN IN 8 YEARS, AT WHICH TIME IT WON'T BE OPEN AND WE NEED TO TRADE LILLARD.
 
i see LMA being effective into mid 30's at least
 
Considering how young we are otherwise, a productive LMA with our core, plus a deepened bench wouldn't be a bad lineup for the next 4-5 years. Deepen that bench, add another quality start-type to play 6th man (or add another starter, thereby pushing a current starter to 6th man), figure development for Lillard and some of the younger guys, and I like it.
 
I'm just waiting for Natebishop3 to strut into this thread and once again declare happily that he'd trade Aldridge for MKG and Ben Gordon since LA and Lillard aren't in the same 'window'.
 
It is possible, although I think longevity will be what puts LaMarcus over. Rasheed played in Portland what....7 years? and Maurice 4(ish) years. Buck was a great PF, but not so much when he played for Portland.

As for SF's, Batums only competition, realistically, is Kersey. Lillard could easily become the best PG to play in Portland. He's already the best PG to play in Portland since Rod Strickland/TP in the early 90s.

What? The addition of Buck is what solidified the team that went to the championship two out of three years. He was the backbone of the team. The mental toughness. He played great here.
 
What? The addition of Buck is what solidified the team that went to the championship two out of three years. He was the backbone of the team. The mental toughness. He played great here.

By comparison, Buck was a great PF in New Jersey. Not so much in Portland
 
Buck was the heart and soul player, the blue collar guy, but never a focus of the offense in Portland. That's not taking anything from Buck, just a fact. I loved Kersey but he was not the long range shooter Nic is. I am still reluctant to compare, however, until this team reaches at least WCF.
 
What? The addition of Buck is what solidified the team that went to the championship two out of three years. He was the backbone of the team. The mental toughness. He played great here.

Buck was certainly a great PIECE for that team, but he was not a great power forward. Without looking, I can't imagine he ever put up more than 10PPG while in Portland. He did offer some tenacious defense and rebounding, but imagine that team with LMA at power forward - that offense (which was hard to stop as it was) would have been ridiculous.
 
Considering how young we are otherwise, a productive LMA with our core, plus a deepened bench wouldn't be a bad lineup for the next 4-5 years. Deepen that bench, add another quality start-type to play 6th man (or add another starter, thereby pushing a current starter to 6th man), figure development for Lillard and some of the younger guys, and I like it.

Definitely. When a young team cements 4 of 5 starting positions, and has a true 7 foot center project waiting in the wings and has a ROY at PG, it's a great sign that the team is heading in the right direction.

Trading Crash for the pick that yielded us Lillard has advanced our rebuild by years.
 
My only gripe with Aldridge this year, is how much he's seemed to float at times. During last season's run up to the all-star game (and the season before) he certainly seemed more efficient and steadier when it came to carrying the team through games.

However, I think it's pretty easy to connect the dots and look at that hip surgery he had last summer and understand why he's been playing more at the elbow than in the post, but he seems to be getting healthier and stronger the past couple of weeks, so maybe the sluggishness of the first month is behind him and he's about to break through and resume the level of play we saw from him the past couple of years.

We'll see.
 
You know when you know Aldridge has truly arrived? When blue9 and jplk can't say too many negative things about him.
Ha ha - thanks for the shout out!
I haven't been watching games lately, so I can't really speak on what he's been doing the past few weeks. Prior to that I did see some slightly improved play, but I was hoping to see him continue playing that way before buying into the idea that maybe he's improving. His RPG is certainly up, but I don't know if he's just grabbing more meaningless rebounds or if he's actually grabbing contested rebounds. It also appears that he's scoring more around the basket - that's always a good thing. But my major gripes with him haven't been about his stats (other than FG%!), they've been about his skills and toughness. For what it's worth, I did once see him put the ball on the floor and dribble past his defender for a lay-up - if that's something he's continuing to do, then color me impressed. Still, I rarely see him keep the ball high when he gets fouled on his way to the basket - doubling over and trying to get the continuation by throwing the ball off your shoulder/hip is pansy-assed. I also haven't been keeping tabs on his 4th quarter scoring, though a cursory glance makes it appear that he's finally scoring more than 4 points in the 4th quarter. But still missing clutch FTs? One of my biggest gripes about him is mostly centered around his undeserved reputation as a great shooter - so half of that gripe falls on the media for perpetrating an idea that just isn't true...but I also fault him for shooting so many jumpers when he's just not THAT good at it. It's not his fault that he's been labeled a great shooter, but it is his fault for shooting so much.
But I've always been open to changing my opinion on the guy - I just never thought it would happen. Perhaps it will though...
 

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