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http://www.hoopsworld.com/Story.asp?STORY_ID=17182
Entering the fourth season of his NBA career Portland Trail Blazers center Greg Oden is at a crossroads. If he plays very well he may find himself in high demand the next time free agency rolls around, whenever the new Collective Bargaining Agreement is hammered out. If he doesn't play well – or gets hurt this season, again - the market for him may be very, very dry.
See, with Oden that's been the issue: injuries.
When you look at his numbers, they are respectable. In 82 games he has averaged 11.1 points, 8.5 rebounds, 2.3 blocks, and shot 58% from the field. The caveat here is those 82 games represent only parts of two seasons, with a third season – his first – lost completely to microfracture surgery on his knee.
Three seasons under contract, 82 games played – 61 in 2008-09 and 21 in 2009-10 (60 total starts). That's the knock.
But those 82 games? Some of those were pretty dang impressive. Sixteen double-doubles in 2008-09, including twice scoring 20 or more points, five times with 13 or more rebounds, and eight times blocking three or more shots.
And 2009-10, before the fractured patella, he was more impressive. He posted five double-doubles, blocked three or more shots eight times, and grabbed 20 rebounds in the last game before his injury, a career-high. His movement on the floor had become smoother in this third season, more purposeful. He knew where he was supposed to be and what his role was in the offensive and defensive schemes.
Basically, he had begun to give glimpses of the dominant big man he could become, and why Portland made the decision to pick him number one in 2007.
And all of this brings us to the summer of 2010. With one year left on his rookie scale contract, Greg Oden is eligible to sign a contract extension that will kick in for the 2011-12 season. This is much like the extensions signed last summer by Brandon Roy and LaMarcus Aldridge of Portland, Andrea Bargnani of Toronto, Rajon Rondo of Boston, and this year the one already signed this summer by Kevin Durant in Oklahoma City.
If you are the Portland Trail Blazers, do you make an extension offer to Greg Oden? With his injury history – and coming off the fractured patella – that's a decision that is full of risk.
If Portland locks him up now for up to another five years they could get themselves a heck of a deal, should Oden stay healthy. Or they could be committing long-term money to a black hole. If they don't make an offer, a fantastic, healthy season by Oden could drive his price sky-high – or another injury could leave them in the same situation they are now...............
....................................Assume for a minute Portland does want to do a long-term deal with Oden. What kind of money is reasonable? What can we compare it to? For reference, let's look at players, specifically power forwards and centers, who signed second contracts in the past couple seasons:
Andrea Bargnani, Toronto Raptors: Five years, $50 million
LaMarcus Aldridge, Portland Trail Blazers: Five years, $65 million
Tyrus Thomas, Charlotte Bobcats: Five years, $40 million
David Lee, Golden State Warriors: Six years, $80 million
Anderson Varejao, Cleveland Cavaliers: Six years, $50 million
Luis Scola, Houston Rockets: Five years, $47 million
Charlie Villanueva, Detroit Pistons: Five years, $37.7 million
Marcin Gortat, Orlando Magic: Five years, $34 million
Paul Millsap, Utah Jazz: Four years, $34.5 million
And let's throw in these too:
Channing Frye, Phoenix Suns: Five years, $30 million
Amir Johnson, Toronto Raptors: Five years, $30 million
Chris Andersen, Denver Nuggets: Five years, $26 million
Where on that scale does Oden fit?........................

