PCmor7
Generational Poster
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I think there's plenty of vets who could provide a valuable leadership presence.
Now if you want one that is also as effective as Grant or Brogdon are currently on the floor then no, I don't think that is likely, nor should it be a goal.
The move would be to trade Brogdon or Grant for picks, then bring in a Lowry or buyout vet minimum type guy for leadership. Maybe bring in two. Think of Earl Watson last season in Portland. Yeah he's basically washed in terms of being an effective NBA player. A vet like that would be fine. We wouldn't be counting on him being effective on the floor. We'd just need him to be an adult and show proper work ethic as well as maturity.
We'd hopefully have Ant healthy to handle some of the Brogdon/Grant offense burden.
There's advantages and disadvantages with either direction, I'm not saying we 100% must go one way or the other. I'm just saying we can explore offers for Grant/Brogdon and if one makes sense accept it, then work on a follow up move to replace much of the vet presence we will have lost.
Grant and Brogdon have value here, but their far from one of our most critical assets nor irreplaceable.
I don't really get the purpose of your post. First, you make a definitive on what the goal should be and then later you say either one's OK. I've already said several times that you hear offers for Grant and Brogdon and if you have something that works for the continued growth of the Blazers and ONLY IF it works for the continued growth of the Blazers, you do it. Again, I don't understand why you're disagreeing with me if your conclusion is the same as mine and the parameters are in all but the details the same as mine.
I will absolutely disagree with you that just any vet can bring the value guys like Brogdon and Grant bring, though. I think having a couple of vets that can make games meaningful and competitive is of greater import to our younger guys just playing. Earl Watson couldn't do that. Honestly, Earl Watson didn't have the resume' to tell any younger guys how to be big contributors on good teams -- he averaged double figures twice in his career and made the playoffs three times, and one of those was with the Blazers.
Having players that not only can tell Scoot and Sharpe and Ant what they need to do but also go out there and show them and also show them positive results first-hand is invaluable. Earl Watson-level players don't do that. If you're talking a guy who's essentially just going to be a coach-player, that needs to be someone that actually made an impact during a great career, someone with cache.