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Prior to that shot, Travis was 5-9, so shooting above 50% for the night. During the timeout, Nate calls Outlaw's number to create a shot (makes sense).
Travis gets the ball, drives, elevates over two players who don't come close to blocking the shot, traivs gets a clear look at the basket with no one to alter his shot and makes it.
And you caharcaterize this last play of the game drawn up by the coach as a shitty shot that went in. If it was Brandon who took on a double team at the end of the game and shot over them to make a basket, you would be praising Roy.
I was surprised though that we went to Travis for the final shot. That was a ballsy play call by Nate
We wouldn't need the big clutch shots if he would not lose his man on the defensive end every game and allow them to score 26 points like tonight!
When Travis plays defense and still makes the big shot, we'll all say he's a keeper. Till then he's just making up for his no show on the other end.
Is that fair to say?
You make it seem like he did one thing right after the other. You don't insert in there "Scored a whole 2 points against Toronto, and nearly fouled out by the end of the first quarter". Or was a -22 while on the court against New Orleans. That is what is so maddening about Outlaw. He is not consistent. In order for a team to be good, the players have to play consistently good. That is how you get to be elite. Until the players perform like that, they will not be elite. An example of a consistent small forward is the guy he was guarding tonight. Tayshaun Prince. He shows up every game, on both ends of the court, and has a complete game. He plays calm and poised. Also note, Travis was guarding him tonight. Tayshaun dropped 26 on him. .
You make it seem like he did one thing right after the other. You don't insert in there "Scored a whole 2 points against Toronto, and nearly fouled out by the end of the first quarter". Or was a -22 while on the court against New Orleans. That is what is so maddening about Outlaw. He is not consistent. In order for a team to be good, the players have to play consistently good. That is how you get to be elite. Until the players perform like that, they will not be elite. An example of a consistent small forward is the guy he was guarding tonight. Tayshaun Prince. He shows up every game, on both ends of the court, and has a complete game. He plays calm and poised. Also note, Travis was guarding him tonight. Tayshaun dropped 26 on him.
He may have hit the game winner, but if he had played better until than, maybe we wouldn't have needed nail biter.
Prince was actually killing the bigs, not Travis. Travis only had about 1 or 2 bad plays on Prince. The problem was that we kept switching Joel, Blake or LMA on Prince. They sagged off and Prince hit jumpers.
For most players that would have been a terrible shot, but Outlaw gets up so far that it can't be blocked.
I'm also expecting the latest trade him now while his value is high thread.
33 points off the bench is very nice, but 33 pts. on 14 shots in 36 minutes is flat ridiculous. The blocks were timely as well. Definitely an A+ game33 points and 7 rebounds against the Bulls. With Roy struggling, Travis stepped up and carried the team.
"My cousin told me about (what people write online)," said Outlaw. "He’s like ‘Travis, they hate you in Portland.’ And I’m like ‘You for real?’ And he’s like ‘Yeah.’ I was like, oh well, I don’t know everybody hated me. He said ‘Yeah, they hate you here.’"
I spend some time around Travis and have discussed this topic with him enough to know that he's not entirely serious (Outlaw tends speak out of the corner of his mouth in a lower tone when he wants you to know he's joking around), but the twinge of insecurity is there. A part of Travis, a guy who consistently asks and is legitimately interested in the opinions of people like myself, really feels as though he's Portland's least wanted.
“I’m going to quit trying settle for the jumper,” said Outlaw. “Now my thing is trying to get two people to start playing me. If I can get two people to start playing me, you know, then I can get someone else a wide-open shot. When I catch it on the block, they coming to a stopper down, so now my thing is to make them go and commit. If I can make them commit, then I can probably get Blake or Rudy, someone out there in the corner, an easier shot.”
“I don’t play against two, you know? Only a couple of people in the league can play against two.”
It’s a surprising admission from a player known for his ability to get off shots, and when pressed further, it becomes clear that Outlaw does think he can get his against a double team, but now, he doesn’t consider it such a good idea.
“I mean, I can play against two if I want,” jokes Outlaw, “but we got too good of a team for me to do that. Scoring is something I do. You look at my game, I’m defiantly scoring, but we got too good of guys for me to take that poor of a shot. But trust me; I can get it off against two.”
