Pat Connaughton

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I'm only arguing about this because there's fuck-all else Blazer-related to talk about, but if there AREN'T better people out there than there are a lot fewer decent players than I believe there are. Obviously Gutierrez is a better player, but the argument against signing him is that we have Shabazz (who can shoot but who is smaller, a much worse defender and not really a PG) but we're thin on the wings. So yes, there are better players (TONS) certainly playing in Europe (and that's just the Americans). I think keeping Connaughton is the fallacy of sunk costs. I'm just glad I'm not the one paying him OVER A MILLION DOLLARS.

In fact, I have to avoid talking about money in the context of sports, otherwise I'll never be able to enjoy it.

Part of those sunk costs, though, is the investment in teaching the guy your system, and bringing him into your culture. You are probably right that there are other guys with similar talent out there at the same age (or even younger), but when you factor in that Pat knows his role, knows what the coaches and star players want out of him, well, it's probably going to waste less of everybody's time to just bring Pat back.

The opportunity cost of dumping Pat for somebody who might have slightly more talent is real. It's not massive, but for a fringe position I can see why the team might prefer to go with the player they know. Between Nurk, Vonleh, Meyers, Harkless, Swanigan and Collins, Portland has a lot of young guys with upside they need to focus on developing. Pat's professionalism and experience means Portland doesn't have to worry about integrating somebody new.
 
One other thought--Portland really seems to have a great three point shooting culture. Between Dame and CJ, you've got two of probably the top 5 three point shooters in the league, and Crabbe was the most accurate in the league last year. Portland guards are going to hit their threes.

Pat took 33 last year and made 51% of them.

Given that Crabbe didn't do much of anything else beside hit wide open threes (at a phenomenal rate, to his credit) you can see how the Front Office probably just figured they could get the same production as Crabbe at 1/18th the price.
 
(A complete absence of even the smallest incremental trajectory in Vonleh and Meyers is why I've pretty much given up on them.)
Year-over-year, Vonleh's MP, TRB, and most importantly his FG% have seen incremental improvement each season. More significantly, Vonleh showed significant statistical improvement from the first half of the year to the second half. Check out his splits through the end of January as compared to after Feb. 1:

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It's like night and day. Does that meet the threshold of incremental improvement? Definitely much too early to give up on him.

Now Meyers--that's a different story...
 
Year-over-year, Vonleh's MP, TRB, and most importantly his FG% have seen incremental improvement each season. More significantly, Vonleh showed significant statistical improvement from the first half of the year to the second half. Check out his splits through the end of January as compared to after Feb. 1:

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It's like night and day. Does that meet the threshold of incremental improvement? Definitely much too early to give up on him.

Now Meyers--that's a different story...
Except Vonleh's rebounding %, steal % and block % and DTRG all went down.
 
Except Vonleh's rebounding %, steal % and block % and DTRG all went down.
Drtg going down is a good thing. The TRB% decrease was almost imperceptible (17.0 to 16.6)--it basically stayed consistent. Steals and blocks are a very minor part of his job, so who really cares?

I didn't say he improved in every facet of the game, so that's a pointless nitpick, but it's indisputible that he improved overall.
 
Year-over-year, Vonleh's MP, TRB, and most importantly his FG% have seen incremental improvement each season. More significantly, Vonleh showed significant statistical improvement from the first half of the year to the second half. Check out his splits through the end of January as compared to after Feb. 1:

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It's like night and day. Does that meet the threshold of incremental improvement? Definitely much too early to give up on him.

Now Meyers--that's a different story...

Eh, given his featured role as a starter, getting to play major minutes with our best players this year, I'm not really sold on his improvement. I'm particularly not impressed with his stats raising with the arrival of Nurkic--I think that says a lot more about Nurk than it does Vonleh. Having watched Swanigan and Collins in SL and some youtube highlights, I'm not convinced at all that he's better than either of those guys.

His best year was actually his rookie season (after which his former team was so impressed they dumped him for Batum). So his trajectory looks great if you just forget he was better 3 years ago.

He reminds me a lot of Webster, Outlaw, Jack....you see him do a little better when given more of a role but it's not like it's mind-blowing.

Does that sound hypocritical given my endorsement of Pat? Maybe, but then Portland isn't handing over to Pat the starting position for a year. Vonleh got that. That's a golden opportunity, and in the end he was maybe the 4th or 5th worst starting PF in the NBA. You shouldn't get to be that bad as a starter multiple seasons, even if you are young.
 
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His best year was actually his rookie season (after which his former team was so impressed they dumped him for Batum). So his trajectory looks great if you just forget he was better 3 years ago.
His rookie year was basically garbage time for 25 games--that's not even worth looking at. On a different team in a different system with a different role. Claiming he was better then is just silly. And still, his actual efficiency (not PER) has increased significantly since then.

And yes, his youth is a factor. He is still at this moment younger than Pat was before he got drafted. Way too early to give up on him or claim he hasn't improved. Not saying he's a star, but he's a player.
 
His rookie year was basically garbage time for 25 games--that's not even worth looking at. On a different team in a different system with a different role. Claiming he was better then is just silly. And still, his actual efficiency (not PER) has increased significantly since then.

And yes, his youth is a factor. He is still at this moment younger than Pat was before he got drafted. Way too early to give up on him or claim he hasn't improved. Not saying he's a star, but he's a player.

Eh, if we'd given Pat the starting role for 82 games I'd be a lot harsher in my judgment. But Vonleh shouldn't be compared to Pat--his yardstick is our rookies.

Vonleh got a massive opportunity last season and I just don't think he proved it was worth it. It's not like we had any better options, so I'm not angry. But this season is a hell of a lot different--we (very rightly) drafted two bigs who will hopefully ensure we don't make the same mistake a second season.

If Vonleh comes out in practice and somehow beats out Collins and Swanigan, well, that's great. More power to him. But if he gets handed the starting position again by default, well, fuck that. He, Collins and Swanigan are basically in a wide-open contest for the job, IMO. If I had to put money on which one of those three is least likely to be in the league in 5 years, it's Vonleh hands down.
 
Eh, if we'd given Pat the starting role for 82 games I'd be a lot harsher in my judgment. But Vonleh shouldn't be compared to Pat--his yardstick is our rookies.

Vonleh got a massive opportunity last season and I just don't think he proved it was worth it. It's not like we had any better options, so I'm not angry. But this season is a hell of a lot different--we (very rightly) drafted two bigs who will hopefully ensure we don't make the same mistake a second season.

If Vonleh comes out in practice and somehow beats out Collins and Swanigan, well, that's great. More power to him. But if he gets handed the starting position again by default, well, fuck that. He, Collins and Swanigan are basically in a wide-open contest for the job, IMO. If I had to put money on which one of those three is least likely to be in the league in 5 years, it's Vonleh hands down.
It's a bit more complicated than that due to Vonleh being an expiring contract. The question is "do we want to trade him instead of invest in him?" PT could also be a sign that he's being traded. It'll be hard to tell.
 
It's a bit more complicated than that due to Vonleh being an expiring contract. The question is "do we want to trade him instead of invest in him?" PT could also be a sign that he's being traded. It'll be hard to tell.

I think Vonleh has a lot more perceived value in this forum than in the league. Obviously, that's just my opinion but I don't think the numbers or how he looks on the floor would make him a promising prospect. I don't think he's shown enough that Portland should invest more playing time in him "just to make sure" before he hits free agency. If he legitimately wins playing time away from two well-regarded rookies due to his performance, great. If not, I'm fine with him getting a few reserve minutes and letting him depart in free agency.
 
I think Vonleh has a lot more perceived value in this forum than in the league. Obviously, that's just my opinion but I don't think the numbers or how he looks on the floor would make him a promising prospect. I don't think he's shown enough that Portland should invest more playing time in him "just to make sure" before he hits free agency. If he legitimately wins playing time away from two well-regarded rookies due to his performance, great. If not, I'm fine with him getting a few reserve minutes and letting him depart in free agency.
Agreed, but I think that Stotts will apply a "tie-goes-to-the-Vonleh" metric, if for no other reason, because of familiarity with the system. If one of the rookies start, you can be sure they earned it.

The interesting question to me is "how much to pay Vonleh." I would absolutely pay him $8 mil/year. His agent will want $14. We'll see how he plays this year...
 
Agreed, but I think that Stotts will apply a "tie-goes-to-the-Vonleh" metric, if for no other reason, because of familiarity with the system. If one of the rookies start, you can be sure they earned it.
I'm more of the mindset that tie goes to the rookie. If a player with 3 years NBA experience, 2 in this system with these teammates, performs comparably in training camp to a rookie, I would conclude that the rookie had much more likelihood of improving over the course of the season and finishing the year as a better player than the vet would with the same PT.
 
I'm more of the mindset that tie goes to the rookie. If a player with 3 years NBA experience, 2 in this system with these teammates, performs comparably in training camp to a rookie, I would conclude that the rookie had much more likelihood of improving over the course of the season and finishing the year as a better player than the vet would with the same PT.

Can't really argue with that
 
I'm more of the mindset that tie goes to the rookie. If a player with 3 years NBA experience, 2 in this system with these teammates, performs comparably in training camp to a rookie, I would conclude that the rookie had much more likelihood of improving over the course of the season and finishing the year as a better player than the vet would with the same PT.
Agreed. Though I can't say I think Stotts' brain works the same way. I fully expect either Vonleh or Aminu (BARF!) to be our starting PF. Of the two it BETTER be Vonleh.
 
--I think that says a lot more about Nurk than it does Vonleh
It says to me that Nurk is a center and Vonleh was subbing as an undersized center...his game improved a lot when he played next to Nurk as opposed to Plumlee....he's better, next to Plumlee he had to guard big starting centers...now he doesn't....I like Vonleh a lot since the Nurk acquisition..big upgrade...strongest lower core in the post on the team...when he's planted he's not getting pushed out of position...great screens...and he's really young. I think he has a breakout year this season.
 
It says to me that Nurk is a center and Vonleh was subbing as an undersized center...his game improved a lot when he played next to Nurk as opposed to Plumlee....he's better, next to Plumlee he had to guard big starting centers...now he doesn't....I like Vonleh a lot since the Nurk acquisition..big upgrade...strongest lower core in the post on the team...when he's planted he's not getting pushed out of position...great screens...and he's really young. I think he has a breakout year this season.

S2 in the offseason:

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I stopped breaking out at about 11 years of age....complexion cleared right up...learned an important stress relieving skill about then
I had bad acne in high school....ugh.
People called me Pruneface.
 
I stopped breaking out at about 11 years of age....complexion cleared right up...learned an important stress relieving skill about then

Never had trouble with acne. Guess I got lucky in that way
 

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