Nikolokolus
There's always next year
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A really nicely written piece on Roy and the predicament the team finds itself in
http://www.portlandroundballsociety...ard-truths-its-time-to-bench-brandon-roy.html
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http://www.portlandroundballsociety...ard-truths-its-time-to-bench-brandon-roy.html
Getting beat Sunday in New Jersey was atrocious, but not really surprising—The Blazers have lost Hope.
That belief—if they just held on a little longer things would get better—vanished along with Brandon Roy’s meniscus and the reason why Greg Oden’s bones suddenly break. Like the American body politic, the Blazers aren’t confident about the future.
Changing that course is going to take courage and an admission of fault no one in the Blazers organization seems ready to own at this point. To accept this role would mean knowingly entering into a world that’s going to get worse before it gets better.
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Brandon Roy should come off the bench.
It makes all kinds of sense. Limiting Roy’s minutes, as the Blazers already are, would give his knees time to rest. It would be a fine way to see if, under less demand, Roy could find a way to operate within the confines of his injury—one that’s supposed to dog him the rest of his career. In the last three games, Roy has been considerably more potent early in games—as if the injury and minutes become heavier weights to carry down the stretch. Certainly tired legs miss jump shots.
In a sixth man role, however, Roy could be an explosive scorer, tearing through lesser opposing bench players. The young Batum and Matthews, who looked downright Roy-like in his stead, would get time to grow. The Blazers could work on expanding their offensive schemes. In other words, it’s time to look to the future.
But a few realities, both in terms of marketing and politics, pretty much preclude this from happening. Everyone would scream: “you can’t put a three-time All-Star, team captain and max-salary guy on the bench!”
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For now, the best change the Blazers could make in trying to plan for a more productive future is to bring Brandon Roy off the bench, while studying closely the limits and remedies for his aching knees.
It’d take someone cooler than a polar bear’s toe-nail to pull it off. They’d have to be super bad—the kind of person who tells an unwilling public the hard truths, coalescing acceptance that difficult sacrifices will be needed from everyone.
