There is a problem with this post.
You say "we have a very solid....core. LaMarcus".
Stop right there.
All of us who are bemoaning being stuck in the mediocre middle, and those who would welcome a plan for getting out of that rut are basing our thoughts on the presumed fact that LaMarcus has gone to management and demanded either: the team make significant improvement to the roster very soon, or be traded.
Perhaps you're the one who should stop right there. You're basing you're entire argument on the "presumed" fact that Aldridge has "demanded" a trade if the roster doesn't get better very soon. Please provide a quote attributed to Aldridge where he demands such action. If you can't, you're presumption become an assumption on your part with no facts to back it up.
In fact, according to Chris Haynes, who actually spoke with Aldridge, he hasn't even requested a trade, let alone demanded one:
Aldridge told CSNNW.com that he did not request a trade and we confirmed that as being fact. However, he's not opposed to one and he has no issue with returning if that be the case, a source close to All-Star revealed to CSNNW.com.
Yeah, I know the sky is falling. Everyone EXCEPT our best player is insisting he has demanded a trade.
The team has NOT made significant improvement to the roster. The bench is improved. We have a legit pivot to start instead of a converted PF, which may or may not turn out to be an improvement. This year we have a modest improvement. That's it.
I disagree strongly. Our two biggest weaknesses last year were our historically bad bench and lack of interior defense, Both of those weaknesses have been addressed.
Aldridge did request the Blazers acquire a legitimate NBA starting center who could bang in the paint for 20 - 25 minutes a game so Aldridge wouldn't have to constantly guard and be guarded by the other team's biggest player. They went out and got Robin Lopez who started all 82 games last season and is a legitimate 7-foot NBA starting center. Aldridge will now get to play next to someone even bigger than he is, and not a 6'9" power forward who doesn't play a lick of defense. That alone is a big improvement in both what Aldridge requested and what the team needs.
We added Thomas Robinson, Dorell Wright, Earl Watson and C.J. McCollum to the bench in place of Nolan Smith, Luke Babbitt, Jared Jefferies, Ronnie Price and 27 games of Eric Maynor (most of which happened after the Blazers were tanking).
You're lack of improvement scenario also neglects to include the improvement of our young players. Do you really believe ALL of LaMarcus Aldridge, Nic Batum, Wesley Matthews and Damian Lillard have reached their absolute peak and that NONE of them will be better this year. What about the rest of the bench? Was last season REALLY a career year for Meyers Leonard, Victor Claver, Joel Freeland and Will Barton, or will all of them be WORSE (or no better) than their rookie year this season?
I say it is not a given like you do, but let us assume a "good" season where we get the 8th or 7th slot. What do we get? The chance to be first round cannon fodder for a real team.
What we get is valuable post season experience for our young players. You have to MAKE the playoffs before you can hope to advance. Making the playoffs is progress and a step in the right direction.
Your "plan" of building around the young talented roster we have (LaMarcus, Lillard, Batum) is shot to hell if LaMarcus walks because the team is just assuming that Robin Lopez is going to convince LaMarcus that Portland is the place to be. We would have little to no cap space, no high picks, and just Lillard and Batum to build around.
No, my plan "assumes" that we addressed our biggest weaknesses (worst bench in the 67 year history of the NBA and complete lack of interior defense because we we playing a 6'9" power forward out of position at center), added some better veterans and better young players to our bench. It also assumes that not all of our players have peaked and some of them, 6 who were rookies last year, actually have room to improve. Better bench, legitimate starting center who plays defense, organic improvement of our young players and no tanking = a MUCH better record than last season.
But my real plan is to actually let this team play at least half a season together before panicking and trading our best player (who can't actually "walk" until after two more seasons). Seriously, getting deliberately worse to get better is a long and painful process. Hoping to luck out in the NBA lottery (not just getting a high pick, but then getting lucky that the guy you pick is a future first ballot Hall of Famer) isn't quite as bad as relying on winning the PowerBall jackpot as a retirement plan, but it's still a long shot.
So, rather than blow this team up before they play a single game together, I advocate letting them play some games and seeing how they jell together as a team, how much LaMarcus benefits from playing next to a legitimate NBA center, how much better our bench is and how much our young guys have improved before we blow the whole thing up and start over.
If we take the Chicken Little approach and trade Aldridge now, aren't we just dooming ourselves to at least four more years of lottery picks? And if we are, won't it then be Lillard's turn to demand the trade because he's tired of all the losing? Sounds a bit like lather, rinse, repeat to me. Deliberately sucking in the hope you get lucky only guarantees one thing - that you will suck for the immediate future. I'm tired of the losing, I'm tired of the only thing to look forward to in May is the NBA draft lottery. I want to root for a team that wins more games than it loses and I want to go to a playoff game and cheer for that team, regardless of the outcome. I don't want the new Blazers to be the old Clippers. I don't want to sacrifice wins now in the hope that after 3 or 4 more years of sucking we MIGHT be good enough to be right back where we are now.
BNM