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Olshey hasn't produced a "needle moving" move, but what kind of needle-moving moves were you expecting from a capped-out team? The Blazers' main trade assets are Lillard, Aldridge, Batum, Matthews and Lopez...their starters. Most people seem to not want a single starter to be traded. "Creativity" only goes so far--trading garbage for gold isn't a valid off-season plan.
The team had the MLE and BAE and got solid value for both, in my opinion, on short-term commitments. They upgraded the bench significantly. The only other player that was semi-realistic was Hawes but A. he chose to go to another team for equivalent money and B. he's not a needle-mover either and arguably isn't even a better player over the next year or two than Kaman.
The hardest step is to move a team from "very good" to "championship-caliber." Most teams that reach "very good" never make that step because they're capped out reaching that level and any major upgrades are basically stars who are almost never available. Hopefully, Olshey will be able to make that hardest step, but it's going to come from moves at the margins. The Spurs, after assembling their core of Duncan/Parker/Ginobili, didn't create the best roster in the league by getting guys who everyone knew were "needle-movers." They targeted under-the-radar guys that they evaluated properly and integrated into their system perfectly. That's what Olshey will have to do and it may take more than one off-season.
The team had the MLE and BAE and got solid value for both, in my opinion, on short-term commitments. They upgraded the bench significantly. The only other player that was semi-realistic was Hawes but A. he chose to go to another team for equivalent money and B. he's not a needle-mover either and arguably isn't even a better player over the next year or two than Kaman.
The hardest step is to move a team from "very good" to "championship-caliber." Most teams that reach "very good" never make that step because they're capped out reaching that level and any major upgrades are basically stars who are almost never available. Hopefully, Olshey will be able to make that hardest step, but it's going to come from moves at the margins. The Spurs, after assembling their core of Duncan/Parker/Ginobili, didn't create the best roster in the league by getting guys who everyone knew were "needle-movers." They targeted under-the-radar guys that they evaluated properly and integrated into their system perfectly. That's what Olshey will have to do and it may take more than one off-season.
