What’s one realistic move that Olshey can pull off to improve this team’s ceiling for next year? — Husein A.
Sign free agent Derrick Jones Jr.
It’s no secret the Blazers need better defensive players. Badly. Only Cleveland, Washington and Atlanta had a worse defensive rating than Portland last season. The 6-foot-7 Jones is a plus-defender who can switch on pick-and-rolls, much like Maurice Harkless and Al-Farouq Aminu did the last time Terry Stotts coached a top 10 defense (2017-18). Jones has a 7-foot wingspan and has pogo-stick hops that make him an elite shot blocker. According to Cleaning The Glass, Jones last season among NBA wings ranked in the 93rd percentile in offensive rebounds, 92nd percentile in blocks and 88th percentile in steals. The guy can instantly help shore up the Blazers’ soft perimeter defense.
If there is a hesitation with Jones, it is his shooting, which the Blazers value from a wing for spacing purposes if he is going to be paired with Damian Lillard and CJ McCollum. Jones is a poor 3-point shooter (career 28 percent), but I would argue he can excel as a slasher who is exceptional at finishing around the rim. Plus, I’m not worried about the Blazers’ offense. With Lillard, McCollum and Jusuf Nurkic, this team will always be a top 10 offense. It’s time this team starts addressing its defense.
The biggest hurdle will be convincing Jones to leave Miami. In April, before the Heat’s run to the NBA Finals, Jones said he wanted to return to Miami, noting a sense of loyalty to the franchise that gave him his first real shot at playing in the NBA. Miami holds his Bird Rights, meaning it can go over the cap to sign him, but it is also believed that the Heat want to preserve cap space for the summer of 2021 to pursue Giannis Antetokounmpo.
Olshey’s biggest carrot in this free agency will be the roughly $9 million mid-level exception, and even though Jones will likely be a hot commodity, I don’t think it will take the full mid-level to land him. And if it does take the full $9-plus million to lure him from Miami’s beaches to Portland’s pine trees, I think you still do it. He’s only 23, which down the road could align him with the next iteration of the Blazers’ core that includes Anfernee Simons, Gary Trent Jr., Nassir Little and Zach Collins.