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I can think of an excuse. He's a brutal outside shooter who dominates the ball. Hinrich would be a much better fit, although I'm not keen on that move either.
I think his lack of outside shooting is overstated. Ramon can stick the midrange jumper fairly well. He can get to the free throw line at an excellent rate which offsets the lack of three point shooting. I don't see how Hinrich is a much better fit, maybe if you want someone who will give you almost the exact same thing as last year. Maybe if you want a guy to not penetrate and give it to the bigs, then yea I suppose. Ramon would make our bigs so much better, which is of bigger significance than how he fits next to Roy.
Which elite big has he played with in Milwaukee?
Which elite big has he played with in Milwaukee?
Elite? None. That's not a problem since we don't have any elite big men of our own either. The same argument could be said of Chris Paul, Deron Williams, and Derrick Rose. What's your point?
So, the motivation to choose Miller over Hinrich is per-year salary being less, length of contract shorter, and allows Portland to not give up as much salary cap space?
All of the above, plus it would indicate a welcome change in philosophy. Get a PG who will spoon-feed our big men, instead of being so perimeter oriented.
Which offensively elite big has Andre Miller played with in his career?
But if you sign Sessions, and he doesn't pan out....
You're left going into the season relying on two very young players to run the PG position for a team expected to get past the first round of the playoffs. At least going into it with Miller, you basically know what you are getting. Same with sticking with Blake, or going to Hinrich, as well. Going in with Sessions, we know he can run a team that has absolutely nothing to play for. Milwaukee's team was basically on extended summer league after Redd went down. Do we know whether he can 'run an offense"? That he can play alongside a high usage guard and play 4th fiddle? We don't. I am not saying he can't, but he is stilla question mark as an above average starter in the league. Not as much as Bayless, but again, with Miller, Bayless has 2 years of backup time to learn, develop, etc. Signing Sessions makes him PG #1, which leaves much bigger question marks than signing Miller, and basically pushing the PG issue out 2 years, which is perfectly acceptable.
how many times does the "Team X waived a player, trade coming soon" thing actually work out? I swear, everyone gets all excited and then nothing comes of it.The Bulls just waived a player. Could mean they're making a move...
The point was that he can get into the lane and dish.
The fact that he has averaged so many assists in his career without playing with an elite big man speaks volumes at how good he would be for us

He averaged 1.5 more assists and 1 more TO than Blake last season in 5 more minutes per game. He's also a terrible 3 pt shooter (28%), although he is better than the utterly horrific Sessons. He's old and gets beat by quicker guards, just like Blake does.
I fail to see the upgrade.![]()
He averaged 1.5 more assists and 1 more TO than Blake last season in 5 more minutes per game. He's also a terrible 3 pt shooter (28%), although he is better than the utterly horrific Sessons. He's old and gets beat by quicker guards, just like Blake does.
I fail to see the upgrade.![]()
upgrade in the luxury tax PA will have to pay next year.
Then I am sorry for you.
1.5 assists and 1 more TO. Also pulled down 2 more rebounds, however, and attempted 4 more FTs a game. The benefit of those 4 FTs could be seen by the easy points, but also by the additional 2 fouls per game it causes against the opposition. Could be putting opposing bigs in foul trouble early, could be getting us into the bonus mroe often.
Why does an upgrade need to be a long term solution? Why can't we upgrade for two years, and then move on from there? Not every move has to benefit us 7 years from now.

We're not near the luxury tax. Signing Andre Miller for all of our cap space will not put us in the luxury tax.
Miller will be 34 by next year's playoffs. He's not a long-term solution, and bringing him in for a year as a starter doesn't make much sense to me.

Ok. You certainly aren't going to convince me you are right, so let's agree to disagree. While not ideal, I think Miller would be a huge upgrade to Blake, and you don't. It's all good. I mean we both want the same thing at that end of the year for the team, I would assume.![]()

I don't think so, since Miles' deal will be coming off then.
