Notice Shaedon out 4-6 weeks

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Well hey more playing time for Banton!
 
On the bright side maybe we can lose a bunch of games while Ant somehow raises his value?

I think Simons has pretty much defined himself as a player. He's a smallish tweener guard entering his 7th season; shoots well, can't defend a chair. Meaning his generic value is well defined too.

and obviously, practically speaking, the market for a player like Simons appears pretty limited. Would any team, other than Portland, really want to add Simons as a starter? I'm skeptical about that. I'd also speculate that any market for an undersized SG with no 'wing/2-way/3&D' potential 6th man is even more limited. And that market vanishes because of his salary
 
When asked why he never suited up in college, Sharpe said he was looking forward to the NBA all the way. “Getting my body right, getting a little bit stronger, a little bit bigger,” he said “My mindset was, get my body right.”
 
I think Simons has pretty much defined himself as a player. He's a smallish tweener guard entering his 7th season; shoots well, can't defend a chair. Meaning his generic value is well defined too.

and obviously, practically speaking, the market for a player like Simons appears pretty limited. Would any team, other than Portland, really want to add Simons as a starter? I'm skeptical about that. I'd also speculate that any market for an undersized SG with no 'wing/2-way/3&D' potential 6th man is even more limited. And that market vanishes because of his salary
Yeah. That's my concern as well...
 
When asked why he never suited up in college, Sharpe said he was looking forward to the NBA all the way. “Getting my body right, getting a little bit stronger, a little bit bigger,” he said “My mindset was, get my body right.”
I'm not with you on the meaning you (& others) are implying from this quote. While his upcoming selection in the lotto and guaranteed millions was assured, he was also a teenager about to play against men in long NBA seasons. From an individual perspective, what was to be gained by playing a year in college vs what could be lost? The best thing he could have gained was maybe sharpening his skills and maybe improving his draft position even further. The downside is he could suffer an injury that truly damaged his draft position maybe even setting him back years and those guaranteed millions might all go away. Instead focusing on training and workouts lowers the risk of a substantial prior to the 2022 draft and lets him ramp up to be as physically fit as possible for his upcoming professional career.

Taking the course he did doesn't mean that he's been injury prone or that he would absolutely avoid injury going forward. Hoops is a rough game and everyone who plays suffers injuries. While its a bummer Shaedon has suffered another setback, a labrum tear isn't an injury that should continue to effect him after he's past it like a knee or foot often do. Even if the Blazers were somehow able to be completely healthy this entire season, they'd likely be outside even making the playoffs. This is just a month+ setback in a developmental year that hopefully he still gets plenty of court time in.

STOMP
 
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Well hey more playing time for Banton!

I am not saying he is better than Scoot, (because he is not) but I would not mind if they started him next to Ant ........until Sharpe gets back.
Then let Scoot bring some energy off the bench.

Two taller ball handlers (He and Deni) next to 3 shooters in Ant, Grant, and Ayton
 
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I'm not with you on the meaning you (& others) are implying from this quote. While his upcoming selection in the lotto and guaranteed millions was assured, he was also a teenager about to play against men in long NBA seasons. From an individual perspective, what was to be gained by playing a year in college vs what could be lost? The best thing he could have gained was maybe sharpening his skills and maybe improving his draft position even further. The downside is he could suffer an injury that truly damaged his draft position maybe even setting him back years and those guaranteed millions might all go away.

I don't see how you can spin that to be a good thing. I mean, you tried and it wasn't convincing... Sharpe avoided competition so as to not get hurt, and all he's done since then is get hurt. If he wasn't scared of failure, be it of the performance or injury variety, he would have played in college.

Other one-and-done guys don't seem afraid to play while preparing for NBA competition the next year.
 
I am not saying he is better than Scoot, (because he is not) but I would not mind if they started him next to Ant ........until Sharpe gets back.
Then let Scoot bring some energy off the bench.

Two taller ball handlers (He and Deni) next to 3 shooters in Ant, Grant, and Ayton
That sounds like winning talk. Isn’t losing the goal?
 
more time for Banton is NOT a good thing -- he sucks - he is a summer league chucker who has just enough skill to make a NBA roster for a team going nowhere.
 
I don't see how you can spin that to be a good thing. I mean, you tried and it wasn't convincing... Sharpe avoided competition so as to not get hurt, and all he's done since then is get hurt. If he wasn't scared of failure, be it of the performance or injury variety, he would have played in college.

Other one-and-done guys don't seem afraid to play while preparing for NBA competition the next year.
Most aren't guaranteed to be lotto picks... there was some talk of him going even higher. I'm not spinning his course of action as a good thing, I'm saying its an obvious good option to consider for an athlete in what was his position. For us Bball fans it only sucks, but I'm never consulted and am sure we haven't seen the last of it. Cry a river if you want, but I'm not blaming athletes for making a logical business move for themselves.

STOMP
 
I don't see how you can spin that to be a good thing. I mean, you tried and it wasn't convincing... Sharpe avoided competition so as to not get hurt, and all he's done since then is get hurt. If he wasn't scared of failure, be it of the performance or injury variety, he would have played in college.

Other one-and-done guys don't seem afraid to play while preparing for NBA competition the next year.
Sharpe wasn't a one and done.... He was in high school but practiced with the college team.
 
more time for Banton is NOT a good thing -- he sucks - he is a summer league chucker who has just enough skill to make a NBA roster for a team going nowhere.
are you a big devonte graham guy?

wait, are you devonte graham?

we could do worse than a 6-8 guard dart throw meme player for our 15th man. they can literally cut him if it’s not working out.

put another way, at least he’s not dame’s cousin.
 
Most aren't guaranteed to be lotto picks... there was some talk of him going even higher. I'm not spinning his course of action as a good thing, I'm saying its an obvious good option to consider for an athlete in what was his position. For us Bball fans it only sucks, but I'm never consulted and am sure we haven't seen the last of it. Cry a river if you want, but I'm not blaming athletes for making a logical business move for themselves.

STOMP

Sure, it's good for the athlete if there's enough intrigue surrounding them to offset the unknown, but it's a terrible gamble for the team. It's a greed play, using Kentucky for the springboard and using the NBA for a paycheck he wasn't prepared to earn, so yeah, I blame the athlete. Sharpe was the first to do that that I'm aware of, so there's not much historical data for teams to gauge the risk. Hopefully, getting burned as the Blazers have will make other teams cautious enough that future players won't make it a trend.

"there was some talk of him going even higher."

"its an obvious good option to consider for an athlete in what was his position."

You do see how those are contradictory viewpoints, right? It was a bad option if he could have gone higher by proving himself. It was only a good option if he knew playing in college would expose him and make him drop in the draft.

Sharpe wasn't a one and done.... He was in high school but practiced with the college team.

He graduated early and reclassified. He practiced with the college team and could have played if he chose to.
 
Sure, it's good for the athlete if there's enough intrigue surrounding them to offset the unknown, but it's a terrible gamble for the team. It's a greed play, using Kentucky for the springboard and using the NBA for a paycheck he wasn't prepared to earn, so yeah, I blame the athlete. Sharpe was the first to do that that I'm aware of, so there's not much historical data for teams to gauge the risk. Hopefully, getting burned as the Blazers have will make other teams cautious enough that future players won't make it a trend.

"there was some talk of him going even higher."

"its an obvious good option to consider for an athlete in what was his position."

You do see how those are contradictory viewpoints, right? It was a bad option if he could have gone higher by proving himself. It was only a good option if he knew playing in college would expose him and make him drop in the draft.



He graduated early and reclassified. He practiced with the college team and could have played if he chose to.
We’re already calling Sharpe a bust? Didn’t he average 16ppg last year?
 
more time for Banton is NOT a good thing -- he sucks - he is a summer league chucker who has just enough skill to make a NBA roster for a team going nowhere.
They are trying to lose. Just wait this out. Sharpe will need season ending surgery. Banton is perfect for a team trying to lose games.
 
Sure, it's good for the athlete if there's enough intrigue surrounding them to offset the unknown, but it's a terrible gamble for the team. It's a greed play, using Kentucky for the springboard and using the NBA for a paycheck he wasn't prepared to earn, so yeah, I blame the athlete. Sharpe was the first to do that that I'm aware of, so there's not much historical data for teams to gauge the risk. Hopefully, getting burned as the Blazers have will make other teams cautious enough that future players won't make it a trend.

"there was some talk of him going even higher."

"its an obvious good option to consider for an athlete in what was his position."

You do see how those are contradictory viewpoints, right? It was a bad option if he could have gone higher by proving himself. It was only a good option if he knew playing in college would expose him and make him drop in the draft.
No dude, you are missing the point. Maybe it's on purpose, I don't really care. Risk vs reward, he made a business decision and now has a 27M contract. If he plays at Kentucky and "proves himself" & goes higher in the draft he has even more millions in the bank but either way he's really rich. You're only kidding yourself if you think this is the last kid who will take this route or that teams will be scared off by his minor health issues.

STOMP
 
No dude, you are missing the point. Maybe it's on purpose, I don't really care. Risk vs reward, he made a business decision and now has a 27M contract. If he plays at Kentucky and "proves himself" & goes higher in the draft he has even more millions in the bank but either way he's really rich. You're only kidding yourself if you think this is the last kid who will take this route or that teams will be scared off by his minor health issues.

STOMP
How many high school kids reclass during their first college season, and have their first practices with the college team well after the season starts with a chance to possibly play mid season, while they are a likely NBA lottery pick? Its just such an unusual situation.

All of these guys should be extremely cautious when there's life changing money hanging out there with real risks of it being lost.
 
How many high school kids reclass during their first college season, and have their first practices with the college team well after the season starts with a chance to possibly play mid season, while they are a likely NBA lottery pick? Its just such an unusual situation.

All of these guys should be extremely cautious when there's life changing money hanging out there with real risks of it being lost.
Reclassifying in high school is very common. Kids wanting to get to the league as quickly as possible. Nobody is reclassifying in college. No point to it.
 
So, how do we feel about Quick’s bold take for Sharpe from The Athletic’s annual bold take column for each team in the league?

“Shaedon Sharpe becomes a household name: In this third season, the 21-year-old shooting guard will win the slam dunk contest at All-Star Weekend (book it) and will lead the Blazers in scoring. Even with last week’s setback — the Blazers announced Sharpe will miss four-to-six weeks with a tear in his left shoulder — he should return in November and have plenty of season to display his shooting and leaping skills. Sharpe last season was starting to blossom in December, compiling consecutive games of 29, 25, 26, 24, and 27 points before developing an abductor strain that led to surgery in January and limited him to only 32 games. Even with high-volume shooters Anfernee Simons and Jerami Grant as teammates, the 6-foot-6 Sharpe has the talent to be the No. 1 option and is ready to pop onto the scene and validate why the Blazers took him seventh in the 2022 draft. — Jason Quick”
 
So, how do we feel about Quick’s bold take for Sharpe from The Athletic’s annual bold take column for each team in the league?

“Shaedon Sharpe becomes a household name: In this third season, the 21-year-old shooting guard will win the slam dunk contest at All-Star Weekend (book it) and will lead the Blazers in scoring. Even with last week’s setback — the Blazers announced Sharpe will miss four-to-six weeks with a tear in his left shoulder — he should return in November and have plenty of season to display his shooting and leaping skills. Sharpe last season was starting to blossom in December, compiling consecutive games of 29, 25, 26, 24, and 27 points before developing an abductor strain that led to surgery in January and limited him to only 32 games. Even with high-volume shooters Anfernee Simons and Jerami Grant as teammates, the 6-foot-6 Sharpe has the talent to be the No. 1 option and is ready to pop onto the scene and validate why the Blazers took him seventh in the 2022 draft. — Jason Quick”
Nope. He injures his shoulder a second time. This time requiring surgery and he is shut down for the second season in a row.
 
So, how do we feel about Quick’s bold take for Sharpe from The Athletic’s annual bold take column for each team in the league?

“Shaedon Sharpe becomes a household name: In this third season, the 21-year-old shooting guard will win the slam dunk contest at All-Star Weekend (book it) and will lead the Blazers in scoring. Even with last week’s setback — the Blazers announced Sharpe will miss four-to-six weeks with a tear in his left shoulder — he should return in November and have plenty of season to display his shooting and leaping skills. Sharpe last season was starting to blossom in December, compiling consecutive games of 29, 25, 26, 24, and 27 points before developing an abductor strain that led to surgery in January and limited him to only 32 games. Even with high-volume shooters Anfernee Simons and Jerami Grant as teammates, the 6-foot-6 Sharpe has the talent to be the No. 1 option and is ready to pop onto the scene and validate why the Blazers took him seventh in the 2022 draft. — Jason Quick”
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But...

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I want Quick to be right and guessing every fan wants him to be right but right now at best I see a star maybe a tad less then CJ.
 
So, how do we feel about Quick’s bold take for Sharpe from The Athletic’s annual bold take column for each team in the league?

“Shaedon Sharpe becomes a household name: In this third season, the 21-year-old shooting guard will win the slam dunk contest at All-Star Weekend (book it) and will lead the Blazers in scoring. Even with last week’s setback — the Blazers announced Sharpe will miss four-to-six weeks with a tear in his left shoulder — he should return in November and have plenty of season to display his shooting and leaping skills. Sharpe last season was starting to blossom in December, compiling consecutive games of 29, 25, 26, 24, and 27 points before developing an abductor strain that led to surgery in January and limited him to only 32 games. Even with high-volume shooters Anfernee Simons and Jerami Grant as teammates, the 6-foot-6 Sharpe has the talent to be the No. 1 option and is ready to pop onto the scene and validate why the Blazers took him seventh in the 2022 draft. — Jason Quick”
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