I'm sorry I don't impress you.
Not a comment on you personally, guy. Your argument wasn't a very strong one.
And I'm sorry if you're content with the Blazers being a jump shooting team. Elite teams don't win by jump shots alone. They play inside-out basketball and grind it out on defense.
Defense has nothing to do with being a jump-shooting team. The Bulls did fine as a perimeter-oriented team on offense, they certainly didn't play inside-out offense. The Showtime Lakers didn't, the Pistons (of either vintage) didn't, the Celtics (of '80s or '00s vintage) didn't. Teams play to the strengths of their talent, and if the talent is good enough, they are elite.
The team is among the best in the league, offensively. Their problem is defense. If they defend like this, they'll be elite as a jump-shooting team, because they're good at it.
Jumpshots will always be heavily chance-based
And that "chance" is based on shooting percentages, and the team is very good at shooting the ball. Their offensive efficiency is great.
Inside scoring is great. The team doesn't currently have an inside scoring presence, so they should continue to play to the strengths of their players, which is shooting high-percentage jumpers. If Oden develops into a consistent inside scoring presence, the team will alter their game plan accordingly.
I hope you don't expect the shot to fall "most of the time" in a seven game series for four rounds in a row to win us a championship.
They don't have the defense to win a championship. If they played strong defense, their jump shots do fall consistently enough to win seven games series and a championship.