BlazerCaravan
Hug a Bigot... to Death
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NOTE: This is very long, and I was really bored and curious when I wrote this.
Overview: I'm going to compare the two 3-year windows (1989-92, 1998-01) with last year's performance. All stats are regular season. I use PER as a shorthand for "good" versus "bad" versus "average" players, not as gospel. It's just a good red flag for underachievers and deceptively bad players (like Rider) or deceptively good players (like Sabas at 35!)
So, anyway...
1989-90 Rotation: Coop's 33, Buck's 29, Clyde, Jerome, Danny Young are 27, Terry's 26, Duck and Drazen are 25, Mark Bryan'ts 24, Cliffy's 23.
Jerome - 15.7
Buck - 14.3
Terry - 20.0
Clyde - 22.2
Duck - 13.3
Cliff - 9.3
Danny Young - 11.5
Wayne Cooper - 10.6
Drazen - 15.5
Mark Bryant - 9.1
The story - entering their championship window, the Blazers make a run with two 20+ PER players and a bevy of average to below-average role players. A lack of maturity prevents them from winning the finals against Detroit, a team with no regular season player over 17.3 PER, but with better players at positions where Portland was weak: the front line (Aguirre, Laimbeer were 15.8 each, and Rodman was 15.4). The tougher, rougher team won this round.
1990-91 Rotation: Walter Davis is 36, Danny Ainge is 31, Buck's 30, Clyde, Jerome, Danny Young are 28, Terry's 27, Duck and Drazen are 26, Mark Bryan'ts 25, Cliffy's 24.
Clyde - 22.1
Terry - 21.7
Buck - 14.3
Duck - 12.7
Jerome - 15.6
Cliff - 14.1
Ainge - 17.0
Young - 11.7
Bryant - 11.2
Walter Davis - 11.7
The story: Ainge and Davis brought experience, and (hopefully) more stable performance for the emotional team. The Lakers got lucky, ending a very good team's hopes early. Of note, Cliff got a lot better, Duck got a little worse, Ainge was a good move, but Davis wasn't.
1991-92 Rotation: Danny Ainge is 32, Buck's 31, Clyde, Jerome, Danny Young are 29, Terry's 28, Duck is 27, Mark Bryan'ts 26, Cliffy's 25, Alaa's 23, Robert Pack's 22
Terry - 18.1
Clyde - 23.6
Kersey - 14.7
Buck - 15.0
Duck - 10.5
Cliff - 14.2
Ainge - 15.4
Alaa - 13.5
Pack - 10.5
Bryant - 11.3
The story: Terry dips below 20, but Clyde takes the team on his back with his best season since 1988-89, the third of three season's he'd get above 23. Buck improved a little too, presumably to make up for Duck's continued slide. Ainge got older and slower, and the young guys weren't turning out to be terribly special. Against the Bulls, who had three players about 20 PER (Ho Grant at 20.6, Pippen at 21.5, and Jordan at 27.7), they were no match.
1998-99 Rotation: Sabas is 34, Anthony is 31, Augmon is 30, Walt and Jim Jackson are 28, Rider's 27, Grant's 26, Damon is 25, Sheed is 24.
Damon - 14.7
Brian Grant - 17.0
Sheed - 16.7
Rider - 13.7
Sabas - 20.4
Jim Jackson - 13.1
Walt Williams - 16.3
Augmon - 13.0
Greg Anthony - 16.6
Kelvin Cato - 14.5
The Story - a young core of Damon, Rider, Grant, and Sheed is joined by vets Sabonis, Anthony, and Augmon. This team had quite a bit of potential, and if Rider's knee had held out a few games longer, might have made it to the finals. More than the previous run, these three lineups shift and change each year ans the core of Damon, Grant, and Sheed are surrounded by more and more mercenaries.
1999-00 Rotation: Schrempf is 37, Sabas is 35, Pippen is 34, Anthony is 32, Augmon is 31, Steve Smith is 30, Grant's 27, Damon is 26, Sheed is 25, Bonzi is 23, O'Neal is 21
Sheed - 18.1
Pippen - 16.4
Steve Smith - 17.3
Sabas - 20.3
Detlef - 14.5
Greg Anthony - 13.0
Brian Grant - 14.0
Bonzi - 17.3
Jermaine - 13.3
The Story: A good number of old mercenaries surround a core of Grant, Damon, and Sheed. Sabas is still something special at 35 years old, and Sheed seems to be ascending nicely. But a horrible string of bad luck derails this team forever.
2000-01 Rotation: Sabas is 36, Pippen is 35, Rod is 34, Greg is 33, Augmon is 32, Kemp, Smith, and Dale Davis are 31, Damon is 27, Sheed is 26, Bonzi is 24.
Sheed - 20.9
Damon - 16.3
Steve Smith - 15.9
Dale Davis - 15.1
Pippen - 15.1
Bonzi - 18.8
Sabas - 18.4
Augmon - 12.3
Kemp - 11.4
Anthony - 12.0
The Story: With a 20+ PER and two 18+ PER's, this team looked to be pretty good, but chemistry issues and a horrible bench (weak and old) kept this team from advancing past the first round. Bonzi turned out to be a wonderful surprise, and the notion of a Damon/Sheed/Bonzi core doesn't seem too bad, if they could just get over the off-the-court issues.
2008-09 Rotation: Joel is 29, Blake is 28, Channing is 25, Outlaw and Roy are 24, Rudy and LMA are 23, Sergio's 22, Oden's 21, Batum is 20
LaMarcus - 19.1
Roy - 24.0
Outlaw - 15.1
Blake - 14.5
Rudy - 15.4
Joel - 15.4
Batum - 12.9
Oden - 18.1
Sergio - 12.5
Frye - 10.0
The Story: Roy has the best PER season of any Blazer since Clyde's 1987-88 season (when Clyde had a PER of 24.1). The Blazers have two more of their young core with 18+ PER. Rudy has a Drazen Petrovic-esque rookie year (is PER is also 0.1 below Drazen's). Batum's rookie year is better than Cliff's, but the worst of any of the starters between 1989, 1998, and 2008. The team wins 54, but with experience could have upped it to 56.
The 1989-90 team was just starting to plateau. The core was 27 on average, and the time was right to make their move. They had three good chances during their plateau, and almost took it all home twice.
The 1998-99 team was interesting, because it really (when you look at the PER's) was based around Sabonis and Sheed. A big frontline that could take on Shaq and his size, with the best players on the team being frontliners. Trader Bob tweaked and tweaked, but couldn't make it happen. The pieces all got too old, and eventually blew up because winning wasn't enough.
The 2008-09 team is younger than both teams by a couple of years, but already has as much talent as the best of the teams. The worst of the rotation has been let go, and replaced by Andre Miller (who had a PER last year of 18.6). This reminds me a lot of the Danny Ainge move, but the one thing KP isn't doing is adding that second piece, which turned out to be not so good for the 1990-91 team (Walter Davis). The team isn't going to suddenly grow much older due to trades or signings.
Looking at all of these PERs (which I'm not taking as gospel so much as a good single indicator of "good" versus "bad" versus "average" players), it becomes apparent that backup PF is really not a big deal, and that one of your starters can be below average and the team can make waves anyway.
Looking Ahead: If Batum can improve to average, and Oden can stay in the game long enough to make an impact long-term, this team is going to SCARY good. Not quite "1989-90 Blazers with Sabas" good, but... not as far away as it seems.
Overview: I'm going to compare the two 3-year windows (1989-92, 1998-01) with last year's performance. All stats are regular season. I use PER as a shorthand for "good" versus "bad" versus "average" players, not as gospel. It's just a good red flag for underachievers and deceptively bad players (like Rider) or deceptively good players (like Sabas at 35!)
So, anyway...
1989-90 Rotation: Coop's 33, Buck's 29, Clyde, Jerome, Danny Young are 27, Terry's 26, Duck and Drazen are 25, Mark Bryan'ts 24, Cliffy's 23.
Jerome - 15.7
Buck - 14.3
Terry - 20.0
Clyde - 22.2
Duck - 13.3
Cliff - 9.3
Danny Young - 11.5
Wayne Cooper - 10.6
Drazen - 15.5
Mark Bryant - 9.1
The story - entering their championship window, the Blazers make a run with two 20+ PER players and a bevy of average to below-average role players. A lack of maturity prevents them from winning the finals against Detroit, a team with no regular season player over 17.3 PER, but with better players at positions where Portland was weak: the front line (Aguirre, Laimbeer were 15.8 each, and Rodman was 15.4). The tougher, rougher team won this round.
1990-91 Rotation: Walter Davis is 36, Danny Ainge is 31, Buck's 30, Clyde, Jerome, Danny Young are 28, Terry's 27, Duck and Drazen are 26, Mark Bryan'ts 25, Cliffy's 24.
Clyde - 22.1
Terry - 21.7
Buck - 14.3
Duck - 12.7
Jerome - 15.6
Cliff - 14.1
Ainge - 17.0
Young - 11.7
Bryant - 11.2
Walter Davis - 11.7
The story: Ainge and Davis brought experience, and (hopefully) more stable performance for the emotional team. The Lakers got lucky, ending a very good team's hopes early. Of note, Cliff got a lot better, Duck got a little worse, Ainge was a good move, but Davis wasn't.
1991-92 Rotation: Danny Ainge is 32, Buck's 31, Clyde, Jerome, Danny Young are 29, Terry's 28, Duck is 27, Mark Bryan'ts 26, Cliffy's 25, Alaa's 23, Robert Pack's 22
Terry - 18.1
Clyde - 23.6
Kersey - 14.7
Buck - 15.0
Duck - 10.5
Cliff - 14.2
Ainge - 15.4
Alaa - 13.5
Pack - 10.5
Bryant - 11.3
The story: Terry dips below 20, but Clyde takes the team on his back with his best season since 1988-89, the third of three season's he'd get above 23. Buck improved a little too, presumably to make up for Duck's continued slide. Ainge got older and slower, and the young guys weren't turning out to be terribly special. Against the Bulls, who had three players about 20 PER (Ho Grant at 20.6, Pippen at 21.5, and Jordan at 27.7), they were no match.
1998-99 Rotation: Sabas is 34, Anthony is 31, Augmon is 30, Walt and Jim Jackson are 28, Rider's 27, Grant's 26, Damon is 25, Sheed is 24.
Damon - 14.7
Brian Grant - 17.0
Sheed - 16.7
Rider - 13.7
Sabas - 20.4
Jim Jackson - 13.1
Walt Williams - 16.3
Augmon - 13.0
Greg Anthony - 16.6
Kelvin Cato - 14.5
The Story - a young core of Damon, Rider, Grant, and Sheed is joined by vets Sabonis, Anthony, and Augmon. This team had quite a bit of potential, and if Rider's knee had held out a few games longer, might have made it to the finals. More than the previous run, these three lineups shift and change each year ans the core of Damon, Grant, and Sheed are surrounded by more and more mercenaries.
1999-00 Rotation: Schrempf is 37, Sabas is 35, Pippen is 34, Anthony is 32, Augmon is 31, Steve Smith is 30, Grant's 27, Damon is 26, Sheed is 25, Bonzi is 23, O'Neal is 21
Sheed - 18.1
Pippen - 16.4
Steve Smith - 17.3
Sabas - 20.3
Detlef - 14.5
Greg Anthony - 13.0
Brian Grant - 14.0
Bonzi - 17.3
Jermaine - 13.3
The Story: A good number of old mercenaries surround a core of Grant, Damon, and Sheed. Sabas is still something special at 35 years old, and Sheed seems to be ascending nicely. But a horrible string of bad luck derails this team forever.
2000-01 Rotation: Sabas is 36, Pippen is 35, Rod is 34, Greg is 33, Augmon is 32, Kemp, Smith, and Dale Davis are 31, Damon is 27, Sheed is 26, Bonzi is 24.
Sheed - 20.9
Damon - 16.3
Steve Smith - 15.9
Dale Davis - 15.1
Pippen - 15.1
Bonzi - 18.8
Sabas - 18.4
Augmon - 12.3
Kemp - 11.4
Anthony - 12.0
The Story: With a 20+ PER and two 18+ PER's, this team looked to be pretty good, but chemistry issues and a horrible bench (weak and old) kept this team from advancing past the first round. Bonzi turned out to be a wonderful surprise, and the notion of a Damon/Sheed/Bonzi core doesn't seem too bad, if they could just get over the off-the-court issues.
2008-09 Rotation: Joel is 29, Blake is 28, Channing is 25, Outlaw and Roy are 24, Rudy and LMA are 23, Sergio's 22, Oden's 21, Batum is 20
LaMarcus - 19.1
Roy - 24.0
Outlaw - 15.1
Blake - 14.5
Rudy - 15.4
Joel - 15.4
Batum - 12.9
Oden - 18.1
Sergio - 12.5
Frye - 10.0
The Story: Roy has the best PER season of any Blazer since Clyde's 1987-88 season (when Clyde had a PER of 24.1). The Blazers have two more of their young core with 18+ PER. Rudy has a Drazen Petrovic-esque rookie year (is PER is also 0.1 below Drazen's). Batum's rookie year is better than Cliff's, but the worst of any of the starters between 1989, 1998, and 2008. The team wins 54, but with experience could have upped it to 56.
The 1989-90 team was just starting to plateau. The core was 27 on average, and the time was right to make their move. They had three good chances during their plateau, and almost took it all home twice.
The 1998-99 team was interesting, because it really (when you look at the PER's) was based around Sabonis and Sheed. A big frontline that could take on Shaq and his size, with the best players on the team being frontliners. Trader Bob tweaked and tweaked, but couldn't make it happen. The pieces all got too old, and eventually blew up because winning wasn't enough.
The 2008-09 team is younger than both teams by a couple of years, but already has as much talent as the best of the teams. The worst of the rotation has been let go, and replaced by Andre Miller (who had a PER last year of 18.6). This reminds me a lot of the Danny Ainge move, but the one thing KP isn't doing is adding that second piece, which turned out to be not so good for the 1990-91 team (Walter Davis). The team isn't going to suddenly grow much older due to trades or signings.
Looking at all of these PERs (which I'm not taking as gospel so much as a good single indicator of "good" versus "bad" versus "average" players), it becomes apparent that backup PF is really not a big deal, and that one of your starters can be below average and the team can make waves anyway.
Looking Ahead: If Batum can improve to average, and Oden can stay in the game long enough to make an impact long-term, this team is going to SCARY good. Not quite "1989-90 Blazers with Sabas" good, but... not as far away as it seems.

