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Sorry Brian, by saying that, I don't mean to also imply then that the plan is worthless and not a good idea, or something to be intrigued by. I mean, I like our team this year. Not in a we are going to win the title way, but, I want to see Felton, Nola, Elliot, Wes, batum, Gerald, Aldridge, and maybe Jamal 0play together. I think it can be a fun season. But I have actually already started getting excited about next offseason,much, I imagine, in the same way you are. And have already started looking at who some RFA are, or might be, and what odds we have of landing different players, etc. I doubt Diwhgt and Deron or CP3 are a likely pair for us, but still see it being a fun time, and very interesting, with our desire it seems over the years to take shots at bigger names.
what's fun about trolling the internet?
No, the line of reasoning is "look at the realities of the NBA, and not some probablistic model with faulty entering arguments."
There haven't been very many teams in the last decade who were a) playoff teams, b) had a young all-star-level player locked up long-term, and c) 30+ M in cap space. The ones who did have that...well, I'll let you look that one up.
I mentioned MIA because it wasn't South Beach and Sunshine that made FA's go there.
lol, did I take a personal shot at you? who's trolling here?
I just find it odd (or maybe amusing) that such a passionate and knowledgeable fan base can be so content with mediocrity. It's ok to strive for more than that as a fan.
Miami and Portland just seem like two totally different destinations to me. I don't know why. Can't place my finger on it exactly.
I would trade Aldridge, yes. Or better yet his heart condition could cause him to sit out this shortened season and we could trade away Wallace and Felton and start this thing over in the draft next year.
The worst place a franchise can be is stuck in the middle without a true superstar to add pieces around. Roy is gone, Oden is done. Time to start over.
I would rather be where we're at then where the Cavs are at. The Cavs struck gold with one of the best #1 picks ever but couldn't put good teammates around him and now have nothing to show for it. Better to build a solid core of talent then put all your money in a few lotto picks. You have to suck for years, possibly a decade before you get one of those top picks and have that be the year there are game changers. Even if you win the lotto (as we did with Oden) it doesn't guarantee a hall of famer.
We need to keep collecting assets, get undervalued players, make smart trades, utilize cap space wisely. I think its more likely to build a contening team through incremental improvements then purposefully sucking for decades. Have the Lakers had to rebuild by being in the bottom of the lottery?
I think there's just a knee-jerk reaction a lot people have about the team risking being worse as they attempt to strive for more.
For instance imagine two hypothetical scenarios. In scenario A) you've got a 10% chance at a title and a 60% chance of sucking for 5+ years and being stuck in the lottery. In scenario B) you've only got a 2% chance at a title, but only a 10% chance of being truly awful for any extended period of time. I have a feeling a lot of people would prefer the second hypothetical; the route where they can say, "I know we got bounced in the first round again, but at least we gave 'em a helluva fight." In scenario B, every year you get to say your team is "respectable" and there's a probably a lot less heartburn.
And just so I don't hear a raft of shit about this, I'm not saying those percentages are real or predictions about the viability of the approaches being debated. I'm just talking risk tolerance and philosophy.
I would rather be where we're at then where the Cavs are at. The Cavs struck gold with one of the best #1 picks ever but couldn't put good teammates around him and now have nothing to show for it. Better to build a solid core of talent then put all your money in a few lotto picks. You have to suck for years, possibly a decade before you get one of those top picks and have that be the year there are game changers. Even if you win the lotto (as we did with Oden) it doesn't guarantee a hall of famer.
We need to keep collecting assets, get undervalued players, make smart trades, utilize cap space wisely. I think its more likely to build a contening team through incremental improvements then purposefully sucking for decades. Have the Lakers had to rebuild by being in the bottom of the lottery?
You can't really compare us to the Lakers can you?
"US"? You aren't a Blazer fan.
I think there's just a knee-jerk reaction a lot people have about the team risking being worse as they attempt to strive for more.
I don't just blindly accept and follow my marching orders like you goofs do.
that's mostly true... I root for the Blazers because I am from Portland and love hoops..but I don't just blindly accept and follow my marching orders like you goofs do.
Interesting. I would call what the majority of us do........ staying loyal to our favorite team. Standing by them through ups and downs..... good times and bad. Unlike yourself that comes around every few months to bitch and complain about everything and show your lack of basketball IQ thru every post. As you were.
Amen to that. This Blazer team is going nowhere, and the sooner we do something about, the sooner we will have a winning team again.Outfuckingstanding news.
It's time to rebuild, and someone down at one center court realizes it. That's good news
Is it really a knee-jerk reaction? If Brandon Roy had never been traded by Minny, the Blazers would still have been the terrible team they were the 5 years prior to Roy.
Great teams are built from existing players, and typically with a bit of luck. The Spurs got lucky on Duncan, and still had a capable David Robinson, Sean Elliott, and a true PG in Avery Johnson. Unfortunately for the Blazers, their shot at greatness went away when Greg Oden turned out to be a dud, and Kevin Durant turned into a Top 5 NBA player. One decision, that seemed like it was win-win regardless of the pick, set the course for where the Blazers are right now. Portland had its shot, and even if LMA turns into a year-after-year franchise player, it will take at least one other player at that level to win titles in the present-day NBA.
Without knowing how the next five years would have unfolded, there's no way to know that. Minus Roy on the team, the excuse of, "we already have a scoring wing, so we don't need Durant." wouldn't have been in play ...
I can agree with most of that and if there is some way of trading for that player then awesome, but usually high-caliber guys end up on the trading block for a reason (either attitude, decline or forcing their way to a preferred destination) which means you either have to get these top end guys via free agency, which seems very unlikely for a team like Portland in the current NBA or you have to draft and develop them ... which is also hard to do.
There is no easy or sure way to championship for this team moving forward, but the best they can do probably do is manufacture as many opportunities as possible and this theoretical Wallace trade -- if it had gone through -- would have created more of those opportunities.
Our last rebuilding took, what, 6 years? No thanks. Not sure I would renew my season tix if we went back to a team of rookies that are 3 years out, if that.
