And one thing that doesn't get mentioned is CJ's 3pt shooting. Last year, he dropped nearly 5% from where he was in 16-17. His TS% was around what he's been for his career mostly because he attempted one more shot from outside, but there was a very obvious dip in efficiency. I think it's fair to expect him to bounce back up with better shot selection. He seemed to round back into form in the playoffs.
I'm a little bit confused if you're talking just 3pt efficiency or over all efficiency?....sure seems like you're talking overall efficiency.
if that's so, he didn't 'dip' last season. He actually improved over the previous season and was at or above his career efficiency marks:
eFG%: last season .527....season before .506....career .522....(last playoffs .506)
PER: last season 17.0....season before 17.0....career 17.2....(last playoffs 17.9)
TS%: last season .553....season before .536....career .552....(last playoffs .527)
assist/turnover: last season 1.95....season before 1.80....career 1.69....(last playoffs 1.97)
now, PER is mostly about volume and raw production but there's a little efficiency metric to it. And, in terms of efficiency CJ was way down in the playoffs. He just made up for it with volume...he attempted 4.1 more FG's in the playoffs then he did in the regular season, and in some games, the timing of those extras FGA's had much higher stakes and were a lot more memorable
while those assist/turnover numbers are encouraging on the surface, there's more to it than just that...
assists/game: 2015-16 4.3
2016-17 3.6
2017-18 3.4
2018-19 3.0
assist rate: 2015-16 21.6%
2016-17 18.0%
2017-18 15.8%
2018-19 13.8%
that's not all bad in that his turnovers have fallen at about the same clip his assists have. Still, that trend is going in the opposite direction of what Portland really needs from him considering how much he has the ball in his hands. That may be even more true next season as there are serious questions if Portland has enough play-making with Turner gone and no backup PG on the roster
I'm guessing that a lot of people keep expecting CJ to get back to the level of efficiency and production he posted in 2016-17. His numbers that year were way above his norms, while his other 3 years as a starter all had pretty similar efficiency and production numbers; indicating that 2016-17 may have been an outlier
In order to 50+ games, we need to win 3 of 4 at home, and go .500 on the road. It's not THAT hard. There are some serious gimme games against the east this year. And I think we can take advantage of teams finding a footing like LAC/LAL/HOU/GS/UTA all of whom had turnover to their big usage positions.
I think it depends on the start of the season
* in 2015/16 when Portland won 44, they got of to a 7-12 and 11-20 start
* in 2016-17 when Portland won 41, they got off to 8-9 and a 13-20 start
* in 2017-18 when they won 49, they got off to a 10-8 and 16-16 start
* last season, winning 53, they got off to a 12-5 and 18-13 start
all 4 seasons they had hot streaks in the 2nd half of the season, but last season was the first they were +5 wins about 30 games in. That was the margin for winning 53
problem is I think the Blazers will be
"finding a footing" like many of the other teams. They will have 3 new starters and about half of their rotation will be new to their Blazer roles. Not only that, the Blazers are making big bets on Zach and Simons. That's pretty thin ice for a good start to the season