With two words, Damian Lillard might have taken hold of the Trail Blazers' franchise

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By Jason Quick | jquick@oregonian.com
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on March 14, 2014 at 9:34 PM, updated March 14, 2014 at 10:16 PM
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NEW ORLEANS — By now, we know the excellence of Damian Lillard on the basketball court, a fact that was once again ingrained Friday night when 16 of his 27 points came during a fourth-quarter comeback in the Trail Blazers’ 111-103 victory at New Orleans.

But after this eventful week in the Trail Blazers season, two scenes off the court might give you pause to reconsider how you view the second-year guard.
It started with two words: Hold on.

It was Wednesday night in San Antonio, and the Blazers had just lost their fourth straight game. When Terry Stotts gave his postgame address to the team, it was the same approach the coach had always used: focusing on the positive, looking on the bright side, trying to offer perspective. The silence that signaled the end of his speech hung, only this time, it didn’t linger.
“Hold on,’’ Lillard said.

And from there, a passionate, pointed and spontaneous flow of emotions and leadership came from Lillard. His interjection, and subsequent soliloquy, sparked a team meeting. The players and coaches want the details of the meeting to say in house, but Lillard said the essence of his speech was that it was up to the players, not the coaches, to step up in crunch time, and to not accept the “we competed hard” as a pacifier for losing.

“He took control,’’ said Dorell Wright, who is in his 10th NBA season. “It was a big step for him.’’

Added Wesley Matthews: “It showed he’s grown. He’s one of those guys who has always led by example, and he put it on himself. He was tired of losing so he voiced his opinion. It was good.’’

The next night, Thursday in New Orleans, Lillard and Wright went to dinner together. As they were eating and watching a college basketball game, Wright nearly dropped his fork when he heard what was coming out of the 23-year-old’s mouth.

“He was saying stuff to me that I don’t hear from young guys,’’ Wright said. “He was talkin’ ‘I can’t wait until the summer, because I’m going to be working on this and that.’ And I was like, you already have your head there? Just hearing him saying that, and him looking forward to doing that work, that’s big. When I was that age, I was looking forward to getting back to L.A. to hang out with my friends. That was my main goal. So to hear him say that let’s me know how much passion he has for the game, how much passion he has for winning, and how much of a competitor he is. You just don’t hear guys say that.’’

Then on Friday, all the speeches, all the dinner table talk, was backed up. With the Pelicans holding a 94-89 lead with 6:18 left in the game, Lillard scored seven consecutive points, including a game-tying three-pointer and a go-ahead layup. Then with 1:18 left, he hit a long three pointer from the top, giving the Blazers a 107-100 lead. He ended up scoring the final nine points for the Blazers.
The team that couldn’t finish, suddenly finished.

And it was the kid who had the guts to speak up, the guts to take the big shot, who led them.

As ugly as this week has been for the Blazers, wins that turned into losses, stars who became injured, it could very well turn out to be a defining moment in franchise history. It could very well be the week Lillard took control of this team, and became its driving force, both on and off the court.

It reminds me of that February night in 2007, when a rookie named Brandon Roy came barreling out of the bathroom in the locker room at halftime to confront Zach Randolph, who was berating the Blazers guards for being unable to keep Smush Parker in front of them. In front of everyone, Roy told Randolph he was out of line, that this was a team, and there would be no finger pointing. Randolph waited by the locker room door as the team filed out for the second half and stopped Roy. He apologized, and from there, the team was Roy’s.

Lillard didn’t call anybody out, and he wasn’t looking for attention, but what he did this week — on and off the court — goes a long way in a locker room.

“When he spoke up (in San Antonio), I was like, ‘OK, I like it,’ ” Wright said. “That’s what you want; you want guys like that on your team. For him to take that leadership, for him to step up and say something right then and there? I’m telling you, that was big.’’

It’s not that Lillard has never showed leadership qualities. He has always been a strong presence on this team, but nothing like this week. When I told him I was surprised that it was him who spoke up in San Antonio, he acted offended.

“Why are you surprised?’’ he asked.

“Because you are so young,’’ I replied.

“I just felt like it needed to be said,’’ Lillard said. “It turned out everybody was feeling the same way. As a point guard, you should be able to speak up and get your team to respond. I spoke like I felt about what had been going on, and people started to spit stuff into it. Guys spoke up — Earl (Watson), Mo (Williams), that’s what we needed. Keep it all the way 100, I guess.’’

For Stotts, who seems to be overly careful about challenging this team, or being critical, it was a welcome gesture when Lillard spoke up after he was done talking.

“I’m glad someone did,’’ Stotts said. “The fact that it was Damian ... hey, he cares about winning. I thought the passion with what he said was absolutely as important as what he said. He wanted us to win games, and what we had to do to win games, and that we were better than that. But the fact that he spoke up, like I said, I wasn’t necessarily surprised, but when it comes from one of your All-Stars, that’s a big step in leadership.’’

It’s always important to have a leader inside the locker room. But when that guy’s play also speaks as loudly on the court? It’s priceless. It’s what you build around. It’s what you cherish, and appreciate that it’s here, not in Los Angeles or Miami or Chicago.

So facing a five-point deficit on the road with six minutes left, and facing a demoralizing 0-5 road trip? This is what I want to hear from the Blazers leader:

“The game was on the line,’’ Lillard said. “So I needed to step up.’’

So he did. And in the process, he might have taken hold of a franchise.

--Jason Quick

http://www.oregonlive.com/blazers/index.ssf/2014/03/quick_damian_lillard_caps_what_could_be_a_defining.html?utm_source=twitterfeed&utm_medium=twitter
 
Re: With two words, Damian Lillard might have taken hold of the Trail Blazers' franch

Jason Quick ‏@jwquick With two words this week, Damian Lillard might have taken hold of the Trail Blazers franchise http://www.oregonlive.com/blazers/index.ssf/2014/03/quick_damian_lillard_caps_what_could_be_a_defining.html#incart_river …


Sly Blazer ‏@SlyPokerDog
@jwquick Nice article but I think you meant to say "stay in house" not "say in house."



Jason Quick ‏@jwquick
@SlyPokerDog got it. Thanks for having my back.
 
Re: With two words, Damian Lillard might have taken hold of the Trail Blazers' franch

As good as LA is, this aspect is just not in his personality. He and we needs someone like Lillard.
 
Re: With two words, Damian Lillard might have taken hold of the Trail Blazers' franch

I know a lot of you don't care for Quick but this was a fascinating article. I'd rather have the ball in Lillard's hands then LMA's at the end of games. Aldridge will always be Robin, nice to Lillard become the Batman we need.
 
Re: With two words, Damian Lillard might have taken hold of the Trail Blazers' franch

This is really good to hear! People sometimes forget just how special this team is across the board. Stay hungry! Dame is the real deal!
 
Re: With two words, Damian Lillard might have taken hold of the Trail Blazers' franch

Calling LA Robin is a bit much, he is so bread and butter that kind of demeans his contribution IMO. He is not clutch though at all, hes got a little better but damn I get nervous when he is shooting a game winner or taking late in the game free throws. More like Dame is our heart and LA is our muscle.
 
Re: With two words, Damian Lillard might have taken hold of the Trail Blazers' franch

Calling LA Robin is a bit much, he is so bread and butter that kind of demeans his contribution IMO. He is not clutch though at all, hes got a little better but damn I get nervous when he is shooting a game winner or taking late in the game free throws. More like Dame is our heart and LA is our muscle.

I think Robin is fair. This team goes as far as Lillard takes it, LA as great as he is for us can be replaced a lot easier than Lillard.
 
Re: With two words, Damian Lillard might have taken hold of the Trail Blazers' franch

Calling LA Robin is a bit much, he is so bread and butter that kind of demeans his contribution IMO. He is not clutch though at all, hes got a little better but damn I get nervous when he is shooting a game winner or taking late in the game free throws. More like Dame is our heart and LA is our muscle.

Calling him Robin isn't an insult. Pippen road that role all the way to the HOF. An insult would be comparing Aldridge to Aquaman. Aqua is a superhero but honestly what the fuck is he good for?
 
Re: With two words, Damian Lillard might have taken hold of the Trail Blazers' franch

Calling him Robin isn't an insult. Pippen road that role all the way to the HOF. An insult would be comparing Aldridge to Aquaman. Aqua is a superhero but honestly what the fuck is he good for?

The problem is that we're feeding him the ball in the clutch like he's Batman.... That needs to stop. I've always looked at LA as a second-fiddle and it's time that he accepts that role. Lillard is the man.
 
Re: With two words, Damian Lillard might have taken hold of the Trail Blazers' franch

The problem is that we're feeding him the ball in the clutch like he's Batman.... That needs to stop. I've always looked at LA as a second-fiddle and it's time that he accepts that role. Lillard is the man.

You're in the wrong forum.
 
Re: With two words, Damian Lillard might have taken hold of the Trail Blazers' franch

GREAT piece by Quick. I was critical of his piece last week but this was terrific. He's back in form.
 
Re: With two words, Damian Lillard might have taken hold of the Trail Blazers' franch

The problem is that we're feeding him the ball in the clutch like he's Batman.... That needs to stop. I've always looked at LA as a second-fiddle

no you haven't. When Aldridge had 31/25 on TV against Houston, you said Aldridge had achieved superstar status. That he had surprised you with his play. That you didnt know he could get much better after last season. Especially his 38 points vs OKC. You said he had achieved superstar status. Now you're backpedalling because he's hit a righ stretch.
 
Re: With two words, Damian Lillard might have taken hold of the Trail Blazers' franch

I think Robin is fair. This team goes as far as Lillard takes it, LA as great as he is for us can be replaced a lot easier than Lillard.

LA can be easily replaced?? 24 points and 11 rebounds? Who else out there can do that? Love and that is it. There are tons of great point guards.
 
Re: With two words, Damian Lillard might have taken hold of the Trail Blazers' franch

I knew lillard would do it. He must have read my posts, keep it lillard swag baby.
 
Re: With two words, Damian Lillard might have taken hold of the Trail Blazers' franch

no you haven't. When Aldridge had 31/25 on TV against Houston, you said Aldridge had achieved superstar status. That he had surprised you with his play. That you didnt know he could get much better after last season. Especially his 38 points vs OKC. You said he had achieved superstar status. Now you're backpedalling because he's hit a righ stretch.

You can be a superstar and still be a second fiddle.

Pippen is a great example of that. Drexler with the Rockets.

With that said, LA couldn't sustain that level of play. He definitely achieved an ability that I did not think he was capable of, but he needs to be able to do it for more than 20 or so games. That's simply not enough to justify being labeled a superstar.
 
Re: With two words, Damian Lillard might have taken hold of the Trail Blazers' franch

Great article. I did like the dig on Stotts there... because it's so true. These guys are professionals, they don't need to be coddled.

I always knew Dame had it in him... so there it is.

I've been pretty critical of this team this week (It's hard watching 2 leads evaporate with nary an effort)... but, I think with this win tonight on the heels of that locker room talk... this is Dame's team.

I've said, also, this week, that I've warmed up to the idea of a trade for LMA, because, like NB3 has said... He had a GREAT stretch there in the early part of the year... and 24/11 is great... but he's so inconsistent with his jumper and when he decides he wants to go to the paint. Now, honest time, I think that goes on Stotts riding him too hard (That could also be attributed to all those close games we were winning, as well).. and even on that note... in those close games, I want Dame with the ball EVERY TIME. Not just some of the time, EVERY TIME. LMA is NOT a #1 option IF he is not going to the rack in crunch time. If he's taking the jump shot, I want Dame taking it, not LMA. PEriod. That, in a nutshell, is where I'm coming from. I'd rather defer to LMA only if Dame is hounded... and it's shown that Dame can adjust, so I think he can do what he wants when he wants (Sans that god awful LAL game). But, I don't want LA taking the jump shot. I want him going to the rack.. if he misses while doing that, I can live with it. Not with his jump shot.
 
Re: With two words, Damian Lillard might have taken hold of the Trail Blazers' franch

LA can be easily replaced?? 24 points and 11 rebounds? Who else out there can do that? Love and that is it. There are tons of great point guards.

When he's out, other players score and rebound more. Lately we've been better without him.
 
Re: With two words, Damian Lillard might have taken hold of the Trail Blazers' franch

When he's out, other players score and rebound more. Lately we've been better without him.

Lately we've beaten bad teams without him, yes. Do you think we'd have beaten any of the good teams we've lost to recently if we'd sat LA instead?
 
Re: With two words, Damian Lillard might have taken hold of the Trail Blazers' franch

Lately we've beaten bad teams without him, yes. Do you think we'd have beaten any of the good teams we've lost to recently if we'd sat LA instead?

You have to admit that Nic and Dame seem to step up more with LA out of the picture.
 
Re: With two words, Damian Lillard might have taken hold of the Trail Blazers' franch

You have to admit that Nic and Dame seem to step up more with LA out of the picture.

Sure, and SA has played just fine without Duncan the last five years. But SA didn't trade him because of a few games every year.
 
Re: With two words, Damian Lillard might have taken hold of the Trail Blazers' franch

Sure, and SA has played just fine without Duncan the last five years. But SA didn't trade him because of a few games every year.

Yeah, but LA has a long way to go before he's Tim Duncan. A looooooong way to go.
 
Re: With two words, Damian Lillard might have taken hold of the Trail Blazers' franch

I think the article makes Stotts look pretty bad.
 
Re: With two words, Damian Lillard might have taken hold of the Trail Blazers' franch

I think the article makes Stotts look pretty bad.

Pretty much just confirms my suspicions. We don't need a Sarge, but Terry is too nice to be head coach.
 
Re: With two words, Damian Lillard might have taken hold of the Trail Blazers' franch

Everything Quick writes is dramatic, & every win/loss is like a game 7. In the last week he's called out the "big 3" LA/Dam/Nic in an article. Then he writes about how LA has always had to prove wrong his detractors, and states he suspects LA will answer the challenge. Then he writes about how "unstable" Blazers are no longer aiming at HCA and just fighting to get in the playoffs. Now Damian Lillard's "two words" take hold of the franchise. It's bipolar analysis. I don't dislike Quick like some of you do. But I don't buy into the deeper meaning psychobabble that he reports in each win/loss. Good for Dame for speaking up. Not sure that we need to make a movie about it though.
 
Re: With two words, Damian Lillard might have taken hold of the Trail Blazers' franch

Yeah, but LA has a long way to go before he's Tim Duncan. A looooooong way to go.

Well sure. But the point isn't that at all. The point is that woo fucking hoo we beat some shitty teams without LA, and because there were 20 shots and 11 rebounds not getting hoovered up by our main star, other people's numbers improved.. Big fucking deal. If this brave new offense survives 20 games of scouting and actually beats a team above .500, call me.
 
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Re: With two words, Damian Lillard might have taken hold of the Trail Blazers' franch

Pretty much just confirms my suspicions. We don't need a Sarge, but Terry is too nice to be head coach.

I'm fine with a Good Cop as head coach, if he has a Bad Cop assistant with the authority to make things painful.
 
Re: With two words, Damian Lillard might have taken hold of the Trail Blazers' franch

You have to admit that Nic and Dame seem to step up more with LA out of the picture.

Dame did! after the game he said that with LA out they play with a different sense of urgency. There's the crux of the problem right there. They need to play that way always if they want to make a strong playoff push.
 
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Re: With two words, Damian Lillard might have taken hold of the Trail Blazers' franch

Dame did! after the game he said that with LA out they play with a different sense of urgency. There's the crux of the problem right there.

Great, but that's the "win one for the Gipper" effect. If we traded LA we'd lose that.
 
Re: With two words, Damian Lillard might have taken hold of the Trail Blazers' franch

Calling him Robin isn't an insult. Pippen road that role all the way to the HOF. An insult would be comparing Aldridge to Aquaman. Aqua is a superhero but honestly what the fuck is he good for?

Lol, I always thought Captain Planet was lamer than Auqaman. At least he isnt aqualad though, I didnt even know he existed.


http://popcultureaddict.com/comic-books/lamestsuperheroes-htm/
#1 – Aqualad
Now everybody likes to pick on Aquaman as being lame – but can you imagine being his sidekick? I take you now to a meeting of the Teen Titans…

Robin: Okay everybody – how was your week this week? This week Batman and I stopped the Joker from causing mass genocide! What did you do this week Speedy?

Speedy: This week Green Arrow and I shook down some crooked politicians, joined a peace rally, stopped some racist cops and fed the homeless some of Green Arrow’s famous chili – how about you Donna?

Wonder Girl: Wow – me and Wonder Woman flew to Mount Olympus in her invisible jet and had a special meeting with Zeus and the other gods of Mount Olympus… how about you Aqualad?

Aqualad: Ummmm… me and Aquaman stopped some dolphins from going into a hydro dam!

Kid Flash: Wow – you suck Aqualad.

Furthermore, Aqualad had this really dumb looking perm – making him look like a Brady… Thanks for coming out Aqualad…

So that’s it, dear friends. However there are so many more characters I’ve left off the list! Jean the Baton and the rest of Section 8, The Inferior Five, the Lieutenant Marvels (with Hoppy the Marvel Bunny), Bouncing Boy (and other various Legionnaires) and the golden age Red Tornado just to name a few. However, as you can see, there are lame superhero ideas out there. Just those dimwits at Maxim magazine didn’t want to take the time to find them. Perhaps they should stop spending so much time thinking about half-naked starlets and read a few more comic books.
 
Re: With two words, Damian Lillard might have taken hold of the Trail Blazers' franch

Well sure. But the point isn't that at all. The point is that woo fucking hoo we beat some shitty teams without LA, and because there were 20 shots and 11 rebounds not getting hoovered up by our main star, other people's numbers improved.. Big fucking deal. If this brave new offense survives 20 games of scouting and actually beats a team above .500, call me.

We run a different offense with LA though. That's really my point. Throw the ball down to LA and stand around. It's really frustrating to watch, and more often than not it results in a bad shot from LA. He is shooting a career low 46% from the field this season. Every other year he's been between 48-50%. He's also averaging a career high 20.8 FGA, which is 3 FGA more than his previous career high of 17.8 which was last season. So he's taking more shots and he's making less of them.

Now, I'm sure this has a lot to do with Stotts' offense, but with LA out it has forced Terry to open up the offense a bit more and rely on Lillard to carry the scoring load. My opinion is that the team plays a better overall offense without LA because they don't feel like they have to feed him the ball every time down the floor. It's pretty obvious that Dame defers to him, so it's not surprise that Lillard has flourished in the games with LA out of the lineup.
 

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