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Hopes and Worries

Brandon Roy

I hope that Brandon can develop into one of top five players in the league with out presenting the issues of a superstar: developing a huge ego (in Roy's case, not to much to worry about. He has showed us all his good character so I don't think that he will develop a bad attitude) and developing selfish play (once again, it seems that this is not an issue worth worrying too much about. Brandon has developed his passing skills a lot, and has always given the ball up when he needed to). If Roy can keep developing his skills without developing these issues we might be witnessing the greatest Blazer ever. He will always be the number one go-to player on our team and will hopefully lead the Blazers to many championships.

 

I worry about how prone to injuries Roy is. He has come a long way in his two years as a NBA player, and has been able to over come injuries well. I think one of the most important things that Roy has developed is his sense for his body. He knows when he his hurt and knows when he needs to sit. Another good thing is his patience. He has not rushed back from injuries which will help him keep his body healthy. I would hate to Brandon become another young player with loads of potential but plagued by injuries holding him back (knock on wood).

 

I see Brandon as a life-time starter and a frequent all-star. Finals MVP of the future.

 

Greg Oden

I hope that Oden can be what the whole organization thinks he will be. I don't think that him scoring 25 points per game is necessary to win, but I do think that he will have to dominate the boards and the defensive paint. He is the player that will be so vital in the playoffs due to his defensive ability. The saying "Defense wins championships", will never, never, never ever change. I hope he will be a quicker Shaq. I think he will be a good ofensive player, but not the scoring juggernaught that some hope for.

 

I worry about his health. This issue has been felt so majorly this year, but we can hope that this is the last of his health issues that we will see. But unlike Roy, Oden has been seemed to be less patient with his reabiliation process. Alltough his knee might feel healthy to him, that doesn't mean he should go out and play pick up games at 24 Hour Fitness. So much is resting on that knee, and he needs to listen to doctor's orders, no messing around. I understand his eagerness though. As a player myself, I always want to play, even if I'm hurting. I cannot even imagen the tempation of a injured rookie to play. A little talk from Roy about patience would do the trick

 

I see Oden as life-time starter and an all-star multiple times. Denfensive player of the year of the future.

 

Lamarcus Aldridge

I hope Lamarcus can find the way him and Oden can play together to macimum potential. Oden will be great, but I think that Lamarcus will feel the big benifit of having a player like Oden on the floor. Lamarcus is an amazing one-on-one post player, very KG esce. With Oden demanding a defensive player to stay on him, Lamarcus will less often be double teamed and be able to score even more. LA's scoring numbers might even rise above Roy's next year due to Oden appearance.

 

I worry about his toughness. I want LA to get meaner on the court. He lacks the intimidation of KG, and I'm not talking about calk-throwing and fist pumping, but I mean the demeanor that KG carries into games. LA needs to know that he is going to dominate his opponent, and the ocasional fist pump is totally okay with me. We have seen some of this before, LA has no fear to get into it with Lamar Odom, but I want to see that every night. With that intensity, better rebounding and physical play will follow.

 

I see LA as a all-star on multiple occasion, but more importantly, a player other teams don't want to face.

 

Rudy Fernandez

I hope he can adapt well to the NBA game. I think it would be great if he came into Blazermania and was a good scoring threat. Players of his type are becoming great players in the NBA. Oversized guards. Not oversized point guards, but tall 2 guards. If he can beef up a little, he could become a T-Mac of lesser magnitude.

 

I worry about his attitude. Not cocky on the court, but of the court. This might not be much of an issue as I think, but there are some early signs of questionable attitude. He thinks he is hot stuff. Don't get me wrong, confidence is vital, but too much can be stymieing. The reason I think he might have too much confidence is because of all of the demands he gave to the Blazers in order for him to sign. Asking for a lot playing time for him and his fellow Spaniard might be a little much for an unproven rookie. Maybe just over worrying though.

 

I see Rudy as an asset off the bench. Good scorer for the Blazers and an important piece to the puzzle.

 

Travis Outlaw

I hope Trout can doing what he is doing, that is improving more and more. He has been improving steadily every year and he has been able to add some skills to his freakish athletic ability which has been proven to a lethal combination for other teams. He has been able to take our team to victory multiple times (ask Memphis and Atlanta).

 

To be honest, there isn't much I worry about with Travis. To me, worst case scenario he platues out where he is now and contiues to be a good bench scorer. I can't see him getting any worse.

 

I see Travis as a occasional starter, but mainly a vital piece of the white unit. More game winners to come.

 

Martell Webster

 

I hope Marty can keep improving as well. He has also been improving his game, and had a good year last year. I think Marty can still can get much better due to flashes of excellence that he showed against Utah. Dominating quarters like that shows us he can keep getting better. He has develop a good defensive game and for him to keep developing his defensive stopping

 

I worry about his consitancy. He has been so good at some points of last season, but he also went through long shooting slumps. He often gets stuck in shooting slumps because he lacks the confidence to shoot trew them.

 

I see Webster as a starter as long as he continues to improve. Another important part of our future.

 

Jarryd Bayless

 

I hope he can develop as a good complementary point guard to Roy. I've never really seen him play much, but I think that he seems like a good complement to Roy. He seems like a good scorer, but I wonder about the other end of the court.

 

I worry that he won't be able to fill all the needs we need for our point guard. I hope that he can play the strong defense that we need from our point guard.

 

 

I know I didn't break down my hopes and worries of every player, but I believe that these seven players are our main core for the future. Feel free to add on to my thoughts, and to bring up new ideas about other players.

Comment 37 comments  |  6 recs  | 

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Good stuff

My hope is that LmA is our leading scorer for the next six years. Just ride the train.

President of the Petteri Koponen fan club.

by Sabonis4Ever on Jul 9, 2008 10:01 PM PDT reply actions   1 recs

+1

LMA's reign as "LaMonster of the Low Post" has just begun!

by LaMarvelous on Jul 11, 2008 10:03 PM PDT up reply actions  

Lots to read

but worth it. I agree about LA too

by alexfoster on Jul 9, 2008 10:19 PM PDT reply actions  

Did Rudy ever demand playing time for Sergio?

I don’t recall that happening. Please provide a link if you have one.

"I think it’s going to be very beautiful game next year."
-Batuuuuuuuum!

by rockingharder on Jul 9, 2008 10:24 PM PDT reply actions  

dont need LA to be the intimidator on the team

thats what Joel ‘ghostface’billa is for

roy is just better than 96% of the players he goes against

Oden will be too strong/quick for anyone to intimidate him

trout is too good-hearted

and eventually, i doubt bayless will back down from anyone

by PippenAintEasy on Jul 9, 2008 11:57 PM PDT reply actions  

but

I do think it would be a good idea for LA to try to be more intimidating.

by sob on Jul 10, 2008 10:19 AM PDT up reply actions  

Martell

I REALLY want to see Martell improve. He made some great strides this past year, becoming more consistent..but he’s not there yet. I consider him a marginal starter right now, he’d become a true force at that position if he can improve and maintain his confidence.

by SloppyJoe on Jul 10, 2008 10:43 AM PDT reply actions  

if Marty can

Take James Jones’ place as the dead-eye shooter and wily defensive stopper, I’ll be so pleased. We need someone to bang down 3s and spread the D. If he can also learn to take it to the hole (as has been harped upon), he’ll be just more than anyone could have asked for.

by 50backflips on Jul 10, 2008 11:10 AM PDT up reply actions  

Channing Frye

Is another player I see in our long-term future. If his defensive skills and rebounding continue to develop I could see him as a great asset coming off the bench. Channing and Ike provide a Yin/Yang element that could be very useful to us, making our front line one of the deeper and more versatile in the league for years to come.

My secret hope is that LMA develops a 3-point shot . I see him as our leading scorer for the future, and frankly I think he could be the best player on this team when all is said and done if his rebounding and defense continue to improve.

by sixth on Jul 10, 2008 11:22 AM PDT reply actions  

Frye + Diogu = Yin/Yang Frontcourt Depth...

Great analogy, first of all. But the exciting deal is that both Frye and Diogu could be the type of role players who could stick around with this team for some time. Culture & Character wise, Channing Frye is a fit. Skill wise, Frye could really play with any team due to his unique skills and ideal size. Channing loves Portland and wants to be part of a winning team. He seems like a guy who understands that he will not be 20/10 guy in the NBA and that he wants a long career, on a winning team, in a good city, and not the pressure of being one of the KEY 3 players on a team. He’ll stay.

Ike Diogu also is an ideal candidate for adding a role player that could be with the Blazers for quite some time. Diogu has been compared to Travis Outlaw as far as personality goes: pretty quiet and needs some coaching attention to ensure that he grasps all the concepts and understands his role. Diogu’s back to the basket game, and sheer power that led him to being the Pac-10 player of the year and being a top-10 NBA draft pick, although his transition into the NBA has been a.) with two absolutly brutal franchises (Warriors & Pacers) and b.) Ike has not put in a full season since his rookie year due to injuries. Ike is still young (age 24) has four years of NBA experience (yet only 158 games or 39/year) and also spent four years in college where he was a dominant post player (thanks in large part to his 7’4” wingspan on his 6’8” 255lb frame). There is still a solid career ahead of him if a.) his situation gets better and b.) he can maintain gamer status with his injury issues. Again, I don’t see Diogu busting out to be a STAR player on another team, though he could become a STAR ROLE PLAYER with the Blazers or any other team in the NBA because his post game is so good. Think Dallas’ Brandon Bass, Boston’s Leon Powe, Houston’s Carl Landry, Utah’s Paul Millsap, or Detroit’s Jason Maxiell… all very effective players in their role. Diogu will never be forced into major minutes in Portland, which could be the key to his health AND with Portland being a young team that IS learning with Sarge Nate doing all the teaching, Diogu might get the personal development that he requires to be a very good NBA role player. This could turn into the ideal situation for his career, and thus could get him on board with Portland’s Success Express.

Portland “Under 25” Roster is so talented and deep. With Oden, Aldridge, Frye and Diogu our young frontcourt looks as solidy as any in the league. Add in 28 year old veteran Joel Pryzbilla as our additional 7’0”er, and other teams have serious match-up problems.

by Portland Dynasty on Jul 11, 2008 12:17 PM PDT up reply actions   1 recs

Hmmmm

Well, I guess I agree with most of what you are saying here…but it seems like some of your worries are overblown in some areas and nearly ignored in others. For example:

Oden
I sympathize with your fears about Oden’s patience and health to a certain extent, but 1) Oden’s surgery was to repair a microfracture that was many times smaller than Amare’s (who obviously recovered with great success) and 2) Oden is YOUNG. Like, a kid still. This means that as he matures he will become more knowledgeable and savvy about his own body and limitations. Plus, I think he learned his lesson on this one.
Obviously the repercussions of lingering injuries to Oden are huge, making this a concern worth noting. However, I think I can say with confidence that the big man will be incredible.

Outlaw
Outlaw, on the other hand, I believe is perhaps the Blazer for which I have the gravest concerns. Clearly, in terms of raw talent and athleticism, he is off the charts. We have seen Trout perform some incredible, gravity-defying in-game feats, as well as last-minute heroics. However, I fear that Outlaw will be unable to improve his defense to support his offensive antics. I fear that, while he will remain successful offensively, he will never quite develop into a cog on the wheel of the Blazers which can function smoothly within the offensive system. Frankly, I fear that Outlaw will not live up to his potential, and I fear that his trade value may never be higher than at this moment.

I hope to God I am wrong.

by joelor on Jul 10, 2008 2:25 PM PDT reply actions  

#25

"Besides, AnntheFan will be here any minute to #25 you." T Darkstar

by annthefan on Jul 10, 2008 3:42 PM PDT up reply actions  

Roy might be having knee surgery!!!

I just heard that Roy may have to have surgery on his knee!!! I dont want to sound like an ignorant fool who is making these things up, but i heard from someone that probably would have a pretty good insight into the teams injuries that this was a possibility. If anyone knows anything about this or has anyway of finding out they should do that now! I hope that the guy was just yanking my chain but he sounded serious about it.

by peteypablo on Jul 10, 2008 5:11 PM PDT reply actions  

Ugh.

Link?

"I think it’s going to be very beautiful game next year."
-Batuuuuuuuum!

by rockingharder on Jul 10, 2008 5:46 PM PDT up reply actions  

no

im getting physical therapy done at th the rebound clinic and heard it from a guy who works there

by peteypablo on Jul 10, 2008 5:58 PM PDT up reply actions  

Gotcha.

That’s still scary, but I’ll take it with a grain of salt until we hear something at least semi-official. Thanks for the info!

"I think it’s going to be very beautiful game next year."
-Batuuuuuuuum!

by rockingharder on Jul 10, 2008 8:29 PM PDT up reply actions  

No link... smells like BS to me...

Never read any peteypablo before. I think you are a faker…

by Portland Dynasty on Jul 11, 2008 12:53 AM PDT up reply actions  

I hope the guy is wrong

Im a die hard blazer fan, so there would be no reason for me to fake a post. this was actually my first post, ive been reading blazers edge for a while but never had a reason to post, but when i heard a guy who works at the same physical therapist say that the blazers might not be so good if roy has to have surgery on his knee, i thought i would pass the word around here to see if anyone had heard anything or knew anything about it. So like rockingharder said take it with a grain of salt for now until something else either proves or disproves this, i was just passing along what i heard for someone who would seems like a credible source.

by peteypablo on Jul 11, 2008 2:37 AM PDT reply actions  

Two hopeful points: First, I hope Roy can overcome ...

... his dreadful scoring in the paint. After two years of trying to get calls on two-to-five-foot tear drops (and getting comparatively few), and shooting a horrendous percentage on these shots in the process, hopefully Roy has practiced most of the summer on improving this dreadful aspect of his game. Alan Iverson and Chris Paul come to mind as two great penetrating guards that make a virtual living shooting a high percentage in the paint over the reach of seven-footers. Roy’s shooting is not the greatest from anywhere on the court, but it is pathetic close in. He could probably have added four or five points a game to his (and the team’s) scoring average last year if he had shot a really good percentage on these floaters instead of his actual near 30%. Four points a game would have translated into several additional Blazer wins.

So much of the offensive game these days is inside/outside/spread-the-floor, and Roy would do much to improve his already outstanding contribution to the team if he can just get this aspect of his game to where it needs to be.

Second, speaking of inside/outside, one really big thing to worry about this coming season is three-point shooting. While I personally abhor the three-point shot rule in basketball, it is undeniably a crucial element of the game … and will, hopefully, be even more so for the Blazers next year when Oden’s inside presence opens up the floor. Alas, KP saw fit to let go one of the game’s premiere three-point artists. James Jones, beyond his great character and veteran presence (I thought KP was trying to acquire veteran presence for this team, not liquidate it), was a lights-out long-distance gunner. Enough has already been said about how successful the Blazers were when JJ was on the floor and on his game. Suffice to say here that 45% three-point shooting is equivalent of nearly 70% two-point shooting, which ranks among the best single-season efforts in NBA history.

Can Travis or Martel (or somebody else) pick up the slack? Maybe. But nothing in their progress last season projects out to 45% this year. Great teams generally have both excellent three-point shooters and an inside game. (It’s the shooting outside the paint and inside the three-point line that make for the lowest-efficiency offense.) Teams like Portland last year and Toronto didn’t have both. The Raps made an effort to rectify their situation by boosting their inside game with a draft-day trade, and the Blazers will certainly have more inside with Oden. Conversely, however, the Raptors did nothing to weaken their outside game, while the Blazers significantly weakened theirs. Mind you, I’m not trading the Raptors roster for ours overall, but I don’t have enough fingers and toes to count the number of years since the Blazers came into the league that one of their biggest deficiences was inadequate outside shooting … and these days in the league, outside shooting is more vital than ever.

As a south Florida resident, I can’t tell you how happy I was to see Riles add Jones to the Heat roster; it’s a shame it had to come at the Blazers’ expense.

by blazerwizard on Jul 11, 2008 7:26 AM PDT reply actions   1 recs

disagree/agree

According to the NBA.com Hotspots charts (can’t link directly to a specific chart, sorry), Brandon shot his best percentage in close: .551 shooting on 401 total attempts, which made up the majority of his 1170 attempts on the season. The data would suggest that Roy is actually best at penetrating and finishing, and is at least comparable to Paul (.573 on 454 total attempts) and Iverson (.547 on 609 attempts). Roy does need work on his short-range jumper (the teardrop you mention above), which was about 40% on the season. Paul shoots a terrific 49% from the same spots, with Iverson at about 43%. For reference, Roy’s mid-range jumper hit at a decent 44%, and his 3-point percentage was at about 34.5% which will also hopefully improve.

I agree that the Blazers will miss James Jones and have a need to replace his shooting, but you could easily make the argument that his 44.4% 3pt shooting last year was a statistical abberation, since his career mark prior to last season was 38.5%, and had in fact been steadily declining ever since the 04-05 season, which was the first year that he averaged considerable minutes a game. A dependable 38.5% shooter is nothing to scoff at, but he’s no Jason Kapono. Martell Webster, as a counter-example, has improved his 3-point percentage every year. He will need to pick up the slack that Jones leaves behind, but it may not be as difficult as we fear.

by abdelnaby on Jul 11, 2008 11:40 AM PDT up reply actions  

get marty the ball

He’ll be the guy to spread out the floor. If he’s open beyond the arc he’ll drown them

by 50backflips on Jul 11, 2008 12:19 PM PDT up reply actions  

I'm pretty sure I remember

Nate asking Roy to work on his outside shot. LMA and Oden are going to get a lot of double teams where they can kick it out to an open three point shooter. There are going to be a lot of open for guys on the perimeter with Oden and LMA on the inside.

I think that’s why we’ll see Webster, Roy, and Rudy playing with LMA and Oden quite a bit. People will call Rudy’s defense into question and I say who cares? He’s got to be at least average with his length and quickness, so he won’t be a liability with those other guys on the floor. Heck, with those four guys on the floor, they could afford to have Sergio starting.

"Man I want to rec it again." - pualo talking about jscot's long comment

by tominhawaii on Jul 11, 2008 2:25 PM PDT up reply actions  

I agree

And I expect to see Roy, Rudy, Travis, LMA, and Oden finishing close games.

Other people don't have as much practice at being wrong as I do -- HT, timbo

by jscot on Jul 12, 2008 10:53 AM PDT up reply actions  

eventually

Blake will be in there for Rudy early.

Boomshakalaka

by jksnake99 on Jul 12, 2008 11:47 AM PDT up reply actions  

Really?

I’m not sure. Nate seems to like offensive threats at the end of the game, and Blake didn’t finish a lot of close games last year. He seems to want someone who is a threat to take it to the hoop.

I think it will be whichever of Bayless and Rudy shows himself more NBA-ready, unless they both show they have a ways to go. I think it will be Rudy who is the most ready, at least on the offensive end. We might see Bayless on possessions when we need a defensive stop.

Other people don't have as much practice at being wrong as I do -- HT, timbo

by jscot on Jul 12, 2008 12:18 PM PDT up reply actions  

Nate ...

... will want the rooks to earn his trust before he has them closing tight ballgames.

Boomshakalaka

by jksnake99 on Jul 12, 2008 2:05 PM PDT up reply actions  

Some numbers

I’ll get back to you on Roy; my data source is currently buried in a web maze.

As for the 3-point shooting, let’s look at the data—and bear in mind your perfectly correct thought on “statistical abberation” while we do, which is even more relevant when considering non-veterans. In the last three years, Travis shot 26%, 27%, and 40%, respectively. The last number may indicate great improvement, but (stat abber?) it is based on only half-a-made-shot per game, and the six months of the season (also based on pathetically small numbers of shots) show percentages of, chronologically Nov. thru April: 31, 40, 58, 25, 56, 36. Highly erratic and no real improvement through the course of the year.

Webster for the last three years shows 36%, 36%, and 39%, with last-year’s monthly totals Nov. thru March (he played only one game in April) of 33, 41, 41, 33, and 41.

Both players shoot reasonably well, I grant, a couple points above the league average. But not great. And keep in mind that everyone hopes Rudy will be a big factor this year, which probably means fewer minutes for Travster. Naturally, I (like everyone else) hope for great stuff from these and other guys , but … you know the old saying about a bird in the hand…. well, now the bird is a Miami flamingo!

by blazerwizard on Jul 11, 2008 2:38 PM PDT up reply actions  

Webster/Outlaw

I agree that Outlaw’s improved outside touch can also be considered an aberration, particularly given the small sample size. Since Jones was a bench player, his role is not necessarily Martell’s alone to fill—we’ll need outside shooting to come off the bench and relieve Martell, and it seems we may have to rely on a streaky Outlaw and two rookies. You can’t really predict what will happen here, and while I’m not ready to be doom-and-gloom, I don’t feel we can call this a position of strength, as it was last year.

However, I think we can take Martell’s improving percentages at face value, given that a) his number of 3-pt attempts is high (most makes on the Blazers this year, as I recall), and b) since he has a reputation as an outside shooter, defenses know to crowd him on the perimeter, so he’s consistently making a good volume of 3’s despite opposing defenses. I think the coaching staff’s suggestion for him to improve his ball-handling is right on; if he becomes more of a threat to drive, the defender will have to back off of him… leaving even more room for that sweet outside shot.

The flipside to the statistical aberration argument is that Nate’s offense seems to create opportunities for outside shooters to thrive—Jones had a career year for us, and Steve Blake also has his best outside shooting numbers under Nate (with the exception of a nice .432 clip during his half-season in Denver). So if Martell (or Travis) picks up a little more savvy, or becomes a little more comfortable with Nate’s current offensive scheme, and figures out how to make the system work for himself, we might see a jump in production. Having Martell jump from 38% to 44%, as JJ did, might be a little too much to hope for, but I don’t think it’s unreasonable to hope for ‘Tell to average over 40% on the year. Ideally, we’ll have two starters shooting over 40% from the outside (Webster and Blake), with a third at 37% or better (a slightly improved Roy).

by abdelnaby on Jul 11, 2008 3:08 PM PDT up reply actions  

James Jones was a great intermediate....

Thank you James Jones.
Thank you Ime Udoka.

You guys were perfect fill-ins while Portland was developing its preps-to-pros small-forwards. Patience is a virtue that not many teams have, most GM’s want to make that move that makes them better now regardless of the future. It’s too bad for them. KP was a genius bringing in, first, Udoka who was a Portland State player, a 28 year old with a good head on his shoulders who approached hoops like what it is…a job., and then second, bringing in James Jones for next to nothing, who brought in more experience and a more established 3-point shot to help bridge the gap while Marell & Travis were aging like fine wine. Udoka and J.Jones didn’t cost us much to get, they cost us nothing when they left, they both got good deals based off of their role success with Portland, and they both taught our young SF’s and team valuable character traits. Thank you fella’s.

Now, James Jones is in a set role in Miami. Three-point specialist. They have a young Uber-athletic SF in Dorrell Wright, they have an exciting inside forward in Michael Beasley, they have a veteran do-everything forward in Shawn Marion, and now they have thier 3-point specialist. Miami is a few pieces away, but Jones will get some good playing time down in Miami and should be part of a pretty decent team. Best of luck to you.

As for the Blazers…. Travis and Martell are two guys that under the spot light this year to again take another step forward. It seems that both Coach Nate and GM Pritchard are confident in the growth of our SF’s that this is the first year they didn’t get a solid character vet on the cheap to keep bridging the gap… maybe that means both Nate & KP KNOW that Martell and Outlaw will get the job done this year and in the future?

by Portland Dynasty on Jul 11, 2008 12:31 PM PDT up reply actions  

Solid 3-pt shooters

seem to be a dime a dozen these days. Korver/Kapono/Posey/Jones/etc…there are a lot of good 3-pt shooters in the league. Although losing Jones will hurt, I think Rudy should be a solid addition, as a guy who can both shoot and penetrate pretty well. (Even though he is a rookie). I think people underestimate how solid our post game is going to be…aldridge’s knack for getting the ball in the hoop is unbelievable, and his scoring should get an incredible boost this year. That should keep the perimeter clear.

by premthegrem on Jul 11, 2008 2:43 PM PDT up reply actions  

3-pt shooting and Frontcourt...

I have heard Nate, Channing and KP mention on radio that Channing is looking to improve his shooting and 3-pt shooting so he can get on the floor more. Channing already has a great touch and is definitely big enough to have killer range, I think this is an exciting option for where our 3’s are going to come from… Martell, Outlaw, Rudy, Frye, Bayless, Blake and hopefully some Roy too!

As far as our frontcourt goes, boy was I excited about Oden/Aldridge/Pryzbilla/Frye/Outlaw, but add in a true PF-banger like Ike Diogu, his back to the basket skill set and beefy 6’8”, 7’4”wingspan and 255lbs frame are a very underrated addition. Diogu has missed many games for the past 3 years and is entering the 5th year of his career, that started by being drafted 9th overall. This guy is a beast and if Nate and Co. can work on developing this guy who is still just 24 years old, we got him as an after-thought “salary-match” player and, if healthy, his presence gives Portlands frontcourt UNBELIEVABLE FLEXIBILITY. This is really Portland’s strength. This amount of frontcourt depth should definitely keep wide open 3pters throughout all the games….

Very impressed with the frontcourt, thanks KP!

by Portland Dynasty on Jul 11, 2008 5:57 PM PDT up reply actions  

yea,

Aldridge legitimately demands a double in the post, but with Oden down low, teams will have to stay honest, or Oden will burn them repeatedly with power slams. If Aldridge draws man coverage, he can probably score on just about any 4 in the league, except for maybe KG and TD. If you seriously think about it, the only teams with a 4/5 tandem that could really hold their own against us are the L*kers/Suns/Raptors. However, each of those teams has question marks…for the L@kers, is Bynum healthy? For the Suns, is Shaq still good/durable? And for the Raptors, Bosh should hold his own with ease, but JO might have problems if he’s still injured. Other than those teams, nobody has a tandem with as much potential as we do (we have our own question marks of course). The crazy thing about this team is that we have potentially 7-8 players that can explode in any game. Roy/Aldridge/Outlaw/Webster have shown evidence of being capable in this respect, and Fernandez/Bayless/Oden are rumored to have this ability also. Has any team ever had that kind of depth before? If even 4 of these 7 guys develop into consistent game breakers, the team could end up making runs at historic records.

by premthegrem on Jul 11, 2008 11:57 PM PDT up reply actions  

Front line 3 pointers. Where have we heard that before?

Oh, yeah. It was a year ago. All about Aldridge really burning up the three-pointers in practice. Now its Frye. They both have nice touch from 18. We can believe 23 when, and if, it happens. Until then, it’s just wishful thinking.

by blazerwizard on Jul 12, 2008 6:30 PM PDT up reply actions  

About Brandon Roy. Some players just have that special personality that allows them to be great and still have humility. I think Kevin Pritchard knows that the guys he picks are great basketball players because of their winning attitudes. It’s why such a young team like the Blazers succeeds when other young teams couldn’t.

This team is on the cusp of something so special and there are no reasons too worry. What ever is going to happen will happen. Let the coaches, players, and management do their jobs. As fans all we have to do is cheer and enjoy.

by BRoyInThe4th on Jul 14, 2008 6:02 AM PDT reply actions  

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Community blog posts and discussion.

Recommended FanPosts

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The Blazers Future Regarding Free Agent Signings
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Thunderous Manboobies
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Why do we hate LaMarcus Aldridge?
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Oregonlive "journalists" 2 new posts...same old drivel
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Greg Oden Suffers Life-Ending Injury; Gets 3-Year Extension

Recent FanPosts

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The Blazers' Future Regarding Trades
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WHAT TO DO WITH NIC BATUM BECAUSE WE WILL LOSE HIM IF NOT TRADED.
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Trade that helps us out now and the future
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How can the All-Star game be more fun and competitive?
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Earl Boykins!
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LaMarcus Aldridge about to become the 10th highest scorer in Blazers franchise  history
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New trade that gets us a new point and a three point shooter
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Portland getting.....
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The Sun Behind the Clouds: Blazers still on track.

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FanShots

Quick hits of video, photos, quotes, chats, links and lists that you find around the web.

Recommended FanShots

It's pretty clear that the season is over already ;)
Double rainbow of sadness:

1) JBay is getting shorter
2) We never got to see him with a mustache

I miss you tiny raptor man.

via The Basketball Jones http://blogs.thescore.com/tbj/2012/02/09/things-of-note-for-february-9-2012/#more-34561
Blazers Broadcasters Mike Barrett and Mike Rice re-enacted NBA referee Scott Foster's controversial goaltending call on Portland Trail Blazers forward LaMarcus Aldridge, who was defending Oklahoma City Thunder All-Star forward Kevin Durant, during this week's edition of Blazers Courtside. Remarkably, no one was injured during the taping of this segment.

Original video of the play here. 
Quotes from the players and coaches here. 
The NBA admitting it got the call wrong here. 
Dave's  extended thoughts here. 
BlazersMakr's FanShot: Major Vegas action on OKC prior to tip here. 
Audio of Chad Doing of 750 AM The Game going HAM on Foster here.

OK, that should just about wrap up the goaltending discussion.

Courtside video via Blazers Broadcasting cameraman John Curry.

-- Ben Golliver | benjamin.golliver@gmail.com | Twitter
In 2008 Tim Donaghy indicated that Scott Foster was a ref that also fixed games
Blazers Owner Paul Allen Ranked No. 3 American Philanthropist In 2011

Recent FanShots

"You Must Be Known For Your Defense, Because You Definitely Stole My Heart"
Bill Simmons: Deron Williams To Dallas 'Is A Lock'
LaMarcus Aldridge Needs Support Around Him
LaMarcus Aldridge Finds Out He's An All-Star With His Teammates
Congratulations to Portland Trail Blazers forward LaMarcus Aldridge, on his first All Star selection.

As seen on www.trailblazers.com
AWoj: Aldridge an All Star
CRAZY stat from Houston game
NBA MVP Rankings... LMA @ #10

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