Tag Archive for 'blazers'

19
Dec

52.

Brandon Roy, shooting here over Matt Barnes, scored a career-high 52 points Thursday night. The Blazers won 124-119.

 

Two nights after the Blazers retired the jersey of team legend Terry Porter, the newest legend in Rip City lore torched the coach’s new team and led Portland to its signature win of this young season.

By now, you’ve heard. You’ve heard of Brandon Roy’s 52 points. The way he continued to battle even though the Suns had just hit yet another three. The way he torched every Phoenix defender on his way to 21 free throw attempts (he made 19). And the way he did it at an efficient rate without ostracizing any of his teammates.

Of course, there were other heroes on this night: Steve Blake scored a season-high 22, not to mention some redeeming last-minute free throws. Travis Outlaw elevated above everyone to hit some clutch jumpers. LaMarcus Aldridge, thank goodness the bank was open on that last shot he hit, played well.

But the story of the night is the one that we will remember for decades. The number itself is intimidating, 52; but the way he got them is what will really stick with fans. The Blazers needed all of them: they needed his drives, crossovers, pull-up jump shots and timely trey bombs.

This wasn’t like a couple of seasons ago when Zach Randolph broke the 40-point plateau by hosting up a variety of offense-clogging shots. This was fluid. This was Brandon Roy. All 14 of his field goals and all those accompanying free throws were timely, necessary buckets.

It didn’t matter who the Suns threw at him. With the longer Matt Barnes on him, Roy simply drove around for a layup. With the quicker Jason Richardson on him, Roy relied on a perimeter game that has excelled in his third NBA season.

He was unstoppable and that led to the Blazers breaking free from the Suns, snapping an 11-game losing streak. This was the win the team has been looking for. Sure, wins against the Spurs, Rockets, Hornets, Magic and Pistons have been nice. But tonight was different. The Rose Garden was rocking like a playoff game. On several occasions the crowd was hushed by a Phoenix three, then you could hear 20, 650 collectively gasp as Roy started his drive, then the subsequent roar as the official signaled for an and one. It was awesome. We’re all going to come out from this with more than just the one victory that will show up in the standings. We’re going to remember, for a long time, Roy’s night.

On the same evening where the organization put Bobby Gross into the rafters, Roy delivered a performance that makes us think of a future where a red banner with a white number “7” will wave gallantly high above the court.

 

17
Dec

Random Thoughts

So it has been awhile since I’ve written anything for PTB and while I doubt anyone has noticed, I do apologize. To make up for my lack of presence these past few weeks, please humor me by reading my quickly and poorly written post which probably contains stories and ideas that have probably already been written about by far better writers. Enjoy.

Need for a Solid Road Win
I’ve been saying this for awhile but just haven’t managed it to put it to paper. If the Blazers want to be considered one of the elite teams (which they were for about a week) they need to put together a solid road win. You’ll say “But Jeff, they beat Detroit, Orlando and Toronto on the road!” That’s fine and dandy, but those 3 teams are not among the elite in the league. Detroit still has a chance to be if they can get their act together (that AI experiment is not working… at all.) Despite Orlando’s record, I’ll take Detroit, Boston and Cleveland over them any day.

Anyways, I’m not talking about the “good” teams in the league. We can beat the good teams away because we ourselves are a “good” team. I’m talking about a win in a city where it’ll really prove that Portland really has something here. I’m talking about a win Salt Lake City, LA, San Antonio, Phoenix, New Orleans, Cleveland, Boston and maybe even Denver. We already lost in Boston and LA once, twice in Phoenix, twice in Salt Lake and once in New Orleans. That’s not a very good start. However, we still have a chance to maybe steal one away in Denver next week and maybe even San Antonio later on. But I’ll tell you right now that we can already chalk up losses when we go to LA again and when we go to Cleveland for the first and last time. That pretty much leaves us Denver and New Orleans to get what I’m calling a “quality” road win. Not a lot of chances left there.

#4 in the Power Rankings? REALLY?
I don’t mean to sound like a hater, but we were ranked 4th in the entire NBA by ESPN for two weeks in a row  in weeks 5 and 6. REALLY? We were the FOURTH best team in the league for two weeks in a row. We were better than Dallas, Phoenix, Utah, New Orleans, Denver, and San Antonio? REALLY?  I suppose if you consider the Power Rankings to only really be a weekly indicator of which teams are hot and which teams are not for that week (which they’re not) sure, Blazers can be fourth in the league. But at no point in time were we ever the 4th best team in the league. Never. Not once. Not ever. Despite our #4 ranking, all those teams I listed above were and are still better than us.  We should have never been mentioned among the likes of the Lakers, Celtics or Cavs. Even being mentioned in the top 5 in the Power Rankings means you are among the elite in the league, and we are just not that. I’m sorry we’re not. You can argue and argue that we’re an elite team, but come talk to me when we barely make (or barely miss) the playoffs. We can talk about how elite the Blazers are in the 8th or 9th spot in the West.

Fair Weather Fans
Of course with the recent 0-3 skid the Blazers suffered through this past week, its no wonder that every single Blazer site is blowing up with impatient, close and narrow-minded comments from fans demanding the firing of Nate McMillan and the trading of every single Blazer sans Brandon Roy. Listen guys. Teams go on skids. Maybe if you’re among the elite in the league (and we’re not) you don’t go on skids, but we do. This has just been a rough patch. We’ll get over it. The dismantling of the Kings tonight was a good way to calm the fans down a bit, but it still amazes me at how quick public opinion can change. Just 2 weeks ago, when we were somehow 4th in the ESPN Power Rankings, every Blazer fan was tooting their horn and simply amazed by how good our young team had been playing. Fast forward 2 weeks, add in a few tablespoons of reality and suddenly the city is erupting. Brimstone and hellfire. People. Please calm down. The Blazers will get back on their feet. We don’t need to fire Nate and we don’t need to trade everyone away…which brings me to my next point:

Trades
A trade is inevitable. It just is. KP may have said that trades are not on his mind right now, but remember that this is the mean who made “Pritch-slapped” a common verb around the league due to his wheelings-and-dealings. There’s going to be a trade whether KP says there will be or not. To me, there’s really one position the Blazers have to tend to, and that’s the very overcrowded 3 spot. You can’t trade Martell because well, he just signed a 5-year $25 million extension and at that price, he’s an absolute steal starting or coming off the bench. Then you have Nicolas Batum who currently starts over Travis Outlaw as a rookie and whom everyone in Portland has fallen in love with. I think the Blazers like his energy and potential too much to trade him away. That leaves Travis Outlaw the odd man out.

If you’ve read any of my articles about Travis Outlaw, they’re basically about me hating him and wanting him out of Portland and what you’re about to read is no different. Look, Travis is capable of doing really great things for us on the court. He’ll drain the open 3, make that ridiculously difficult jumpshot he seems to love and jam it home for the easy dunk. The thing is, he has no fundamentals. He looks like a puppy still trying to figure out how to use his body correctly. The kid can’t dribble but still tries to create his own shot (which he can’t…and that little two-dribble jumpshot he does DOES NOT COUNT) and just plain looks awkward while on the court. I’m saying trade him while his stock is high. He will only get marginally better than he is now at this point in his career. Call me crazy or call me an idiot but the Travis Outlaw we have here at age 24 is going to be the same Travis Outlaw at ages 25, 26, 27 and 28.

I don’t know who or what to trade for. I just feel that he needs to go. I marginally like him when he does something well but I absolutely loathe him when he does something poorly…which in my eyes is a lot of the time.

13
Dec

Miles is About to Land

Here it is, the news that you didn’t want to hear following a three game losing streak. Darius Miles is about to sign with the Memphis Grizzlies. It’s apparently all but done says Yahoo! Sports:

 

In a move that could damage the salary-cap flexibility of the Portland Trail BlazersDarius Miles is close to signing a minimum-salary contract with the Memphis Grizzlies, two NBA sources said Friday.

Miles recently worked out for the Los Angeles Clippers, who drafted him third overall in 2000, but team officials said they would prefer to wait until January to decide whether to sign him. The Grizzlies had room for another player after trading guard Javaris Crittenton to the Washington Wizards on Wednesday and appear to have settled on Miles after looking at D-League options. One source said only a last-minute veto by Grizzlies owner Michael Heisley could keep the team from signing Miles.

13
Dec

Ghost of Blazers Past

This, from Ball Don’t Lie is pretty hilarious. Gatta love the Channing Frye bit.

12
Dec

Frustration

Anyone who watched the game last night against Utah will be left with one feeling: frustration. Brandon Roy was the only bright spot, with a stellar 31 points and 8 rebounds. Otherwise, Oden looked bad, Blake was outplayed and Outlaw continued to prove that he will not be on this team at the end of the season. More then anything, the Blazers were far out coached. Call it a young team, but the Blazers settle for the 3 so much that it can be disgusting to watch. Okay, that’s harsh, but true when you have Aldridge down low (and Boozer is out). In the fourth quarter, we began to use Aldridge again, and on 3 possessions went in down low to him. Oh what do you know, a 6 point run. Then, kick out to Blake for a three, missed. Next possession, Rudy for 3… and missed. Then the next possession, another missed 3. I don’t understand. I know, we are currently (or were) the 2nd best 3 point shooting team, but is that more by fluke then anything else? We were not supposed to be a good three point shooting team, and this is a huge surprise by any standard. I mean Outlaw, Fernandez and Blake have been lighting it up from behind the arc. The only one in that group that should be shooting like that is Blake (and to a lesser extent Fernandez).

There were so many times during the game where I was just left thinking what are we doing. You know when you were little and went up against an older kid in a game of one-on-one? Well, that was last night. So what do you do when you are against those older kids? You shoot outside shots. You know you can’t drive in, because every shot will be rejected. You stand no chance other then throwing up deep shots, shots that are so far out they wont defend. Here is my problem: The Blazers are better inside then the Jazz (sans Boozer). The tables should have been turned, with Oden, Aldridge and Przybilla holding down the key, putting a body on everyone coming down the key. Force them to play behind the arc.

This game just goes back to the Orlando game too, showing that we are boys playing a mans game. Sure, we can jump out of the gym, but sometimes we forget to tie our shoes and trip before we jump. Blowing an 8 point lead in a minute? Coaching. I am not saying Coach Nate isn’t a great coach, because I do think he is a good fit for this team, but I think he is growing, just like the players. In the world of NBA coaching, Nate is a pretty new kid on the block. He didn’t coach in college and his main credential is that he was a solid court leader in his playing days. I see the value in having a coach that has played, but I also see the value in having a coach who can coach. That is coming with Nate, but the last two games show just how much growth our coaching staff needs as the players.

We cant just shoot our way to the playoffs. And even if we do, we won’t get far in the playoffs just shooting. We HAVE to defend the fast break, we are terrible in transition defense (a la Suns and Jazz games). So, it’s frustration. We were spoiled with the early start, despite Oden being a disappointment, Webster being out (again) and Aldridge having a tough start (not bad, but not growth over last season).

08
Dec

A Great Time

This is such a great time to be a Blazer fan. The Blazers have completed their second five game road trip, and both trips ended with winning records. Bounces that would bounce out in years past, are bouncing in (Toronto game, Houston game). Shots that usually would drop for the opponent, are rimming out (Spurs game, Toronto game). What a great time to be a Blazer fan. There have been two “bad” losses, to the Lakers and Celtics. But in the same sense, those are the two elite NBA teams, so even a blow out can not be too “bad.” Sure, that game in Golden State was disappointing and it would have been nice to steal a game in Phoenix, but no one could have asked for a better start to the season. Yes, Oden got hurt, but it’s already December and no one has been arrested (an accomplishment for the Blazers who are getting rid of that image fast). Brandon Roy, LaMarcus Aldridge, Greg Oden and Rudy Fernandez are all budding NBA stars, and a joy to watch. That’s all for now, I’m just full of gratitude to the men (KP and Allen) who put this team together.

05
Dec

The First Quarter (14 - 6)

Season Breakdown

 

The Blazers are off to a great start to the season. The team is currently 2nd in the Western Conference and in sole possession of first place in the Northwest Division. Oh how good it feels! The season is 20-games old (or young), which is about 25% (24.39%) of the season. So, here is a little statistical breakdown:

 

A Look at Percentages:

 

Percent of Season Completed: 24.39%

Percent to 50 Wins: 28%

Percent to 45 Wins: 31.11%

Percent to 41 Wins: 35%

On Pace for: 56 Wins

Percent of Home Games Played: 17.07%

Percent of Road Games Played: 31.71%

A Look at Last Year: 8 - 12

 

The main statistics that show up to me is that the Blazers have played almost 32% of their road games, while only being 25% through the season. On the flip side, the Blazers have only played 17% of their home games (and are currently undefeated at home).

 

Also of note, the Blazers are on pace for 56 wins, but even more showing is that the team is a whole 10% ahead of schedule to match last seasons record of 41 wins (already 35% completed).

 

 

The Good:

Point Differential Rank: 4th in the NBA (+5.5)

Three Point Percentage Rank: 2nd in the NBA (37%)

Turnover Rank: 4th in the NBA (13.1 per game)

 

The Bad:

Opponents Field Goal Percentage Rank: 20th in the NBA (45.87%)

Opponents Three Point Percentage Rank: 22nd in the NBA (41%)

Opponents Turnover Rank: 23rd in the NBA (13.8)

 

In essence, the team is doing well across many categories, be it turnovers, shooting or overall point differential. The more showing area might be the area of weakness, which would be defense. The Blazers rank 20th and 22nd in the NBA for defending the field goal and three point field goal, respectively. Those rankings, in the 20’s, is not great. If the Blazers want to continue their successes over the remainder of the season, they will need to improve on defense. Pull those defensive shooting ranks into the 15 or lower range, and the Blazers will be doing great for the remainder of the season (and playoffs). Also, the Blazers only force 13.8 turnovers a game (which is more then they turn the ball over at 13.1) but force an extra turnover per game, convert an extra point off that turnover and your point differential could improve to +6.5. That’s a liberal calculation, but you get the idea.

 

Player Breakdown

 

LaMarcus Aldridge:

Does Aldridge stand for All Star? It might. Aldridge is having another impressive year, averaging nearly 16 points and 7 rebounds per game. Okay, those numbers probably won’t get him a spot on the All Star team (unless the NBA wants two representatives from Portland), but he is vital to the Blazers winning season. Aldridge has improved his offensive abilities, specifically a better back-to-the-basket game. He played his best game against Detroit (and Rasheed Wallace), scoring 27 points in a road win.

 

Nicolas Batum:

The impact that Batum has far outshines his mere 6 points and 3 rebounds per game. He plays limited minutes (16.8) but has provided a big spark of energy and hustle on multiple occasions. He goes for every loose ball, goes after any nearby rebound and has kept vital possessions alive when they count in the 2nd half. He will likely see a dramatic reduction in minutes once Webster returns, but he has had a huge impact in filling the void and more. I guess that is the beauty of Batum, he didn’t only fill a void for an injured player, he carved out a place of his own.

 

Jerryd Bayless:

After only playing in 7 games this season, Bayless has not been given a true chance to run. For that reason, it is not really fair to evaluate his play of impact. What I can say, is that he shows up for practice everyday and is pushing Blake and Rodriguez to be better. If their is an injury at the point guard position, expect Bayless to stand up.

 

Steve Blake:

One of the biggest weaknesses going into the season was supposed to be the lack of ability at the point guard position. Well, Blake doesn’t agree. Blake is averaging 11.5 points and 4.2 assists per game in only 29.5 minutes. He has played great in the last six games (6-0), and calmed many fears over his ability to run the team. It would be nice to see more assists out of a starting point guard, but his outside shooting and experience (5th year in the league), will be very key come the push for the playoffs.

 

Ike Diogu:

It’s really not fair to evaluate a player who only plays garbage minutes, but Ike is a good guy, a good teammate and fills his role.

 

Rudy Fernandez:

Rudy is either the biggest surprise of the season or the best “I told you so.” He has been stellar, at times, and pedestrian, at times, but overall Fernandez provides the shooting and energy that makes the Blazers so deadly. He averages only 11.6 points per game, hardly a number that will earn him the Rookie of the Year award, but he is the best rookie on the best team, if that counts for anything. Sure, Rose gets great numbers, but he also plays the minutes of a starter, not the 26 minutes that Fernandez is playing. His shooting (43.8% 3PP and 95.3% FT) is really key to the Blazers current record.

 

Channing Frye:

Someone learned to shoot the three and his name is Channing. Coming in to the season, Frye was only a 28% career 3PT, he is 38.5% on the season. That is a huge improvement, and his threes have been moments of great inspiration and energy. You know you love when a big man steps out for the long ball. It’s hard to imagine that at age 25, Frye is one of the oldest players on the team, but he is, and he carries himself like a man. He does depend way to much on the jumper and is weak in the post, but he is slowly converting into a 3/4 and not the 4/5 that he was forced to play his first few years in the league.

 

Greg Oden:

Obviously, Oden came into the season with great hype, and fell, fast (literally in the season opener). He remains the 2nd best center on the team, but first in our hearts. Maybe, I do hold a special place for Joel too. He has become a double double machine over the past few games, well sort of at least. Oden has a much bigger impact on defense, as opposed to offense, but his offensive game is developing. He shots 65% from the free throw line, which is lower then was probably expected, but is still respectable for a big man. The hard thing to remember is that Greg is 20 years old and had only played in 14 NBA games. His upside is still there, just give it time and patience.

 

Travis Outlaw:

Oh Travis Outlaw. He is often a spark plug, but often a black hole. He shots 50% from the three point range, but only a 42% field goal percentage. HUH? Yah, exactly. The beef with Travis is that he has NO FUNDAMENTALS, which is essentially true. He is a Ruben Patterson type hustle player. He thrives off loose play where he can run, create and beat someone with the ball. He does not do well in catch and shoot situations (except from long range) and can’t be trusted with the ball in the final minute anymore. Once Webster returns, Outlaw might see a reduction in his minutes (as well as Batum), but if he continues to shoot the long ball well, averaging about 1.5 made three pointers per game, he will continue to get long runs on the floor.

 

Joel Przybilla:

If I were to name an MVP so far for the Blazers (Roy excluded) it would be Joel Przybilla. He came into the season knowing he lost his starting job, for no fault of his own, and that he would be seeing a lot more of the bench. Then, Oden goes down against the Lakers and in comes the importance of Joel Przybilla. With Oden back in the starting lineup, Joel is coming off the bench and STILL having a big impact. He is a monster on the boards and blocks shoots like it’s his job (I guess it is though).

 

Shavlik Randolph:

N/A

 

Sergio Rodriguez:

Trade me. Don’t trade me. Play me. Let me earn it. Who knows what has really been said or what is all fabrication. What is true is that those lobs Rodriguez throws to Fernandez are awesome. He is playing really well and is a much more disciplined player then last year, but still has significant downside. He will likely never be a starting point guard for the Blazers and his shooting is weak, just 35%. For now, Rodriguez has beat out Bayless, but down the road, who can say. Keeping Rodriguez on the floor has the opportunity cost of not playing Bayless, that will make it double hard for Rodriguez to keep his job, but for now, his performance has been deserving of his playing time.

 

Brandon Roy:

Brandon was the Rookie of the Year, and if the SOY and JOY awards (Sophomore of the Year and Junior of the Year) existed, he would win those too. Brandon is an All Star now and Finals MVP in the making. He is so composed and clutch, a leader but not forceful. Not much needs to be said here, Roy takes care of that on the court.

 

Martell Webster:

Hopefully Webster will return to the lineup very soon. He is out of his boot and running in practice, but still a little behind schedule in returning to game speed. His return will, eventually, push Batum from the starting lineup and possibly reduce Outlaw’s minutes. He is a career 39% 3PT, which is good and since the three ball has been so key to the Blazers, it will be nice to have Webster back in the lineup.

04
Dec

The East Beware, The Blazers are Here

What a season so far. The Blazers are currently 14 - 6 after a win in Washington (D.C. not state) last night. We currently stand 1st in the NW division, 2nd in the Western Conference, and 4th in most Power Rankings (yes, not a true standing but it does show the respect the teams and media from the entire league are giving the Blazers). So, in essence, the season is a quarter done, or 25% finished. I don’t think anyone in Blazermania could have expected or asked for a better first 20 games. The first five were the toughest five games to open a season that ANY NBA team has EVER played, and that’s huge for the team to go 2 - 3 over that strech, not 0 - 5. All of this, of course, with no Martell Webster or a servicible Greg Oden for 4 of the 5 games.

Friday night (in Boston) will be a HUGE test. The Blazers are riding a 6-game win streak and Boston a 10-game streak of their own. These are undoubtably the to hottest teams currently playing roundball. One of the streaks will come to an end and one team will help to solidify their place as an elite team (although Boston doesn’t really have much to solidify past their Campionship banner). Is this a winnable game for the Blazers? Yes, of course. Indiana beat the Lakers earlier this week, further proving that anyone can beat anyone on anynight. The Blazers have been playing good basketball, shooting the 2nd best 3-point percentage. To win on Friday (on ESPN no less) the team will need big performances from players like Steve Blake, Rudy Fernandez, Travis Outlaw and Channing Frye. Why these players? They are the shooters. Aldridge will get all he can handle, and more, from KG. Roy will have Ray Allen and/or Paul Pierce to chase around, leaving the other for Batum/Outlaw/Fernandez. To win this game, the Blazers will flat out have to defend (Oden and Przybilla), rebound (Oden and Przybilla) and shot, shot, shot! Oh, and make those shots. There is no stoping Pierce or KG, they can be slightly slowed, but the one player who can be shut down is Allen, so placing Roy on him might make a less then fun night for both. If Rudy Fernandez can sit behind the arc and go, say 4 - 7 from 3-point land, with Frye and Outlaw each contributing say 6 and 12 points, respectivly, the Blazers will have a chance.

This will also be a great game for Aldrdige to prove he is an All-Star caliber player. He played his best game of the season (27 points) against Detriot and Rasheed Wallace. Now he goes up against KG, the reigning defensive player of the year. If Aldridge gets under 10 points, the Blazers have no chance (unless Roy just goes nuts). This is a winnable game, and the Blazers match up against the Celtics as well, if not better, then most NBA teams. We are hot right now (but so are they), so it should be at least an interesting game. If you win in Boston, then you are instantly a favorite to not only make the playoffs in the West, but make a serious splash. Beat the Celtics and the Raptors on Sunday, well, that’d just be too good to be true.




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