I'm trying to do more of these Q&A sessions with other team bloggers. I find it incredibly helpful to get this in depth information from the guys that know the team best. I hope you agree.
To that end I sat down with Dave from Blazersedge (well, I virtually sat down with him; we weren't like at my dining table or anything, but I was sitting as I wrote emails and I assume he was sitting as well). In case you are not aware, Blazersedge is one of the most popular NBA blogs on the entire interwebs; it's the blog Clips Nation wants to be when it grows up. So Dave must know something, right? Turns out he knows a lot. I asked him five questions, then tossed him a sixth when LaMarcus Aldridge twisted his ankle. He asked me some questions as well, the answers to which you can read over there.

ClipperSteve: I love Nic Batum -- think he's a big time talent. But he seems to be odd man out in Portland, with two All Stars at the forward spots and Wes Matthews firmly entrenched at the two. What is the future for Batum in Portland? He's in the final year of his rookie deal and will be an RFA this summer -- will the Blazers try to trade him now, or hang onto him and assume they can get something good for him later, even if they have to re-sign him as a backup?
BlazerDave: There are several issues here. He may be a big-time talent but night to night his performance is more modest. Granted, nobody's ever tossed him the ball and said, "It's your team, Nicolas" but he hasn't played consistently or aggressively enough to warrant that either. Nobody throws you that ball, you have to take it. Batum never takes it for long. So "big-time" may be a misnomer at this point. He's valuable. He's skilled. He's not a star.
The players around Batum aren't in as solid of a position as you'd think either. Matthews is having a lackluster year, inducing as many groans as cheers from Portland fans. If Batum can play shooting guard, odds are he'll get a chance before the year is out. Even at small forward, Gerald Wallace isn't the lock you'd think he is. He's brilliant on the run. His energy is unmatched when he's healthy and whole. This year hasn't left him in great condition though. His performance is intermittent. He's looking at a possible opt-out clause at the end of the season. He's also pushing 30.
There are two ways Portland can go here. If they plan to win now they're going to need more help. In that case you sacrifice the long-term view and Batum becomes a trade possibility. The problems with that approach are that it's bloody expensive-incoming vets likely being high-salary types-and it's not likely to work. The Blazers aren't just a player or two away from contending...at least not a player they could get. If there's a trade this season Wallace is the much more likely candidate, bringing in young players and picks instead of losing them. In that case the way is clear for Batum as the small forward of the future.
There was no advantage to Batum to sign an extension early, so he didn't. But as you point out, he'll be a restricted free agent this summer. The Blazers will likely match any offer he gets and he and LaMarcus Aldridge will form their forward tandem of the future.
ClipperSteve: The Blazers were 7-2 after their win over the Clippers back on January 10. They're 9-12 since then, with only two of those wins coming against teams with winning records. Obviously, playing a lot of road games in that stretch had something to do with that. But what else is different with the team now versus the first two weeks of the season?
BlazerDave: The Blazers are capable of great games when everything goes well. They have talent at every position, a couple of nice players off the bench, plus Aldridge, of course. You like this team in most situations. But the team has basic flaws. Nobody can get to the rim off the dribble and finish. Almost every player in the rotation is most comfortable working for the same kind of shot: the mid-range jumper. That's the least efficient shot in basketball. The only true low post player they have is Craig Smith. Their three-point shooting is streaky. Aldridge and Batum have stepped up on defense but they still rely heavily on Marcus Camby to watch the interior and rebound. He's good for 25 minutes per night when healthy. If you play him more his legs are shot the next game. Wallace, has trouble performing on the road and is playing below the rim in almost every situation. If you know Gerald Wallace at all then "below the rim" is going to make you shake your head. The guard defense is spotty and the Blazers have zero reliable point guard options outside of Raymond Felton.
Then you have to factor in that, while talented, this team runs at most 8 deep right now. Start doing the math on 8 players with back-to-backs and road travel and you start seeing fatigue, loss of focus, inability to impose their will physically. This team will start out great and then fade throughout the game. Or vice versa, they'll start out horribly and scramble to make it up in the late third and fourth. Either way, playing only 27 good minutes in a 48-minute game is a recipe for a spotty record. Being at home provides rest and an emotional lift from the crowd, but on the road this team looks tired before the ball tips.
The Blazers-Clippers matchup being Portland's third game in three nights, you're likely to see some of this demonstrated in person. Let both teams be fresh and I promise you I'll relish a Blazers-Clippers matchup. That's going to be a great battle. But in game three of three I'm just praying not to get blown out of the building.
ClipperSteve: Jamal Crawford. Man. The guy can get buckets; at times he seems almost unstoppable. But dude is shooting 39% on the season, and doesn't do a lot other than score to help teams win games. Where do you stand on Jamal? Love him or hate him?
BlazerDave: Neither. Crawford is Crawford. From the moment Portland signed him you went, "This was undoubtedly the best free agent they could pick up at this price but still..." He's brilliant with the ball. He also over-dribbles. He's the best Blazer by far at getting his own shot off, but he doesn't look natural doing anything else. Portland's actually playing him at point guard for part of the game. It's great when it works, which is to say when the offense is simple. He actually racks up nice assist numbers. But throw a pick at him or try to get a whole offense running around him and it's a no-go.
Here's the deal, though. The Blazers desperately need scoring, confidence, and experience off that bench. Who's behind Crawford? Nolan Smith, Elliot Williams, Armon Johnson...you haven't heard of any of these guys. They're rookies, newbs, lost out there, not ready for minutes. This is kind of like dating a girl that you know has problems but she's pretty hot and you have enough of a good time when she's in fun mode to balance the crazy bad times. There's nothing wrong with that kind of relationship. You just know that you're not going to take her home to mother and when it's over, it'll be for good reason. We're not married to Crawford but dang, the booty calls would get pretty desperate without him.
ClipperSteve: The Clippers played Charlotte last week, and that team is bad. The Blazers took their best player Gerald Wallace last February, sending them a collection of expiring contracts and two middling first round picks in return. So tell the truth: don't you feel guilty? Gerald Wallace is a stud, and your enjoyment is part and parcel of the misery of millions of basketball fans in Carolina.
BlazerDave: ...says the guy whose team sent broken parts to 18% win-rate New Orleans for their all-time franchise superstar.
But listen, my friend. Forgetting your bus pass on the way to work is bad. Charlotte is something else. Take your older brother's dirty gym sock, use it as an elephant prophylactic, dip it in anti-freeze, then ram it down your throat with a hockey stick. THAT'S Charlotte-level bad. Maybe.
Either way, you're not going to make Blazer fans feel remorse. Misery? Our All-NBA shooting guard is fishing instead of playing ball, a victim of jelly-free knees and the amnesty clause. This guy would have challenged Clyde Drexler for the title of best Blazer of all time and his career got cut short after five seasons, the last two as a shadow of himself. Misery? Take a look at Greg Oden's medical file. You want to talk about misery to a Portland fan? Go teach Guinness how to make beer, or Scotty how to fix the Enterprise, or George Lucas how to milk a franchise into the ground until everybody is bored with it, or Anne Hathaway how to make my toes tingle without even trying. Mmmmm...wait, now what was the question again?
ClipperSteve: The Blazers still don't have a GM. What's up with that? That seems a little, I dunno, weird.
BlazerDave: Hypothetical question: A bus falls off a cliff. It's a big cliff, so it'll take about 20 minutes to hit bottom. Does the bus need a driver in the interim or should the occupants just party it up and do what seems good to them instead of turning the wheel?
Yeah...the Blazers need a GM, especially since they draft about as well as a monkey throwing poop at a dartboard. But the lack of one isn't going to make a huge difference right now. I don't see any practical move that makes them a true contender this year, GM or not. They just need to get some clear direction and a passionate, committed vision before they head forward from here.
ClipperSteve: Sorry about LaMarcus. If Aldridge is out for awhile, what does that do to the Blazers? Or do I already know the answer to that one?
BlazerDave: The Blazers are so dependent on Aldridge right now that it's hard to imagine them succeeding in his absence. This team has two true big men: Aldridge and Camby. Camby, as we said above, is a part-time player. Without Aldridge the Blazers would be fielding a lineup whose tallest reliable player was Gerald Wallace at 6'7". No full-time players would have a back-to-the-basket game. No full-time players would be comfortable anywhere near the key in the halfcourt. No full-time players would command consistent double-teams. Only Jamal Crawford could credibly get his own shot...and we've discussed the ups and downs of that above. Without Aldridge the Blazers become so much easier to defend it doesn't even look like the same team anymore.
Let's put it another way. I was tongue-in-cheek whining about the loss of Oden and Roy above, but step back for a minute and compare. What if the Boston Celtics--the good Celtics of a year or two ago--lost Kevin Garnett and Rajon Rondo permanently. The next season they come out with Paul Pierce and crew and play a little bit above .500. What would happen if Pierce then got injured? I mean, they still have Ray Allen (and back then Kendrick Perkins) but what would you have expected from them? You'd consider it a miracle if they could stay anywhere near .500. That's about what you'd expect of the Blazers if Aldridge goes down, looking at the big picture. It's going to be a nightmare. If they win, it'll be on sheer guts plus the other team being either bereft of talent or wholly overconfident.
Thanks to Dave for providing such insightful answers. I'm hoping that "Booty Call" catches on as Jamal Crawford's new nickname. I'll be doing my part. Remember to visit Blazersedge, but not only to read my answers to Dave's questions.
0 recs | 31 comments
Ouch...we're really catching them on back-to-back-to-back and they don't have LA?
banandy - February 16, 2012
Sucks if LA misses the All-Star Game,
That means that Pau Gasoft will get in.
HVYDRT007 - February 16, 2012
He won't miss it...
Just a sprained ankle. I’m sure it will be better by the All-Star Game.
jenstcy - February 16, 2012
Good stuff.
Gotta love the analogies.
SoCalBoltFan - February 16, 2012
Dave
Dave likes him some analogies, that’s for sure.
Steve Perrin - February 16, 2012
I wonder what our respective blogs would say to Mo/Wes swap...
Mo/Felton sounds like a pretty good PG tandem with what they’re trying to do…
banandy - February 16, 2012
I think I would do that trade in a heartbeat!
And start Mo along Batum, Wallace, LMA, and Camby. Leaves our bench with only Crawford and (errrp) Felton along with a touch of Rhino and Thomas…
clinchmobb - February 16, 2012
I asked my Blazer friend about this the other day and his response was “meh, whatever.” I think he’s had enough of Wes.
Michael White - February 16, 2012
I still think the Blazers will still be a tough game tonite.
First, we always seem to suck when we play in Portland on National TV. Plus, they have lost 3 in a row in a supposedly invincible home arena to play in and do not want to make it 4. I see others stepping up for the loss of LA tonite.
PV Mike - February 16, 2012
I think you will see a tired Blazer team that just came off a tough win on the road...
Camby played heavy minutes last night…So did Wallace. LaMarcus might play but may be a little hobbled with his ankle. As a Blazer fan, I don’t feel confident at all…
clinchmobb - February 16, 2012
What's with the Blazers misery index storyline?
Fans of that team push that stuff all the time. Sure, they’ve had some bad breaks (who hasn’t) but they also went to the playoffs in something like 20 consecutive seasons (a record), a billionaire owner who likes to spoil them, and won a championship in the 70s. Spare me the constant whining about Greg Oden’s and Brandon Roy’s knees.
Otherwise, I liked the article and he’s absolutely right about LAC fleecing NOH way more than Portland fleeced Charlotte.
Michael White - February 16, 2012
Well your guy asked about guilt and remorse...
and that is the storyline that is still being pushed by the mass media this year. Also, that storyline leads into the overcoming adversity storyline this team has managed to write the last couple years…
clinchmobb - February 16, 2012
Pastor Dave and booty calls?
I need to start attending his church!
clinchmobb - February 16, 2012
Well, I went there to read your comments Steve
and I thought the first blogger comments were really condescending about Blake, the Clippers and Los Angeles but then also noticed it has 3 recs. You maybe are being a little kind to them. Dave seems pretty intelligent and a good writer but there is a lot of pent up testosterone there.
PV Mike - February 16, 2012
that is the same blog that endorsed Andre Miller's blind side attack
banandy - February 16, 2012
yeah his preview was quite weird
“oh if we don’t get blown out without Aldrigde… but we totally better then the Clippers”
also their commenters are quite aggressive. I haven’t seen many Citizens wish harm upon other team’s their players.
BelgianClipper - February 16, 2012
???
Dave - February 16, 2012
Git em Dave, GIT EM!
Devyn - February 16, 2012
LOL
I don’t “git” people. But neither did I say anywhere that the Blazers are “totally better then the Clippers”, nor that the likely outcome of this game was anything other than a blowout loss for Portland.
—Dave
Dave - February 16, 2012
so batum is the only thing that can save the Blazers from a blowout???
or what are you implying?
Sorry the structure of that part is confusing me to no end. And it was not helped by the first reaction suggesting 5 ways to smash Griffin or something…
BelgianClipper - February 16, 2012
Pretty much
Batum and Wallace will have to come up big on both ends…or at least that’s the most likely chance the Blazers have.
Also the structure isn’t that bad: The Blazers will probably get blown out. If the teams were on more equal terms (Aldridge playing and healthy, the Blazers not on the third night of three in a row) the blowout wouldn’t be such a strong possibility. This game would be more in line with the first two games the Blazers and Clippers played against each other. But given the situation and Portland’s utter lack of a consistent Plan B this year—a weakness of the Blazer roster—this will probably not end well for the Blazers.
—Dave
Dave - February 16, 2012
that's the way I understood it
but I found it a bit apologetic to begin with. As I read your piece: shouldn’t the Blazers consider blowing it up a bit? Wallace is nice and all but it is a kind of here and now deal. Batum seems much more the future (and he is going to get some massive offersheets in the offseason).
BelgianClipper - February 16, 2012
Perhaps
They’re going to retool at the end of the year anyway. Expiring contracts. You may see moves before the trade deadline if Portland can get young players or draft picks.
—Dave
Dave - February 16, 2012
Kind?
I’m not sure what you mean about being kind….
I learned long ago that interacting too actively with another blog’s readership is problematic. There are too many voices that are too emotional about their own team. I’m sure others view Clips Nation the same way.
to have the first comment on that thread be “Blake is a whiney baby” is unfortunate… but whatever. We all know that Blake would be that commenters favorite player ever if he played for Portland. It’s just how fandom works.
Steve Perrin - February 17, 2012
Indeed
I answer this all the time when asked about the best power forward in the league. Head to Los Angeles, Portland, and Minnesota. All three are happy with what they have, all three have some claim to being the best, argument beyond that is futile except for the fun of it.
—Dave
Dave - February 17, 2012
Also, Steve
you are welcome at Blazersedge anytime. A few folks have come over during exchanges and we love the conversation. Fresh perspective is great.
—Dave
Dave - February 18, 2012
While it is good for the Clippers that Aldridge is out
I love watching the dude play, so I am personally disappointed. Get better soon man!
NewCavsfan - February 16, 2012
this illustrates my point
we don’ t go around bashing other team’s top players.
BelgianClipper - February 16, 2012
Wonder if the switch from Miller to Felton
has hurt the team. In my Eyes, felton is no where near as good as Miller and the Blazer’s screwed themselves there.
mustang6944 - February 16, 2012
it's the pace thing mainly I think
Miller just seems to fit LA better then Felton.
BelgianClipper - February 16, 2012
Felton
Well, Felton has never been this bad anywhere. That trade has really hurt them, but no one could really have predicted that Felton would be this bad.
Steve Perrin - February 17, 2012
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