Where Do The Portland Trail Blazers Go From Here?

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The 2014-15 season for the Portland Trail Blazers has concluded, in a five-game series loss to the physical Memphis Grizzlies. It certainly wasn’t a good series to watch, basketball-wise. Definitely not like the Clippers-Spurs series, which went all the way to seven games.

I watched that seventh game in full, on the most glamorous sports day of the year (which our own Patrick McEachern highlighted here), and I can say without reservation that it was the best game not involving the Blazers that I’ve ever watched. The ending was the best part, as Chris Paul quashed the naysayers who said he couldn’t get it done in the playoffs by sinking a runner over the Great Tim Duncan with one second left, sending the defending champions home in the first round.

The Blazers didn’t have any kind of great game; the Memphis series had the air of last year’s second-round tilt against the Spurs, where the team was just glad they didn’t get swept.

So, that begs the inevitable question: What’s next?

LaMarcus Aldridge: The most obvious question is where will Aldridge decide to go in free agency. There are many rumors floating around the interwebs, ranging from Cleveland’s possible interest if they can’t retain Kevin Love, to San Antonio and Dallas targeting Aldridge as a replacement for their respective resident legends at power forward, to Aldridge being jealous and resentful of Damian Lillard’s growing national profile, and the requisite commercials.

The last point is spouted by people who know NBA players’ tendencies in general, not by those that know Aldridge particularly. I can’t imagine a dude as chill and calm as Aldridge being jealous of Lillard’s commercials; Aldridge isn’t the kind of man that likes to put himself out there, and he and everybody else (including Lillard) knows that he’s better than Lillard, and the focal point of the team.

I’ve mentioned several times that Aldridge would be a perfect fit in the New York Knicks’ triangle offense, but the presence of Carmelo Anthony, and the general craptasticness of that putrid roster, might warn Aldridge to stay away. The Los Angeles Lakers also want Aldridge, because they need guys that are actual basketball players, but then again, this is the franchise that wants to give Rajon Rondo, last seen tearing apart the Dallas Mavericks from the inside, significant money this summer.

I’m sure myself, and many others on this site (and nationally), will delve into this topic in the coming weeks; it’ll be the biggest sports story in Oregon, with everybody giving their daily hot take on Aldridge. It’ll be obsessive, exhaustive, and could eventually end up being completely pointless.

My gut feeling today is that he stays.

Damian Lillard: Lillard’s up for a contract extension, since next year will be the last of his rookie deal. Depending on what happens with Aldridge, Lillard could receive a max-contract offer of five years and $120 million, taking into account 2016’s expected massive cap jump. The new contract would kick in that summer.

It should be made clear that there is only one player per team that can be offered a five-year contract, and that the Blazers will offer the five-year deal to Aldridge; it’s the only real home-field advantage Portland has with the unrestricted free agent.

If Aldridge does re-sign, and it is with the expected five-year max, Lillard will get a four-year deal. Whether it’s for the regular max, or for the Derrick Rose Rule “super-max,” depends on Lillard being named to an All-NBA team for 2014-15. Make no bones about it, though, Lillard’s about to receive a rich basketball deal, though it’s hardly needed; the money he’s making from Adidas, State Farm, and Foot Locker endorsements will dwarf any earnings he’ll get from Paul Allen.

The breakdowns on Lillard’s game, and what he needs to improve in the offseason, will come later in the year. I just want to highlight his contract situation, and congratulate him on graduating from college. A guy who’s a nine-figure millionaire making an effort to get his degree? That’s character right there, and yet another reason why Rip City should love this guy.

Wesley Matthews: Healthy, Matthews receives a huge offer, easy; in the neighborhood of $12 million a year. His 3-and-D game, combined with the little wrinkles to his game he added during his Blazer tenure, make him extremely valuable in today’s NBA. However, there is the issue of his Achilles injury.

Matthews is the real unknown when it comes to the Blazers’ offseason. A player coming off an Achilles rupture isn’t usually the same guy; the injury has even ended careers. If Matthews can’t move with the same speed he used to on defense, his value is reduced by several millions of dollars per season. His true abilities, though, won’t be known until after he gets paid.

The risk with Matthews is well-known, but there’s a real need for skilled wing players, and Matthews is a proven shooter who’s attained the magic 40% mark from three-point range multiple times in his career. That, coupled with his bruising post game, ensure he’ll have value even if the Achilles injury permanently robs him of lateral movement.

Although CJ McCollum’s emerged in the playoffs, his NBA destiny is as a light-’em-up sixth man off the bench, due to his lack of size and inability to play defense. That, coupled with Arron Afflalo testing the grounds in free agency (he’s expected to decline his player option for next year), may make Portland GM Neil Olshey think retaining Matthews is the safest option, though it’ll be the most expensive.

Robin Lopez: Although Lopez pulled a disappearing act in the Memphis series, getting utterly dominated by Marc Gasol, I still expect Lopez to get around what a healthy Matthews would receive; large humans that shoot well from 15 feet and in, and from the free-throw line, while providing legitimate rim protection, are extremely rare.

Lopez qualifies under basketball’s version of the “Planet Theory,” which is what a football coach came up with when asked why his NFL team paid a 320-pound defensive lineman almost as much as they paid their franchise quarterback. He said that 320-pound men that move fast and are light on their feet are so rare, they’re worth any amount of money despite the warts they may have, both professionally and personally.

In basketball, finding a seven-foot man able to move quickly, shoot a basketball, and be smart enough to instantly diagnose offenses, and the counters to those offenses, are rarer than me getting a date (and that, sadly, is incredibly rare). They’re the NBA’s “Planet Theory” individuals, and as such, those individuals will get substantially more money than your average NBA player, just by virtue of being very tall and skilled at some aspects of the game.

For a seven-foot man, it’s either play basketball, or clean out elephant butts for a living. Though Lopez is a quirky sort, and we do have several elephants at the Oregon Zoo, I don’t think Robin’s ready to scrub elephant asses just yet.

As for other roster concerns, Meyers Leonard has repaid the faith Olshey had in him when the Blazers GM traded Thomas Robinson, and picked up Leonard’s option on the fourth year of his contract. Now, Leonard, who was taken in the same draft as Lillard (Brooklyn Nets fans will forever rue the day that Billy King traded for Gerald Wallace, surrendering the draft pick that would eventually become Lillard), should get an extension of his own.

If Aldridge does end up leaving, the guy who will replace him could very well end up being Meyers Leonard. Quite a turnaround from a year ago, when the likes of me were wondering if Leonard had an NBA future.

Steve Blake, Chris Kaman, and McCollum will all be back next year, as will starting small forward Nicolas Batum.

Some familiar faces will be there, but the big domino is obviously Aldridge. I don’t expect Olshey to just sit on his hands and wait for Aldridge to make a decision–that’s not Olshey’s style. It won’t be a stretch to say, however, that what Aldridge does will dictate what the Blazers do this summer.

At least Aldridge says he’ll be quick about his choice. One way or the other, he won’t drag it out. That’s good news either way; if Aldridge says yea, Olshey can assemble a contending team around him. If Aldridge says nay, Olshey can quickly put a contingency plan into action.

The summer of 2015 is vital to the future of the Portland Trail Blazers. Either we get to celebrate a franchise icon staying with the only NBA team he’s ever known, or I’ll add another reason to the thousands-long list of reasons to drink vast amounts of Kirschwasser.

(Google Kirschwasser. I dare you.)

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