Dame Lillard needs Blazers to go for Broke
Before the Olympics began, reports of Damian Lillard’s displeasure with the Portland Trail Blazers erupted. According to Chris Haynes of Yahoo Sports, Lillard’s worries about the organization being a genuine championship contender could push him “out the door.”
Ahead of leaving for Tokyo with Team USA, Lillard denied requesting a trade, but in the same statement, contradicted himself with a stunning admission, “I haven’t made any firm decision on what my future will be.”
Two summers ago, Dame Time signed a super-max extension to keep him in Portland until the end of the 2024/2025 season and pay him over $48 million in the last year. The ink isn’t dry on his deal, yet it seems that his affections for the only pro team he’s ever known are dwindling. How else can someone with four years remaining on their contract, while making extraordinary sums of money, claim their mind isn’t made up?
The answer to that question is painfully obvious. Lillard has no other leverage in forcing the team’s hand to improve than to give the impression he’ll look to bounce if he is suspicious that they are too comfortable. He’s a sharp dude.
I’m not sure if this is what the Big O (Oscar Robertson) envisioned when the Players Union settled with the league in the Robertson Suit in 1976, which as Sam Smith brilliantly explains in his book Hard Labor, created the NBA as we know it. As of now, it appears that Lillard is grabbing the Trail Blazers by the balls, and he should continue to squeeze.
The list of players that could get away with “indecisiveness” when already contractually committed and not have their rep suffer too much is not long. Recently, the Oakland native said, “I know what the truth is. I know where I stand. It’s not my duty to make the public know … it’s not my job to make them aware of what that is.”
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Lillard’s frustration with Portland is understandable, but unfortunately, the fans were caught in the crossfire. The front office’s master plan this offseason resulted in signing Ben Mclemore, Cody Zeller and Tony Snell as free agents for the bench. Then on Aug. 27, as part of a three-team deal with Chicago and Cleveland, the Blazers swapped Derrick Jones Jr. and a protected first-round pick to the Bulls. Lauri Markkanen, originally a Bull, found a new home in Cleveland, and the Blazers got Larry Nance Jr., per the Athletic.
With respect to the new members of the Portland outfit, the front office’s performance thus far in the offseason is underwhelming, which probably doesn’t delight Lillard. The Trail Blazers, much like the 76ers, appear to have plateaued and cannot improve without making drastic alterations to the lineup.
It would behoove the team’s managers to feverishly search for a suitable trade partner, but I’ll suggest one: the Philadelphia 76ers. Both teams could get salaries to match in trading Ben Simmons to Portland in exchange for Mr. President of the Players Union CJ McCollum and Anfernee Simons, sent to Philly.
In this proposed scenario, no team loses as each club eliminates a problem. The 76ers can’t continue to utilize Simmons as the primary ball-handler because he is reluctant to shoot when left open, despite his game-changing ability on the defensive side of the court. McCollum, in his place, gives Philly more variety attacking, and his defender won’t sag off and clog the lane for the other 76ers on the court.
The Trail Blazers, over the past five seasons, have only had a top 15 defensive rating once (6), and that was in 2018. The past two years, Portland was 29th in that category in 2021 and 27th in 2020. Hypothetically, Simmons in black and red instantly improves the squad’s defensive ceiling due to his skills operating in multiple coverages.
Any suggestion that could boost the Blazer’s chances of winning needs to be explored by the top brass immediately. Dame Time is the best player to walk through Portland’s doors since Bill Walton and Clyde Drexler. The team is not good enough, and Lillard needs the execs to reach for the stars.
If he stays it would be just for one year than off to LA or New York where he could grow his brand and further is music career.