Coming off three straight seasons at or near the bottom of the standings, the team has arrived at a crossroads of sorts. High lottery picks Evans and Cousins have shown enough potential to slot them into the starting lineup for a long time to come. Only two other sizable contracts remain on the payroll -- Beno and Garcia who have played important veteran roles on the team this year. Jason Thompson, Donte Greene, Omri Casspi, and Hassan Whiteside are all on their rookie contracts. We have decisions to make with Dalembert and Thornton both of whom have shown they can be key contributors for the team if given the opportunity. Another high lottery pick looms on the horizon along with approximately $30 million of cap space to sign free agents.
I think most of us are in agreement that another full season at the bottom of the league in payroll and the bottom of the league in standings would not be acceptable. However, as long as it's taken Geoff to finally clear out the bad contracts carried over from the previous championship push, we should also understand that spending money can be counterproductive if it's not done carefully and appropriately. The time for stock-piling expiring contracts and draft picks has passed. We should be looking for complimentary talent and key pieces for the next championship push.
So with that in mind, let's look briefly at what assets we currently have:
(G) Tyreke Evans - Former ROTY, just suffered through a season of nagging injuries. The troubling part about Tyreke's sophmore season is that he seemed to struggle at times integrating his game with that of his teammates. With the emergence of Cousins as a capable passer and go-to scorer, Tyreke's dominant do-it-all rookie presence seemed to fade. Was it just the injuries slowing him down or was it a sign of things to come?
(PF/C) DeMarcus Cousins - Hyper-talented bigman who plays with a chip on his shoulder which sometimes gets him in trouble with the refs and his own teammates. Unstoppable in the post on occasion but sometimes plays out of control. Improved immensely as a defender throughout the season though still guilty of ill-advised attempts to draw charges. Seems to have All-Star bigman written all over him if he can limit his fouls and keep focused for the full 48 minutes.
The Rest - Beno (PG), Garcia (SG/SF), Thompson(PF/C), Greene(SF), Casspi(SF), Whiteside(PF/C) - Whiteside is still a mystery but the rest have shown flashes of potential at times. Beno played well enough this season to be considered one of the best backup guards in the league. Garcia, when he's not injured, has been a steadying presence and occasional shotmaker. Thompson played well towards the end of the season after the Landry trade solidified his role on the team. Greene and Casspi continue to frustrate and tantalize. Does Casspi want to be traded?
Key Free Agents:
(G) Marcus Thornton - Arriving through mid-season trade, hit the ground running with much-needed scoring and heady end-game play. Proved himself to be a capable playmaker as well and at least an average rebounder. As an unrestricted free agent, he's going to earn a sizable raise and a multi-season contract from somebody.
(C) Samuel Dalembert - Struggled through early season injuries and a long adjustment period while Westphal figured out his rotation. Settled in as the starting center in the second half of the season and found his comfort zone as a difference-maker on defense and a surprisingly capable scorer on occasion as well. Also an unrestricted free-agent, though coming off a large contract and reaching the end of his career he may be willing to take a pay cut.
So our current depth chart looks like this:
Tyreke, Beno
Garcia, (Tyreke)
Greene, Casspi, (Garcia), (Tyreke)
Cousins, Thompson
Whiteside, (Cousins), (Thompson)
Team needs:
A solid third guard, preferably a starter (re-sign Thornton?)
A solid third big, preferably a starter (re-sign Dalembert?)
More reliable production at SF
A consistent outside shooter
Veteran leadership
Dalembert and Thornton both leave big holes to fill if they're not re-signed. It's probably unwise to count on Whiteside as a regular rotation player at this point though we also shouldn't cut him completely out of the depth chart. As the fourth big he should find plenty of development minutes in the event of foul trouble and/or injuries. Thornton was not only our starting SG since he arrived, he was also the team's leading scorer. And as a 23 year old at the start of his NBA career, getting him re-signed could be the most pressing need for the team this off-season. Most of the discussion here so far has revolved around filling our needs at SF with a steady veteran player like Kirilenko, Prince, or Battier. This would push the Greene/Casspi duo back to the bench since neither one seems ready to assume the starting role at this point in their careers. It also seems likely that one of them will be traded since there aren't enough minutes for two inconsistent young players who play the same position to both find their role on the team. So far I'm not disagreeing with the majority opinion on the best course of action for this pivotal off-season. But this is where I throw out the curveball...
What if, instead of re-signing Dalembert to reprise his (no doubt, very valuable) role as Cousins' frontcourt buddy we instead make an offer to lure Greg Oden from Portland? Portland is going to try to re-sign him, but we have the capspace to make an offer that they won't match. If Greg Oden is healthy, there's not a better player in this free agent class. Obviously he's a long ways from healthy, so the question is, how big of a contract for how many years would be a calculated risk worth taking?
Well, what do we know about Greg Oden up to this point in his career? He's currently 23 years old. He was tagged as a once-in-a-decade franchise center coming out of high school. Since Portland made him the first overall pick in the 2007 draft he's played a total of 82 games out of a possible 328 in 4 seasons due to various injuries. Those injuries include... micro-fracture surgery on his right knee, missed entire rookie season... two weeks for foot injury...three weeks for chipped kneecap...fractured left patella on Dec 5th, missed rest of season...microfracture surgery on left knee. In the few NBA games he has played he's put up career bests of 24 points, 20 rebounds, and 6 blocks.
So while the risk is huge, the potential reward is pretty significant as well. Having succesfully tested out a twin towers lineup with Dalembert and Cousins, there shouldn't be a problem fitting Oden and Cousins into the same frontcourt. We have the frontcourt depth already in place to limit his minutes and bring him back slowly. And the presence of Whiteside as shot-blocker in waiting off the bench at least gives us a backup plan if Oden does wash out. There should still be enough money regardless to re-sign Thornton and that leaves our lottery pick and possible trade assets in Casspi, Garcia, or Greene to solve the SF problem. If the plan is to take the BPA with the draft pick and go after a vetern SF like the names listed above, there should still be enough remaining cap space to do that barring an apocalyptic slashing of the salary cap via new CBA negotiations in which case 80% of the league would be maxed out anyway and we'd still have major negotiating leverage with available free agents.
It's certainly not the safest move for the franchise at this very important crossroads, but the point I wanted to make is that going after Greg Oden with our free agent money this off-season wouldn't be betting the farm, and it wouldn't be a move that we can't recover from if it backfires. This plan isn't contingent on us getting lucky in the lottery or fleecing some other poor GM in a trade and it has a bigger potential impact on this team's ability to compete for a title than any other realistic move I can think of.
I think most of us are in agreement that another full season at the bottom of the league in payroll and the bottom of the league in standings would not be acceptable. However, as long as it's taken Geoff to finally clear out the bad contracts carried over from the previous championship push, we should also understand that spending money can be counterproductive if it's not done carefully and appropriately. The time for stock-piling expiring contracts and draft picks has passed. We should be looking for complimentary talent and key pieces for the next championship push.
So with that in mind, let's look briefly at what assets we currently have:
(G) Tyreke Evans - Former ROTY, just suffered through a season of nagging injuries. The troubling part about Tyreke's sophmore season is that he seemed to struggle at times integrating his game with that of his teammates. With the emergence of Cousins as a capable passer and go-to scorer, Tyreke's dominant do-it-all rookie presence seemed to fade. Was it just the injuries slowing him down or was it a sign of things to come?
(PF/C) DeMarcus Cousins - Hyper-talented bigman who plays with a chip on his shoulder which sometimes gets him in trouble with the refs and his own teammates. Unstoppable in the post on occasion but sometimes plays out of control. Improved immensely as a defender throughout the season though still guilty of ill-advised attempts to draw charges. Seems to have All-Star bigman written all over him if he can limit his fouls and keep focused for the full 48 minutes.
The Rest - Beno (PG), Garcia (SG/SF), Thompson(PF/C), Greene(SF), Casspi(SF), Whiteside(PF/C) - Whiteside is still a mystery but the rest have shown flashes of potential at times. Beno played well enough this season to be considered one of the best backup guards in the league. Garcia, when he's not injured, has been a steadying presence and occasional shotmaker. Thompson played well towards the end of the season after the Landry trade solidified his role on the team. Greene and Casspi continue to frustrate and tantalize. Does Casspi want to be traded?
Key Free Agents:
(G) Marcus Thornton - Arriving through mid-season trade, hit the ground running with much-needed scoring and heady end-game play. Proved himself to be a capable playmaker as well and at least an average rebounder. As an unrestricted free agent, he's going to earn a sizable raise and a multi-season contract from somebody.
(C) Samuel Dalembert - Struggled through early season injuries and a long adjustment period while Westphal figured out his rotation. Settled in as the starting center in the second half of the season and found his comfort zone as a difference-maker on defense and a surprisingly capable scorer on occasion as well. Also an unrestricted free-agent, though coming off a large contract and reaching the end of his career he may be willing to take a pay cut.
So our current depth chart looks like this:
Tyreke, Beno
Garcia, (Tyreke)
Greene, Casspi, (Garcia), (Tyreke)
Cousins, Thompson
Whiteside, (Cousins), (Thompson)
Team needs:
A solid third guard, preferably a starter (re-sign Thornton?)
A solid third big, preferably a starter (re-sign Dalembert?)
More reliable production at SF
A consistent outside shooter
Veteran leadership
Dalembert and Thornton both leave big holes to fill if they're not re-signed. It's probably unwise to count on Whiteside as a regular rotation player at this point though we also shouldn't cut him completely out of the depth chart. As the fourth big he should find plenty of development minutes in the event of foul trouble and/or injuries. Thornton was not only our starting SG since he arrived, he was also the team's leading scorer. And as a 23 year old at the start of his NBA career, getting him re-signed could be the most pressing need for the team this off-season. Most of the discussion here so far has revolved around filling our needs at SF with a steady veteran player like Kirilenko, Prince, or Battier. This would push the Greene/Casspi duo back to the bench since neither one seems ready to assume the starting role at this point in their careers. It also seems likely that one of them will be traded since there aren't enough minutes for two inconsistent young players who play the same position to both find their role on the team. So far I'm not disagreeing with the majority opinion on the best course of action for this pivotal off-season. But this is where I throw out the curveball...
What if, instead of re-signing Dalembert to reprise his (no doubt, very valuable) role as Cousins' frontcourt buddy we instead make an offer to lure Greg Oden from Portland? Portland is going to try to re-sign him, but we have the capspace to make an offer that they won't match. If Greg Oden is healthy, there's not a better player in this free agent class. Obviously he's a long ways from healthy, so the question is, how big of a contract for how many years would be a calculated risk worth taking?
Well, what do we know about Greg Oden up to this point in his career? He's currently 23 years old. He was tagged as a once-in-a-decade franchise center coming out of high school. Since Portland made him the first overall pick in the 2007 draft he's played a total of 82 games out of a possible 328 in 4 seasons due to various injuries. Those injuries include... micro-fracture surgery on his right knee, missed entire rookie season... two weeks for foot injury...three weeks for chipped kneecap...fractured left patella on Dec 5th, missed rest of season...microfracture surgery on left knee. In the few NBA games he has played he's put up career bests of 24 points, 20 rebounds, and 6 blocks.
So while the risk is huge, the potential reward is pretty significant as well. Having succesfully tested out a twin towers lineup with Dalembert and Cousins, there shouldn't be a problem fitting Oden and Cousins into the same frontcourt. We have the frontcourt depth already in place to limit his minutes and bring him back slowly. And the presence of Whiteside as shot-blocker in waiting off the bench at least gives us a backup plan if Oden does wash out. There should still be enough money regardless to re-sign Thornton and that leaves our lottery pick and possible trade assets in Casspi, Garcia, or Greene to solve the SF problem. If the plan is to take the BPA with the draft pick and go after a vetern SF like the names listed above, there should still be enough remaining cap space to do that barring an apocalyptic slashing of the salary cap via new CBA negotiations in which case 80% of the league would be maxed out anyway and we'd still have major negotiating leverage with available free agents.
It's certainly not the safest move for the franchise at this very important crossroads, but the point I wanted to make is that going after Greg Oden with our free agent money this off-season wouldn't be betting the farm, and it wouldn't be a move that we can't recover from if it backfires. This plan isn't contingent on us getting lucky in the lottery or fleecing some other poor GM in a trade and it has a bigger potential impact on this team's ability to compete for a title than any other realistic move I can think of.
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