Blazers: 20-19 Suns: 16-21 Game Details: US Airways Center, Phoenix AZ. 7:30 PM. TV: ESPN. Radio: KXTG (95.5 FM) Projected Portland Starting Lineup: PG Andre Miller (#24, 6’2’’, Utah), SG Wesley Matthews (#2, 6’5’’, Marquette), SF Nicolas Batum (#88, 6’9’’, France), PF LaMarcus Aldridge (#12, 6’11’’, Texas), C Marcus Camby (#23, 6’11’’, UMass) Projected Phoenix Starting Lineup: PG Steve Nash (#13, 6’3″, Santa Clara), SG Vince Carter (#25, 6’6″, North Carolina), SF Grant Hill (#33, 6’8″, Duke), PF Channing Frye (#8, 6’11″, Arizona), C Robin Lopez (#15, 7’0″, Stanford) In the month or so since the last time the Blazers [...]
Rip City Project | A Portland Trail Blazers blog
Tag Archives: Blazers
Game 40 Recap: Suns 115, Blazers 111
Here’s the thing, taken individually each of Portland’s last three losses can be explained away. Miami is one of the best teams in the league; LeBron is a beast and can kill not just teams but entire American cities all by himself. New York is a team that can get hot, and when it does can play with the best teams league wide. Phoenix is struggling, but still, nobody wants to be beaten four straight times in a single season. What I’m saying is this: on a game-by-game basis, when looking at the last three nights, the Blazers aren’t struggling. [...]
Rip City Project | A Portland Trail Blazers blog
Game 39 Recap: Knicks 100, Blazers 86
I bet more than a few people expected this. Portland stands tall against Miami, only to fall to a barrage of scoring from LeBron James in the closing period and overtime Sunday night, then are basically unable to show up in their next outing, and are beaten handily by the Knicks. In a perfect world, a gut-wrenching loss is followed by an energy-renewing win. In the NBA, it usually doesn’t happen. This isn’t a momentum-killer, or a season-ender, but it’s a tough one, there’s no doubt about that. Give a ton of credit to the Knicks. In fact, give all [...]
Rip City Project | A Portland Trail Blazers blog
Game 38 Recap: Heat 107, Blazers 100
I’d be lying if I said this one didn’t hurt. You can say whatever you want about tonight’s 107-100 overtime loss to the Heat being a moral victory because the Blazers were able to hang with the hottest team in the league for 48 minutes before the game got away, but man, it would have been cool to pull this one out. What better way to put this banged-up-but-resilient team on the national map than by knocking off the most unlikeable juggernaut in recent NBA history? They came damn close, that’s for sure. A questionable no-call on a LeBron double [...]
Rip City Project | A Portland Trail Blazers blog
Game 36 Recap: Blazers 103, Rockets 100
Well, that might be the single weirdest game the Blazers have played all season. Just when you think you’ve got a handle on the game narrative, what’s working and what isn’t, the script flips completely. After a fairly evenly-matched first quarter, the Blazers jumped out to a decent halftime lead with the Rockets seemingly unable to find their footing on defense. Turn the page to the other side of halftime and suddenly Kevin Martin is fighting hard for Basketball Jones “whoa boy” honors as the Blazers go ice cold from the field. Fortunately for Portland, Houston returned the favor in [...]
Rip City Project | A Portland Trail Blazers blog
Game 20 Preview: Portland Trail Blazers vs. Los Angeles Clippers
Blazers: 8-11
Clippers: 4-16
Game Details: Rose Garden, Portland, OR. 6:00 PM. TV: CSN. Radio: KXTG (95.5 FM)
Projected Portland Starting Lineup: PG Andre Miller (#24, 6′2″, Utah), SG Brandon Roy (#7, 6′6″, Washington), SF Wesley Matthews (#2, 6′5″, Marquette), PF LaMarcus Aldridge (#12, 6′11″, Texas), C Marcus Camby (#23, 6′11″, UMass)
Projected Los Angeles Starting Lineup: PG Eric Bledsoe (#12, 6′1″, Kentucky), SG Eric Gordon (#10, 6′3″, Indiana), SF Al-Farouq Aminu (#3, 6′9″, Wake Forest), PF Blake Griffin (#32, 6′10″, Oklahoma), C DeAndre Jordan (#9, 6′11″, Texas A&M)
On the bright side, things can’t get much worse for Portland than they are now. The Blazers have lost six games in a row, five of which they blew late, including a few to pretty bad teams. They haven’t won a game since November 19, when they beat the Nuggets at home. The four-game road trip they just completed may well be the low point of the post-Jail Blazers era. The “fire Nate McMillan” talk is starting to become something a little more tangible than just a few disgruntled fans. There is legitimate concern right now as to whether the Blazers will even make the playoffs.
Friday’s abomination of a game against the Wizards was notable only for the return of Joel Przybilla, who played well in limited minutes, taking charges, going after rebounds and loose balls, and providing some much-needed (to put it mildly) added presence in the middle. The Vanilla Gorilla is sure to get a monstrous ovation from the home fans tonight, which could be the lift the Blazers need. Przybilla will also be crucial tonight, as the Blazers are going to need everything they’ve got against Blake Griffin. The 2009 No. 1 overall pick has been nothing short of beastly through the first quarter of the regular season, making a strong case for himself as Rookie of the Year. He made his NBA debut against Portland, and although the Blazers won that game, Griffin posted an impressive 20-and-14 line and had a couple of highlight-reel dunks. He’s only gotten more confident since then, and will likely be the main thing the Blazers have to worry about tonight. Third-year guard Eric Gordon has also played well for the Clippers, scoring at least 20 points in each of his last seven games. He will likely be Wesley Matthews’ defensive assignment tonight. Other than that, the Clippers are nothing to write home about, and their rotation issues concerning Baron Davis and, to a lesser extent, Chris Kaman, make them somewhat vulnerable.
This is a winnable game for Portland, but they can’t make the kinds of mistakes they’ve been making lately. Players besides Brandon Roy and Wesley Matthews need to step up offensively, and the team’s turnovers need to be cut drastically. Patty Mills played the first non-garbage-time minutes of his pro career on the road trip, and despite a few too many turnovers, he mostly acquitted himself fine. There’s a good chance we’ll see more of him tonight. Przybilla played well in his return on Friday, and should be key in the Blazers’ defensive effort, which has been lackluster of late. A win tonight wouldn’t tell us a lot, given the opponent, but it would certainly be a much-needed step in the right direction after one of the worst two-week stretches in the Blazers’ recent history.
Recap Game 20: Blazers 100, Clippers 91
A hard foul on Joel Przybilla was just the beginning of a chippy night at the Rose Garden. Photo courtesy of the AP.
In the middle of the third period, as I was watching the Blazers lay yet another egg and all but seven of Portland’s 22-point lead had evaporated, I thought to myself, man this is so much harder to see live and in-person than sitting on my couch at home. That feeling was amplified by a factor of ten when, with a minute and a half, the Clippers had gotten the lead down to only three. I would love to say that my frustration and anger, that has been festering unhealthily as the losses continued to mount, disappeared when the final horn sounded Sunday, and the losing streak was FINALLY over. It would be a lie to say that I didn’t feel at least some relief, but the overwhelming feeling I had was that Portland, right now, is not very good. They’re missing too many shots, taking too many bad shots, missing assignments on defense, and failing miserably to capitalize on their opponent’s mistakes. Yes it feels good to get the win, and yes I feel that some of the speculation about the eminent demise of this version of the Portland Trail Blazers may have been a tad overblown. But after that, this team is still a ways from being relevant.
Even when playing well on Sunday, Portland looked a step slow. Way too many offensive possessions went deep into the shot clock, and more times than anybody would like to see, a few passes by the Clippers lead to open men with good looks at the basket. In the first half the Clips were 0-of-8 from deep. In the second half they were 7-of-17. Bad teams are going to take a lot of bad shots, and keep thinking bad looks are good looks for a lot longer than they should, but if LA could have gotten hot from deep in the early going, Portland may not have had a large enough lead to pull out the win. Of course it’s silly to hypothesize about what could have happened when we know what did happen. I just bring up the three-pointer issue because there are teams in the NBA that have guys that actually should shoot threes. If Portland plays perimeter defense against good shooting teams the way they played against the Clippers you can forget about 20-point leads.
If Sunday marks a turning point at all in Portland’s season, I would point to something that happened post-game that may very well be a watershed moment. In the home locker room following the game, the biggest group of reporters was surrounding the locker of Wesley Matthews. Two stalls down from Wes, those stalls belonging to Armon Johnson and nobody, Brandon Roy was dressed and talking only to one journalist. The crush of reporters never came for Brandon, and he gave his post-game interview without a single television camera in his face. The transition from Brandon to Wesley hasn’t been a hostile takeover, and I would go as far as to say that from a basketball standpoint it isn’t yet a takeover. Nate McMillan still wants to run isolation sets for Brandon until every person around the globe sees it coming a million miles away. When the ball starts going to Wesley exclusively, and it’s Brandon who gets the ball when the defense collapses, the switch at the top will be complete. It may never happen, but I think Nate may do himself a favor by coming up with some plays for Wesley before too much longer. Matthews 26 points were a game high, and during the third quarter when B Roy was coming up empty, it was Wesley that mad the clutch baskets.
In the end, when it looked like another melt down was happening right before our eyes, it was defense that put Portland over the top. Andre Miller made a couple of fantastic defensive plays, including a neat pick from rookie Eric Bledsoe right in front of the hoop. Nobody has come out and said that this Blazer team is not interested in winning, but the fighting spirit is most evident in Miller. The dude’s been a big time player all his life. It’s his grit and fight that will be able to salvage this season.
Post game, both in the locker room and clogging Twitter, there was plenty of qualified happiness about Sunday’s win. I’m right there with everyone that has said we’ll take it, but. That but being, let’s see what happens when a team with a road victory comes into the Rose Garden. Who knows though, it may have taken only one win to get these guys back into it. Only time will tell.
Portland plays the Phoenix Suns on Tuesday at the Rose Garden. Phoenix is both a team that Portland should beat, and a better team than a few that Portland has lost to in the last few games. If you’re looking for a test of where this team really is right now, it’s coming right around the corner.
Here are a few brief thoughts:
- After much hype, and one road game, Joel Przybilla made his 2010-11 home debut with 2:02 remaining in the opening quarter. His entrance was preceded by a nice highlight package and a huge standing ovation. Joel made his presence felt early with a horse collar on Blake Griffin, but his impact was minimal to say the least. His line: 9:34 played, 1 point, 1 rebound, five fouls. Joel brings the kind of intensity and toughness Portland has been missing, but he is going to take some time to catch back up to the speed of the game. It’s pretty great to see him back on the court, though.
- Patty Mills got the back-up point guard minutes again on Sunday. There are a ton of mixed feelings about what Patty brings as far as basketball skill. I personally like his quickness, he’s a great passer, and on Sunday he was perfect from the floor. That being said, he’s a little slow on man defense, he got lost a few times on defensive rotations, and he probably doesn’t have the physical ability to get inside either on offense or defense. I do like what I’ve been seeing from Patty, don’t get me wrong, but he has a lot of things to work on before he can get that bump from 10 minutes a game to real back-up point guard minutes.
- Four of Portland’s starters got into double figures in scoring. Led by Wesley’s 26, Portland’s top scorers were, Brandon with 14, Andre Miller with 13, and Marcus Camby with 12. Nicolas Batum was the fifth Blazer to reach double figures, he added 13. Nicolas also contributed a career-high 13 rebounds. LaMarcus Aldridge had an altogether forgettable night. He missed a lot of easy shots on his way to shooting 2-of-10 from the floor. LA missed both his free throw attempts, before fouling out with only four points scored. Look at this two ways: It’s great that Portland wins with LaMarcus struggling, or LaMarcus struggling is literally the last thing this team needs right now.
- A few words on the LA Clippers. One reason this Clippers team looked like they could finish their comeback against the Blazers, is that they are almost the exact opposite team. Whereas Portland has little to no inside presence on offense, the Clips have a bevy of brutish pivot men. Craig Smith is a brawler, DeAndre Jordan is enormous, Chris Kaman plays sometimes, and then of course there is Blake Griffin. These guys are big and mean, and they play with a tenacity that far outstrips their collective abilities. Griffin is a big timer, and everybody knows that, but the other big Clippers aren’t a basketball player between the three of them. However, when Sunday’s game came down to a fist fight, it was the Clippers all the way. As far as Blake Griffin goes. He is very good, unlimited potential, top shelf work ethic. My one beef; every time he goes to the hoop it isn’t a foul. Portland got no favors from the refs Sunday night, but they were especially dubious when it came to calling fouls perpetrated against Blake Griffin. Griffin shot 16 free throws. Luckily for Portland he converted from the free throw line only seven times.
At the end of the day, I feel like I can’t have it both ways. I get mad when Portland loses games they should win, so I think I shouldn’t be mad when Portland wins games they should probably lose. Let’s hope that Sunday’s win was enough to break this early-season funk. Either way, I’m taking it.
Twitter: @mikeacker | @ripcityproject

