blazersbucs40 wrote:If the goal is to get tough defensively, I don't think the priority will be extend an offer to Plumlee. Portland will never be a good/great defensive team with Plumlee starting.
it's hard seeing the Blazers becoming a good defensive team with the Lillard/CJ back court and the two of them playing 75% of available guard minutes. Forget about great. If you gauge by opponent FG%, the Blazers are last in the NBA in opponent FG% from 16' & beyond. Their perimeter defense sucks and that's not Plumlee's fault
as to Plumlee, the trick is replacing him with a C that would be a clear upgrade defensively while not giving it all back on the offensive end. That might not be so easy to do.
and on the Blazer team, when it comes to so-called defensive numbers, Plumlee ranks very well:
* 4th in steal %
* 2nd in block %
* 1st in defensive rating (tied with Davis)
* 1st in defensive win shares
* 1st in defensive box plus/minus
* 2nd in defensive real plus/minus
I'm not saying that Portland couldn't find a better defensive C...I've seen Plumlee play all season and know he has some significant issues. But it's pretty clear that Plumlee & Davis are the least of Portland's defensive issues. We've seen that in the playoffs as Harkless and sometimes Aminu have been moved onto opposing guards defensively while Portland tries to 'hide' Lillard and CJ on lesser offensive players.
It's also probably too easy to over-emphasize Plumlee's play-making ability. The Blazers are really quite weak in play-making but if the front office can significantly upgrade that area with a couple of new players, Plumlee's importance as the 3rd play-maker would drop quite a bit, and maybe, that would mean going with a stronger defender at C would become a priority. In other words, maybe it's better to expand thinking a bit an go beyond just a Plumlee for player X swap as the starting C; who else comes in could be as big a factor as the starting C swap