Will the Giannis Antetokounmpo Trade Talks Actually Involve the Trail Blazers?
Portland has been connected in multiple ways to the Bucks' superstar ahead of Thursday's trade deadline.
Gary Payton II was a smart signing, but Portland is still one piece away.
One thing's for sure: Joe Cronin and Chauncey Billups have a type.
Look at Josh Hart, the headlining piece of the CJ McCollum trade. Look at Justise Winslow, the one player that came back in the more controversial trade with the Clippers whom Cronin singled out at exit interviews as part of their core. Look at Shaedon Sharpe, the enigmatic prospect they took with the No. 7 overall pick. Look at Jerami Grant, this offseason's big trade acquisition.
What do they have in common? They all defend, and they all can play multiple positions at both ends of the floor. If you're going to build a team around Damian Lillard and Anfernee Simons, two undersized, high-scoring guards who aren't good defenders, everyone else in your rotation had better be a two-way player.
Which is why it made perfect sense that Portland's midlevel signing was Gary Payton II, who agreed to a three-year, $28 million deal late on Thursday night. Payton's defense was invaluable to the Warriors' title run—they missed him badly after he suffered a fractured elbow on the controversial Dillon Brooks foul in the Memphis series, and was impactful playing big minutes off the bench against Boston in the Finals.
If there's a concern with the roster as it stands now, it's size. Payton, Hart and Nassir Little are all a little small for a starting wing rotation. But this kind of undersized is different from the kind of undersized Portland has been in years past. All three of those players have shown an ability to guard bigger players. Still, one more 6-6 to 6-9 player in the rotation would help.
As it stands, the Blazers' offseason—re-signing Simons and Nurkic and adding Grant and Payton—is a solid B to B+. If they'd been able to pull off one of the deals they worked on for OG Anunoby or John Collins on draft night, we'd be getting into A territory, but they didn't. They still need one more impact player.
Maybe that guy comes with the Eric Bledsoe contract or one of their trade exceptions. Maybe they can peel off a Cam Johnson in the inevitable Kevin Durant-to-Phoenix deal, or maybe they can get in on the agreed-to Rudy Gobert trade between Utah and Minnesota and get Jarred Vanderbilt rerouted to Portland by sending one of those teams a second-round pick. They won't be the only team trying to be the third team in whatever blockbuster deal ends up happening, but at this point, that's the most realistic path to adding another piece.
We'll see if Cronin is able to make it happen. He's done well so far, but his draft-night assessment of the roster as "not good enough" still holds true.