Friday, June 30, 2017

Portland Trailblazers Draft Review

Current Roster
PG: Damian Lillard/Shabazz Napier
SG: CJ McCollom/Allen Crabbe
SF: Moe Harkless/Evan Turner/Pat Connaughton
PF: Al-Farouq Aminu/Jake Layman
C: Jusef Nurkic/Zach Collins/Ed Davis/Meyers Leonard/Noah Vonleh/Caleb Swanigan/Festus Ezeli

2017 Free Agents
Unrestricted
None

Restricted
None

Who They Drafted
1-10 Zach Collins, C Gonzaga
1-26 Caleb Swanigan, C Purdue
Despite already having five players on their roster who can really only play center effectively in the modern NBA, the Trailblazers drafted two more players that are probably limited to playing center only. The first player they drafted, Zach Collins, the Blazers traded up to get (moving 15 and 20 to get 10), a good prospect that makes sense as a backup/insurance policy for Jusef Nurkic, the player that turned the Blazers season around last season. Collins has a lot of potential, he is a good athlete that moves well, blocks shots, rebounds, and can shoot a little from the outside. Though he has all this potential, Collins still needs some refinement as well, he is foul prone and doesn't alway play up to his potential. Also, though he has shown three-point range, Collins shouldn't be considered a knock-down shooter yet. Again, drafting a straight backup (due to roster construction) after trading up, with a top ten pick is questionable but at least defensible when you consider how important Nurkic was to them, however when you already have so many centers on the roster and don't have any money to improve their areas of your team that need improvement.
To make matters more confusing, the Blazers drafted another player who, unless he makes changes to his body and becomes more athletic, will be a five in the modern NBA as well. Caleb Swanigan was one of the best players in college basketball last season, averaging over 18 points and 12 rebounds a game while also making 44% of 85 three-pointers last season. Swanigan isn't that good of a shooter, but it should still be a weapon for him, as is his ability to get deep position and score in the post, though length and athleticism may give him a little bit of trouble and he can be quite turnover prone. There are reasons to be optimistic about his offense, as he can draw big men out of the paint with his jumpshot and abuse smaller defenders in the post. Swanigan is also a monster rebounder, a natural that knows how to throw his big body around on both the offensive and defensive glass. Where the issue comes in, and why it is unlikely Swanigan is anything but a center is his lack of athletic ability and poor footspeed, which will limit his ability to defend on the move and also severely limits his rim protection (Swanigan blocked only 36 shots in his 2014 college minutes). As a backup center in the mold of a (healthy) Jared Sullinger, Swanigan could be a longterm NBA rotation player, but on the Blazers I don't know when he plays or how effective he will be.

What They Need Going Forward
The Blazers need to get rid of their bad contracts and logjam at center, though it will cost them to do so, so much so that they'll might easily just roll into the season with their current roster. If they do find money to spend or get good deals, they could use another backup point guard and a wing that can shoot the ball.

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