Blazers Depth Chart Just Exposed Joe Cronins Unfinished Offseason

The Portland Trail Blazers face a roster conundrum as they look to bolster shooting and forward depth following a series of high-profile trades and acquisitions.

The Portland Trail Blazers still have work to do, and their updated depth chart makes the unfinished business pretty obvious: they need more shooting, and they need more help on the wing.

After the trade that sent Jerami Grant and Kris Murray to the Memphis Grizzlies for Ja Morant, plus the signing of former Oklahoma City Thunder big man Branden Carlson and Caleb Love’s move to the Philadelphia 76ers on a two-way deal, Portland is down to two final roster spots and one two-way slot. That leaves GM Joe Cronin with a roster that has plenty of names, but not enough balance.

The backcourt is suddenly crowded in a way it wasn’t a year ago. Point guard now projects as Ja Morant, Jrue Holiday, Scoot Henderson and Damian Lillard.

That’s a major shift from last season, when injuries to Henderson, Holiday and Shaedon Sharpe exposed the Blazers’ lack of guard depth. Morant’s arrival and Lillard’s expected return have flipped that weakness into a strength.

Still, there’s a catch. A Morant-led backcourt only makes the spacing issues more severe, and it nudges Portland farther from the defensive identity it wants to build.

The hope is that if Morant gets anywhere close to the All-Star level he showed in Memphis, the tradeoff will be worth it. Head coach Micah Nori should also be willing to mix and match those backcourt pieces during the season rather than locking into one look too early.

At shooting guard, the early projection has Damian Lillard, Jrue Holiday, Shaedon Sharpe and Vit Krejci. Starting Lillard there would leave Portland undersized, which is not exactly a comforting setup given how the Lillard-CJ McCollum pairing played out in the postseason years ago.

Even so, the Blazers should lean into a different version of Lillard to open the year. At 35 and coming off an Achilles tear, he doesn’t need to carry the offense the way he once did. What Portland does need is his shooting away from the ball, and that part of his game still showed up when he won yet another 3-Point Contest trophy this past season.

Sharpe is the wild card in that group. He posted the best statistical season of his career, but after a late-season injury he dropped out of Tiago Splitter’s playoff rotation.

With so many ball-handlers and playmakers around him, Sharpe will need to become more of a 3-and-D presence if he’s going to carve out a real role. Whether he can put that together consistently is still an open question.

Small forward may be the toughest spot for Nori to sort out. The early projection there is Toumani Camara, Sidy Cissoko and Jrue Holiday.

Holiday’s versatility makes him a possible starter at the three, even if his 6-foot-4 frame doesn’t scream small forward. But that same versatility is also why he could be more valuable as a bench connector, filling multiple gaps for a roster that still isn’t finished.

Camara, though, feels like the steady answer. If Portland does start Morant and Lillard together, it will need defensive help somewhere else, and Camara can provide that without needing the ball. He has also emerged as one of the roster’s clearest building blocks, which makes it easy to see why the Blazers would keep prioritizing him.

Power forward is another area where Portland could use more bodies before opening night. The current projection lists Deni Avdija, Toumani Camara and Sidy Cissoko. Avdija gives the Blazers a real starter and some flexibility as they piece the rest of the roster together.

Cissoko also looks set for a bigger role after the departures of Grant and Murray. That should only deepen the team’s defensive lean.

Avdija, meanwhile, took a step back on that end last season because he had to spend so much energy creating offense as a point forward. With less playmaking responsibility now, he should be in better position to use his physical tools as a more complete two-way player.

At center, the depth chart is more settled. Donovan Clingan is the starter after a breakout sophomore season that locked him in as Portland’s long-term answer in the middle.

The Blazers also kept Robert Williams III, giving him a three-year, $44 million extension. That move gives them time to develop Yang Hansen, whose rookie season was described as concerningly bad.

Williams’ injury history makes that insurance necessary, which is why Carlson matters too. The seven-footer adds depth, size and even some floor-spacing potential behind the main rotation.

With the Blazers leaning toward a more offense-heavy group of guards, Clingan and Williams may end up carrying even more weight on the other end. If Portland wants to preserve any defensive identity at all, those two are going to have to anchor it.

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