The Portland Trail Blazers’ pursuit of Trey Murphy III may already be dead in the water.
Portland had shown interest in the New Orleans Pelicans wing at February’s trade deadline, but the latest reporting suggests the Blazers are no longer part of the conversation. Michael Scotto of HoopsHype said Portland has “faded from the Murphy trade conversation” after the team’s surprising acquisition of Memphis Grizzlies guard Ja Morant.
That might not even be the biggest obstacle anymore. NBA insider Jake Fischer said on a Bleacher Report livestream that the Pelicans are expected to keep Murphy, largely because no team appears willing to meet New Orleans’ asking price.
"At this point in time, I am working with the belief that the Pelicans want to keep Trey Murphy," Fischer said. "This whole offseason chatter around him kind of got blown out of proportion by them letting other teams around the draft believe he was available, but there just isn't really a market for him at that price point that the Pelicans are asking for."
Marc Stein of The Stein Line added another layer, reporting that the Pelicans have lowered their demand for Murphy from the equivalent of four first-round picks to three. Even with that reduction, the price still sits in the steep range.
The comparison point is obvious. The Orlando Magic paid four unprotected first-round picks and one first-round pick swap for Desmond Bane, while the New York Knicks previously gave up a similar package for Mikal Bridges. That move was once controversial, but it has since been viewed much more favorably after the Knicks recently ended their 53-year championship drought.
For Portland, though, the real issue isn’t just whether Murphy costs too much. It’s whether he changes the team enough to justify going all in.
Bridges, Bane and Murphy sit in a similar neighborhood as wing players, but the results have looked very different. Bridges helped push the Knicks into another level, while the Magic have had a harder time getting out of no-man’s land with Bane.
The Blazers’ roster, even after the Morant blockbuster and Damian Lillard’s return, looks much closer to Orlando than New York. A major swing for Murphy would add talent, but it still might not be the move that turns Portland into a true contender.
There is, however, a clear argument for why the Blazers would keep pushing. Murphy is 26, fits the timeline of Portland’s young core, and is under contract on a team-friendly deal through 2028-29.
Still, the Pelicans have acted like a team that knows exactly what it has. At the trade deadline, their asking price seemed designed to scare teams off, and that approach appears to have carried into the summer. New Orleans is coming off a 26-win season, yet the front office continues to value Murphy highly.
For now, the message is simple: if Portland wants to keep adding star power after landing Morant, Trey Murphy III probably won’t be the answer.
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