Blazers Quietly Nailed The One Offseason Move That Actually Mattered

In an understated offseason, retaining Robert Williams III may prove more pivotal for the Portland Trail Blazers than even their splashy acquisition of Ja Morant.

The Portland Trail Blazers made the offseason noise that comes with landing a name like Ja Morant, but their smartest move may have been the one that kept Robert Williams III in town.

Portland’s summer has been quiet aside from the additions of Morant, the former Memphis Grizzlies star and two-time All-Star, and former Oklahoma City Thunder big man Branden Carlson. The Morant deal grabbed the headlines, but the Blazers’ best business came when they locked up Williams on a three-year, $44 million extension.

That contract matters because of how it’s built. NBA insider Jake Fischer reported on X that Williams has a “wonky” structure with only the first season fully guaranteed.

“In Portland, I'm told Robert Williams' extension is fully guaranteed at $14 million for this season, but just $5 million guaranteed in Year 2, which becomes fully guaranteed if he plays 50 games this 2026-27 campaign. Then, Year 3 is entirely non-guaranteed, but becomes fully guaranteed if Williams plays 50 games in 27-28. Wonky...”

That setup fits a broader trend this summer, with role players and borderline starters landing deals that protect teams after one guaranteed year. Norman Powell, Kristaps Porzingis, Keon Ellis, Zach Collins, and John Collins have all been part of that wave. In Williams’ case, though, the Blazers found a way to keep a valuable player without fully committing themselves to his injury risk.

That part is the real win. Jason Quick of The Athletic had previously reported that Portland was expected to move on from Williams, who was looking for an average of $15 million annually elsewhere. For a player who mattered so much to the Blazers last season, that would have been a tough loss.

Williams gave Portland a steady stopgap for rookie Yang Hansen, buying the team time for its longer-term plan. He also outplayed starting center Donovan Clingan at times, especially in the first-round playoff loss to the San Antonio Spurs, where the lineup at center could have used a mid-series change.

He has rebuilt himself into one of the league’s best backup centers, which naturally drew more interest around the NBA and raised the possibility of him reaching free agency. But Portland had clearly valued him throughout his time with the team, as shown by how often he survived trade chatter.

Now he’s made it through free agency rumors too. And unlike a simple $15 million AAV deal with no protection, this one gives the Blazers insurance against Williams’ injury history while keeping a useful piece in place. For Portland, that’s the kind of move that can outshine the bigger headline.

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