Blazers Still Have Two Roster Spots And One Huge Decision Ahead

With two open roster slots, the Trail Blazers are considering strategic additions to bolster their revamped squad, including potential signings that blend experience with their burgeoning young talent.

The Portland Trail Blazers have already made one of the loudest moves of the offseason by landing superstar Ja Morant, and that deal has pushed their timeline forward in a hurry. What looked like a play-in team now has the feel of a group that can make some real noise in the Western Conference. Even with that major addition in place, Portland still has unfinished business.

The roster’s starting group may be locked in, but there are still two open spots to sort through. That leaves the Blazers with a chance to add a little more stability and experience at the back end of the roster, and a few familiar names stand out as logical fits.

One of the cleanest possibilities is a reunion with Trendon Watford. Portland originally brought him in as an undrafted free agent out of LSU in 2021, and he spent two seasons with the team.

In that stretch, Watford averaged 7.5 points and 4 rebounds per game in just 18 minutes. He plays power forward, but his defensive versatility lets him handle multiple positions, which would give the Blazers another useful piece for the second unit.

Watford also checks another box for Portland: age and fit. At 25, he lines up with the team’s current timeline, and he already knows the organization and its culture. That kind of familiarity matters when a team is trying to round out a roster without disrupting the core.

Jae’Sean Tate is another name that fits the kind of move Portland could make. He’s coming off a season with the Houston Rockets in which he averaged just under 10 minutes per game, but his appeal is similar to Watford’s. Tate brings defensive flexibility and a steady veteran presence, two things that can matter a lot on a bench.

For a Blazers team still trying to build its defensive identity around players like Toumani Camara and Donovan Clingan, Tate could be a useful addition on the veteran minimum.

Then there’s Aaron Holiday, who would bring a different kind of logic to the table. Portland’s backcourt is already crowded with the newly acquired Ja Morant, Damian Lillard, Scoot Henderson, and Aaron’s brother, Jrue Holiday. With Head Coach Micah Nori recently endorsing the elder Holiday brother, it is largely speculated that Scoot Henderson may be on the move.

Even if the guard rotation changes again, Aaron Holiday would still have a role to play. The Blazers are not chasing another big-minute guard here.

What they need is someone who can steady the room, help the younger players, and provide value without demanding a major role. A Holiday family reunion in Portland would fit that idea.

The bigger point is simple: Portland does not need another headline-grabbing swing. The foundation is already in place. These kinds of additions would not redefine the franchise, but they could help the Blazers fill out the depth chart with veterans who make the whole roster sturdier.

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The two-way situation adds another layer, with Chris Youngblood and Jayson Kent both getting a real chance to show they can be more than camp bodies. Portland has also lined up a cluster of other Summer League players who could push for attention, including Jalen Bridges, Quincy Olivari, Andrew Carr, DJ Steward and Flynn Cameron, and the shooting need makes that group worth tracking closely. For a team still sorting out its edges, this month could offer an early answer to one of the more frustrating questions on the docket. [Read more 🡒]