The Portland Trail Blazers’ decision to bring in Ja Morant has turned the backcourt into a crowded room, and Blake Wesley looks like the odd man out.
Portland now has four point guards after the trade with the Memphis Grizzlies, which immediately sparked questions about whether another move was coming. Jrue Holiday and Scoot Henderson were both floated as possible names to watch if the Blazers decide they need to clear the logjam. But for now, the early read is that Portland wants to see if this group can coexist.
If that holds, Wesley’s path in Portland gets even narrower.
The Blazers already had four players set to hit free agency this summer: Wesley, Robert Williams III, Matisse Thybulle and Caleb Love, who is restricted. Portland handled Williams first, locking him into a three-year, $44 million deal that is only fully guaranteed in year one. The other three remain unresolved.
Then came another roster move that only complicated things further. Portland signed former Oklahoma City Thunder big man Branden Carlson to a one-year, $2.5 million contract, adding to a roster that already feels overloaded in some places and thin in others. The result is a strange balance: four point guards, four centers, and a team that suddenly has too many bodies at the wrong spots.
Wing depth is the real problem. It was already shaky last season, and the Morant deal made it worse by sending Jerami Grant and Kris Murray to Memphis.
That leaves Portland looking even lighter on the perimeter, which is why there’s at least a reasonable argument for keeping Thybulle. Love, too, could still have a case after a promising rookie year, especially because he can play off the ball.
Wesley doesn’t have the same argument.
He put together a solid season, though injuries cut into it, and he showed exactly why teams value him: speed, defensive pressure, and the ability to hound ball-handlers from end to end. That kind of energy fits Portland’s defensive identity.
The problem has always been the other end. His offensive game never quite matched what the Blazers needed, especially with their desire for more shooting.
Damian Lillard’s return already made Wesley’s fit less certain. The addition of Morant, another non-shooting point guard, makes it harder to imagine a clean path forward.
Wesley is only 23, and he was a first-round pick for a reason. In the right setting, he still looks like the kind of bench piece teams can use without needing plays run for him or the ball in his hands. For Portland, though, the roster math is becoming increasingly unforgiving.
He won over fans quickly in what might end up being a short stay with the Blazers. Wherever he lands next, that part probably won’t change.
In Other News...
Blazers Summer League Roster Hints At Portlands Next Wave
The Trail Blazers Summer League roster offers an early look at the next group of young players trying to carve out a role in Portland, and the mix is what makes it interesting. The roster features a lottery pick, two players on two-way contracts and several others with NBA experience, giving the team a little more substance than the usual July audition.
Yang Hansen is the centerpiece, the second-year center from China who was already one of the events more notable draws a year ago. Hell be joined by two-way players Chris Youngblood and Jayson Kent when Portland heads to Las Vegas for the league schedule that runs July 9-19, with the Blazers set to open against the Phoenix Suns on July 10. [Read more 🡒]
Blazers Face A Sharpening Debate After Their Backcourt Shakeup
The Trail Blazers backcourt overhaul has opened up a fresh layer of roster debate, and it comes at a time when Dallas is trying to sort through a crowded frontcourt after adding Santi Aldama. Portlands new look, built around Ja Morant and Damian Lillard, has naturally pushed attention toward the wings, where the Blazers could still use more help if they are going to make the most of this reshaped lineup.
Within that backdrop, the idea of a trade between the two teams has started to get real discussion time, even if nothing is close to being finalized. The framework makes some sense on both sides, with Portland potentially looking for extra value to balance the deal, but the bigger issue is whether the teams needs line up well enough to make a swap worth pursuing or if this is just one of those conversations that sharpens the market without producing a move. [Read more 🡒]
Anfernee Simons Just Got The Winning Chance He Always Wanted
Anfernee Simons is headed to Philadelphia after agreeing to a two-year, $12.3 million deal that includes a player option in the second season, according to ESPN's Shams Charania. For a guard who has spent the past stretch bouncing from Portland to Boston and then Chicago before reaching free agency, this is the kind of landing spot that gives him a cleaner read on what comes next.
Simons decision also says something about where he wants his career to go from here. He had other options on the table, but the fit with Philadelphias roster appears to have carried the day, and that sort of alignment can matter just as much as money for a player looking to reset his trajectory. What comes next for him in that setting will be worth watching, especially with the second year built in as a choice point. [Read more 🡒]
