The Portland Trail Blazers have added another name to the frontcourt mix, claiming Indiana Pacers forward Micah Potter off waivers.
Potter arrives with five years of NBA experience and a résumé that includes stops with the Detroit Pistons and Utah Jazz. Last season was his most productive yet: he averaged 9.7 points and five rebounds in 47 games for Indiana, the best statistical stretch of his career to this point.
To get a clearer read on what Portland is bringing in, Indiana Pacers On SI reporter Alex Golden offered a detailed look at Potter’s game. The headline trait is easy to spot.
Potter can shoot. He has a soft touch, stretches the floor, and knocked down 42.3% of his three-point attempts last season.
In Indiana’s fast-moving offense, he fit cleanly because the ball kept humming and he could punish defenses as a pick-and-pop big.
Golden also pointed to the other parts of Potter’s offensive package. He set sturdy screens for his size, could roll hard to the rim, and finished with emphatic dunks when the lane opened up. But the shooting is what makes him useful.
The defensive end is where the problems start. Golden said opponents targeted Potter repeatedly, forcing him into actions almost every trip and exposing him when he had to switch onto quicker guards. That often dragged the rest of the defense into rotation and left Indiana scrambling.
That’s why Golden sees Potter more as a depth center than someone who should be counted on every night. He can help on offense, but the tradeoff on defense is significant enough that his overall impact gets complicated. Golden said that, while they are different players, Potter is less talented than Duop Reath but should fill a similar role.
Indiana’s decision to move on from Potter was tied to roster math as much as anything else. Adding Nance Jr. saved the Pacers roughly $400K, and the team was extremely close to the first apron caphold. Nance Jr. also gives them more positional versatility and better defense.
In Other News...
Another Bucks Misstep Has The Damian Lillard Trade Looking Better
Milwaukees latest roster move is the kind of decision that can ripple far beyond the Bucks locker room, and Portland has a direct reason to keep an eye on it. Gary Trent Jr. landed a four-year deal worth $64 million, a price tag that only adds to the sense that Milwaukee is paying premium money for a player whose recent production does not quite match the contract.
For the Trail Blazers, the bigger issue is what all this means for the future. Portland still has a claim on Milwaukees draft capital from 2028 through 2030 from the Damian Lillard trade, and every questionable Bucks move can make those picks more interesting. With Lillard still on Milwaukees books through the waive-and-stretch and other costly roster decisions piling up, the Bucks are giving Portland reason to watch the long game closely. [Read more 🡒]
Blazers Offseason Shakeup Just Put Their Young Core On Notice
Portland spent the offseason remaking its backcourt and, in the process, put several young players on a shorter leash. The reshuffle has left one roster spot still open and raised fresh questions about frontcourt depth after Jerami Grants departure, but it also clarifies where some of the minutes are likely to go as the Blazers lean into a faster, more aggressive style.
Donovan Clingan looks positioned to be one of the early beneficiaries, with more chances for easy buckets and lob finishes in a system built to get him involved. Scoot Henderson and Shaedon Sharpe, meanwhile, are the names to watch on the other side of the ledger, since the new lineup and recent additions could squeeze their roles and push Henderson toward a reduced workload that may even send him to the bench. [Read more 🡒]
