This Blazers Move Changes One Big Thing In The West

With Ja Morant's arrival, the Trail Blazers set their sights on climbing the competitive ranks of the Western Conference.

The Portland Trail Blazers made a splash by trading for Ja Morant, and the move has them aiming higher in the Western Conference. But even with that kind of headline-grabbing addition, the climb is still steep. Portland finished seventh in the standings last season, and the path ahead includes a crowded middle, a few dangerous surprises, and a top tier that still looks out of reach.

At the bottom of the West, the Blazers should be ahead of a group that includes the Dallas Mavericks, Los Angeles Clippers, Memphis Grizzlies, New Orleans Pelicans, Phoenix Suns and Sacramento Kings. The Mavs, Grizzlies, Pelicans and Kings are all described as rebuilding teams that should end up in the lottery again.

The Clippers and Suns are projected to hover around the Play-In Tournament, with Phoenix looking stronger on paper, especially after Kawhi Leonard was traded to the Toronto Raptors, though Los Angeles could still have something up its sleeve. Even so, Portland is expected to be better than both, which makes the Play-In Tournament the floor for the upcoming season.

A tier above that, the Blazers are being grouped with the Golden State Warriors, Houston Rockets, Los Angeles Lakers and Utah Jazz. Golden State is old, but Stephen Curry still commands respect, and the Warriors would merit even more of it if they can land LeBron James in free agency.

Houston still has Kevin Durant, and despite playoff disappointment last season, the Rockets are being treated as a 50-win team that can make noise in the West. The Lakers lost LeBron, but they are still expected to put together a playoff-caliber roster, especially if Luka Doncic and Austin Reaves stay healthy over the long haul.

Utah is the wild card in that group. The Jazz are said to want to compete this season, and their roster could cause problems for other teams in the conference.

Morant’s former teammate Jaren Jackson Jr. is expected to be healthy for Utah alongside one-time Blazers center Jusuf Nurkic in the frontcourt. If No. 2 overall pick Darryn Peterson has a strong season, the Jazz could become the West’s biggest under-the-radar threat.

The real upper crust remains a different conversation entirely. The Denver Nuggets, Minnesota Timberwolves, Oklahoma City Thunder and San Antonio Spurs are still the teams Portland would have to chase to break into the conference’s elite.

Oklahoma City and San Antonio are coming off trips to the Western Conference finals and are expected to be favorites to get back there in the spring. Denver and Minnesota are viewed as the biggest challengers behind them, with Nikola Jokic and Anthony Edwards carrying the kind of clutch ability that can swing a playoff run.

For Portland, the message is clear: a second straight postseason appearance is within reach, and Morant gives them a better look on paper, especially with a healthy Damian Lillard alongside him. But the Blazers are still a long way from the top of the West. One season won’t be enough to crack that upper tier, though it could give them the kind of progress and experience that starts to matter later in the decade.

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