
Players move around all the time in the NBA, but Portland Trail Blazers guard Jrue Holiday hopes to stay where he is for the time being.
Following the conclusion of the Blazers' postseason run in a five-game series loss to the San Antonio Spurs, the veteran guard made it clear that he views his long-term future in the Pacific Northwest. Even as external trade speculation continues to swirl around him, Holiday wants to build a winner from the ground up.
“I hope so. I don’t like being traded and moved and stuff," Holiday said regarding his desire to remain in Portland via Oregon Live's Joe Freeman. "I like being a part of something and building with the team and seeing the progress and going through the progress with them. So I hope so. I’d love to be here.”
While contenders view Holiday as the ultimate missing piece to the puzzle, his focus remains entirely on the culture brewing inside the Blazers' locker room.
For Holiday, the Blazers' identity solidified in the final weeks of the regular season as they moved up in the standings and beat the Phoenix Suns in the first matchup of the Play-In Tournament.
“Honestly, just kind of how we ended the season, fighting and clawing, knowing that we have a team that has proven ourselves to some extent to be a playoff team," Holiday said via Freeman.
"We have a good mix of older gentlemen and then young guys that are still hungry. You hear them. ... So I’m really excited for that.”
Holiday's value to Portland extends far beyond perimeter defense and steady playmaking. His championship experience is exactly what a team like the Blazers needs in order to take the next step as a franchise.
By publicly stating his desire to remain with the Blazers, Holiday shifts the narrative. Any potential offseason move now rests squarely on management's shoulders rather than Holiday forcing his way out.
Blazers general manager Joe Cronin and the front office must now weigh the tangible value of Holiday's leadership against the high-value draft capital and young prospects rival executives are dangling. If the front office honors Holiday's wishes, they secure an elite culture-setter next to Damian Lillard in the backcourt.
If they move him, they risk disrupting the chemistry that Holiday is so excited to build upon for next season and beyond.
There's a reason the Blazers traded for Holiday from the Boston Celtics for Anfernee Simons last offseason and it wasn't just to ensure they would have a placeholder until Lillard's return from a torn Achilles.
Teams like the Blazers need players like Holiday in order to build championship DNA. It may not happen overnight or even while Holiday is with the team, but the impact he is having on the players who will be here longer than himself will linger for many years to come.
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