Tag Archives: Portland Trailblazers

Carmelo Anthony Brought The “Fun” Back To Portland Traiblazer Basketball

Oklahoma City Thunder v Portland Trail Blazers

Source: Abbie Parr / Getty

For a minute there, it seemed like future Hall of Famer and 10-time NBA All-Star Carmelo Anthony was getting the Colin Kaepernick treatment from NBA teams for no reason other than being a “ball stopper” on offense.

Luckily for fans of the game, the Portland Trailblazers decided to take a chance on the iso-ball scorer extraordinaire and it’s paying off big time as the recently unemployed NBA star done went “Hoodie-Melo” on the league and is posting up impressive numbers across the board.

So much so that Oregon Live wrote a piece on Carmelo praising him for not only breathing new life into the Damian Lillard and CJ McCollum-lead team but for bringing back the “fun” to Portland basketball that’s been missing for a minute even with that deadly backcourt.

Though Melo’s only played in five games thus far for the Trailblazers, he’s already put up a 25-point performance against the Bulls and more recently a 19-point effort against OKC in which he shot an efficient nine for 11 and moved onto 18th place on the All-Time NBA scoring list. Obviously, Melo is far from washed as most believed at the beginning of the season.

“I think people just see how kind of genuine this is for me,” Anthony said. “This is not nothing fake. This is authentic. This is who I am. This is genuine. This is real love at the end of the day. And I think people can sense when it’s not. I think that’s what we’re dealing with here.”

His All-Star teammate Lillard is also delighting in the rejuvenated Anthony and is happy to be witnessing it firsthand.

“It’s fun to see,” Lillard said of the “Me-lo” chants. “We’ve got another megastar, a Hall of Famer … and the fans are excited about it, as they should be. I think it’s a point in his career where he needs that type of support. He needs people behind him and to feel good about what he’s doing. So it was great to witness. We all want to be a part of his comeback. We want to see it work out. We want to see him get the respect that he’s due. So to see how the crowd responded to him, it’s really good to see and be a part of.

“And it’s also … a spark and some energy that our team needed. It’s fun to see.”

Hopefully Melo can keep this up for the remainder of the season and well into the playoffs because while many thought this was going to be Anthony’s “farewell tour” throughout the season, it’s looking like Melo’s making a case that he can continue to contribute to a contending team for at least another season.

Photo: Getty

Source: HipHopWired.com

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Exclusive: Damian Lillard Talks ‘Big D.O.L.L.A.’ Album and Upcoming NBA Season

Portland Trailblazers superstar Damian Lillard has many nicknames: Dame, Dame Time, Big Game Dame, and most recently, Logo Lillard. This past summer, after sending the Oklahoma City into roster purgatory and making a run at making the NBA Finals, Lillard shifted his attention to a different name: Dame D.O.L.L.A.

Fans know Lillard is nice on the hardwood against some of the coldest NBA players we have ever seen, but the challenge in the offseason was to corral your ear and show you why he also is a quality talent on the microphone. In August, D.O.L.L.A. released his third album, Big D.O.L.L.A., which he describes as his best work, a breakout project that illustrates his current life.

Right before the most storied free agency period in NBA history kicked off, Lillard’s new contract extension was just as big of a splash as his dagger over Paul George in the playoffs that just concluded. Brian Windhorst of ESPN broke the news of a four-year $196 million contract extension between Lillard and the Blazers, that could bring Dame $54.3 million in his final year.

Not only did that deal confirm Lillard’s status as one of the league’s elite talents and the key piece in Portland for the foreseeable future, but shaped how he would approach the content of his forthcoming rap album.

Speaking with The Source, Dame D.O.L.L.A. shares on his growth as an artist, giving back to his hometown of Oakland and why the Blazers are not mentioned in contender lists like the Lakers and Clippers.

The Source: This summer you’ve been a rapper more so this summer opposed to the formalities of a basketball player. Has it been wearing two hats or having them overlap?

Damian Lillard: Every day that I get up and do all my training. So basketball player duties still continue every day when I get up. First things first and then later on in the day, that’s when I’m getting into all the stuff with the music. But this summer it was cool to like really go in on it. I got to be more invested in music than I have been before as far as my career. Even with that, it didn’t seem like much really changed. The people that I had assisted me in supporting me was already really changed. I have more people that can give him more legs.

People that follow or listen to you, know your love for Oakland, representing home in music and everything. How important is it for you to stay aligned with home and what are some of the efforts that are currently working on there as well?

That’s such a huge part of why I am the way I am. That’s why it’s such an emphasis in my music because I want people to understand that connection and understand me better through my hometown and experiences in my upbringing.

I got a lot of things that I’ve been working on back home. Supporting local artists, rebuilding pieces of my high school. We rebuilt the gym, we rebuilt the weight room, we built a recording studio on campus. I’ve been doing a community picnic where we provide backpacks, school supplies, free haircuts, free hairstyles for women, and clothes for women. There is a stage for live performances, firetruck rides, everything’s that could be of service to the people in the community as much as possible. I’m still working on trying to find ways that we can support as well. That community was part of the foundation of me as a man and I’m forever going to be going in debt to the city.

For this album cover, it’s two Bentleys on the cover, you in one and then your son in a mini one. Hip-Hop is known for having the baby picture cover art but you did it a little different. What made you think of doing it that way?

This album was me going in a completely different direction. Before this, I hadn’t said any curse words on my first two albums. Just kind of like PG-13 and for this one, I wanted to really embrace where my life is now. I signed a supermax extension, living in the kind of house that I live in, having the type of things that I have, my family being in a position that we’re in. And also me having a son now. I did the cover like I’m leveling up from where I was my last album. That’s why I called it Big D.O.L.L.A. The music is embracing what my life actually is and not trying to dumb it down or play it off like is not what it is. It was me embracing it and kind of flexing. I felt like that’s what people wanted to see, a light turn up and do something good. And I think that’s part of why they respond so much better.

What is your creative process like in the studio and since the season is returning, I’m assuming this is all going to be reduced some?

Naturally, it will go on the back burner just because I’m in a profession that takes a lot of time and focus and attention. They pay me that kind of money to be able to perform and to be able to focus on that. But music is something I’m invested in and I’m going all-in on. So there’s a team of people that I have that are going to be still promoting it and pushing it and doing stuff like that. And it’ll probably be still some music. I’ve worked on a lot of music even beyond my album that’ll still be getting dropped over the course of the season. But it won’t be to the point where it’s like a distraction.

We see you on the court and it’s going hard at everybody. And then we saw you in the whole Marvin Bagley thing and it was like, I’m going to get you off the court and you can get it here too. What creates that demeanor in what you do?

The stuff that I do, I take a real interest in. Like I really love to do music and I’ve done it as long as I’ve played since I was a kid. So like I don’t just do it halfway. I do it for real. It’s even to the point now where I’ve heard my music played in visiting arenas. It played in Dallas last season while I was shooting around, they played it in Milwaukee one time and I didn’t tell him to play it. It was a known thing. People respected the music.

This album has been received more positively than previous efforts. What growth have you seen in yourself between The Letter O, Confirmed and now Big D.O.L.L.A.

My understanding of how to create music and a sound. The first two I didn’t really know what I specifically wanted my music to sound like. I wanted to show people I can rap and it put together quickly. It was just talking about myself instead of creating a song about something that might not even be directly connected to me. Now, it’s creating a song and the production and how I want it to sound and how I wanted to feel like.

Photo by Marcio Sanchez/Associated Press/Pool/EPA/Shutterstock (8619115a)

Shifting to the court. You are getting ready for training camp. The ESPN rank is starting to come out and CJ McCollum is at 13. You’re in the top 10, but at the same time you can go to that same group of ESPN analysts and talk about West final representatives and they’ll go talk about the Lakers, the Clippers, Rockets, Warriors and won’t mention the Blazers. Why do you think it is your team gets slighted even though y’all ran through almost everybody last year?

Yeah, just the way it is. You got to talk about was the hot take and that’s not us. We have a smaller market. We haven’t won a championship since ’77. We’ve been good for a long time, we been consistent, steady and just keep showing up. It’s not like I’m getting big free-agent acquisitions and big-time trades happening. So it’s not sexy to mention us or talk about it.

A lot of these analysts, they say stuff and when they’re right, they right. But when they wrong, they not held accountable for being wrong. They talk about stuff that’s going to grab people’s attention, which is not what the Trailblazers is, you know, the Lakers or the Clippers or the Rockets, some of those teams. So that’s just what it is.

Aside from winning your ship, what is a goal for you this year on the court and then back in music?
My goal on the court aside from winning the championship is to be the MVP of the league. I want to be there repeatedly and win the championship. Off the court, I want to put out a platinum album. Even if that means my current album is up, just getting on the right playlist and end up going gold or platinum or something like that. I want that platinum album.

The post Exclusive: Damian Lillard Talks ‘Big D.O.L.L.A.’ Album and Upcoming NBA Season appeared first on The Source.

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Iman Shumpert Stopped From Giving Blazers Center The Fade?

Portland Trail Blazers v Sacramento Kings

Source: Ezra Shaw / Getty

Sacramento Kings guard/forward Iman Shumpert lost his head for a moment and appeared that he was ready to give Portland Trailblazers center Jusuf Nurkic the fade. Shumpert was prevented from entering the Blazers’ locker room after his team won the game after the big man set a hard screen.

ESPN reports:

Shumpert apparently was angry at Blazers center Jusuf Nurkic, who set a hard screen in the second half.

“Some stuff needed to be between me and him, a conversation between two men,” Shumpert said. “Some stuff happened out there that we needed to have a conversation about. That’s it.”

Nurkic shrugged it off.

“I’m not going to worry about it,” he said. “He’s going into retirement soon. I’m not going to worry about a guy who’s going into retirement soon.”

Shumpert tweeted out an apology to the fans for causing a ruckus and celebrated his squad’s 115-107 win.

But wait, Shump is just 28 years old, so there’s gotta be a lot of basketball life left in those legs.

Photo: Getty

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Who is Portland’s DJ O.G. One?


Damian Lillard isn’t the only hot Hip-Hop coming out of Portland, Oregon. Trailblazing a buzz also is David Jackson, better known as DJ O.G. One, the official Portland Trailblazers DJ. Bouncing back for a rollercoaster 2017, O.G. One kept the crowd while the Rip City enjoyed their boys on the court nightly. Meanwhile keeping the crowd hype, O.G. One keeps his ear to the streets, supporting the local talent with alley hoops throughout the night, playing local music throughout the night.

Keeping things grooving on the court, off the court O.G. One continues to soar as a recording artist/composer, throughout his tenure, the DJ has released two official projects from his Vibez series. While currently pushing a remix track with rising star singer Phoenix Melody titled, “Be The One”. All available now on major streaming platforms. Download your copy of DJ O.G. One’s Vibez Volume 1 and Volume 2 now on iTunes.

For news and new releases, follow DJ O.G. One on social media via Twitter and Instagram.

Watch the news coverage on the Portland Sensation above.

Follow DJ O.G. One on Twitter: @DJOGONE

Source: UndergroundHipHopBlog.com

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