The bottom line is that Patty still faces a long, hard climb up from the bottom of the Blazers' depth chart. His best option is to wow everyone this summer and give the Blazers confidence that he can fill the role Rodriguez played until he got dissatisfied with his minutes (or lack thereof), but that leaves open the question of Bayless. His problem is the Blazers' two guard is the incomparable Brandon Roy, and Roy is actually a part-time point guard himself. In other words, he is used to handling the ball a lot and creating his own and ohers' shots. That's why the unsensational Blake is a good fit for the Blazers and Bayless -- who sees himself as a big-time scorer -- is not. Patty's challlenge is to convince Blazers' management that he can play alongside Roy as well as Blake. That might allow the Blazers to let Bayless go, but it seems unlikely that Patty would be so good to make the Blazers give up on landing an experienced back-up to Blake. It is a sobering thought that the best outcome Patty could achieve is to prove he's good enough to be third string.
An interesting aspect of the fans' comments on the draft was the large number who figured Patty was a steal at 55. Lots of comments along the lines that now Oregon has a shot at beating Saint Mary's. Those comments undercut the impression that Patty made a terrible decision in coming out this year, that he would have been much better served to polish his rep with an outstanding junior year and enter next year's draft with more clout. There is just no way you can view this decision as anything else but a disaster for our Patty. He squandered an opportunity to carve a truly epic college career for a crapshoot at garbage minutes in the NBA. What a shame.

