First of all, Greg Oden has done little to nothing in the league. He has not lived up to the hype. The former number one overall pick has only played in 88 NBA games since being drafted. For a role player, his numbers might be acceptable, but not for a former first pick. Oden has averaged 9.4 points per game over his regular season career, and only five points per game in his brief playoff career (when it matters most). His inability to stay out of foul trouble combined with his injury prone luck has resulted in a regular season average of only 22 minutes a game (16 mpg in the playoffs). The Blazers thought he could use his 285 pound body to dominate down low on both ends of the floor. To put it plainly, they were wrong.
His lack of production has disappointed Portland's organization to the extent that they decided to let him go. Oden currently has no home. He is a free agent looking for another chance to play wherever someone will give him a second chance. Steve Patterson, who was Portland's general manager at the time of the draft selection, was apparently so ashamed with his decision he decided to resign the following year in 2007. Oden never panned out for the Blazers. As a result, the entire organization is left wishing they could take a mulligan over the 2006 NBA Draft.
The more significant reason the unfortunate selection of the Blazers was wretched is because Greg Oden is not Kevin Durant. The Blazers decided to surpass "Durantula," who was selected by the Seattle SuperSonics (now the Oklahoma City Thunder) with the very next pick. Kevin Durant, who averaged 25.8 points per game and 11.1 rebounds per game for the Texas Longhorns in his one year as a college basketball player, has done what Oden has been unable to do. He has blossomed as a professional, and turned into one of the leagues youngest superstars.
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Durant not only stuffs the stat sheet like Lebron does, but he has what "The Chosen One" does not. He has the clutch factor. He has ice in his veins. He knows when its time to take over a game. His matchless skill set, closer mentality, and maturing intangibles could have been taking over the NBA in Portland. Instead, because the Blazers chose Oden, Oklahoma City won the lottery when Steve Patterson and his colleagues regretfully passed up on KD. Hindsight is 20/20, and in hindsight, the Portland Trailblazers know they made a catostrophic mistake in selecting Greg Oden over Kevin Durant, the league's newest megastar.