The Blazers went through this back during/around the Brandon Roy time. It didn't help that Greg Oden was actually 35 and broken down when they drafted him, or that Roy's knee blew out. But the Blazers were already up against the wall trying to afford all the young talent they had. It was a foregone conclusion that they weren't going to be able to keep all the young talent they had.
OKC had the same problem. They (Seattle) traded all their top players when they got Durant, and raked in a bunch of draft picks. They did well with the picks, and had a huge amount of talent on one team. Just about the time they got them experienced playing with each other, the team started having to worry about how they were going to pay them all. You can argue about why they lost Harden, but the fact is they couldn't keep him.
If nothing else, if they keep having success, there are going to be a lot of important role players who will see a chance to cash in elsewhere. They can't afford to pay everyone the maximum, and there aren't enough minutes to go around on a stacked team. Curry, Klay, and Durant will get all the glory, and Draymond will feel disrespected. Or Durant will understand that it will never be "his" team. Or both. The old ring-chasers won't be able to get minutes and move on to get one more big paycheck, or retire. Maybe GS will find some magic to hold them all together, but chances are DRob is right.

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. doesn't work like that. Never has and never will. If that's the case, the Blazers in 2000 would have been champs.
