The Trail Blazers are entering an offseason of upheaval, with a new owner running the show and a search for a new head coach underway. They also have decisions to make about several key players this summer, including the highest-drafted young player on the roster: Scoot Henderson.

This was supposed to be the season that Henderson, who is extension-eligible following the third year of his rookie contract, took the reins as the point guard of the future, writes Joe Freeman of Oregon Live (subscriber link). Instead, a hamstring injury sustained right before training camp proved to be a critical setback, as he wasn’t able to get on the court for four months.

Henderson ultimately played just 30 games, and while he had some highly successful outings during the Blazers’ first-round series against the Spurs, he didn’t exactly put questions about his future to rest.

His shot improved a little bit and that’s something you can continue to work on,” an anonymous scout told Freeman. “He has intangibles that you can’t teach. But he has to learn to use them in an NBA game. He needs to finish better. He has no idea how to play explosive against bigger, stronger athletes. Will he get it? Who knows.”

We have more from the Blazers:

  • Portland will also have to make a decision on 28-year-old unrestricted free agent Robert Williams III. Though he was limited by a minutes restriction, Williams played 59 games this season, which is the second-highest mark of his career, Freeman notes (subscriber link). The veteran center also stepped into a larger role in the playoffs due to the struggles of Donovan Clingan. Injuries and availability remain a question mark with the talented, defensive-minded big man, but his impact when he plays could draw the interest of other playoff teams if the Blazers don’t retain him. “I feel like I found another home in Portland,” Williams said. “I’d be happy to stay here, help the rebuild. I’m proud of the young guys. We’ve been together for a couple years … but everything is a business. It’s a negotiation. And we’ve got to get into talks.”
  • One player whose status with the team is clear at this point is Deni Avdija, who blossomed into an All-Star point forward despite playing on a team that featured some of the worst spacing in the league, according to Freeman (subscriber link). Avdija clearly cemented himself as a franchise cornerstone, though some scouts still wonder if he’s more of an elite second option than the best player on a truly competitive team, Freeman writes. The 25-year-old forward is aware that he may have taken the league by surprise this season and recognizes that likely won’t be the case next year. “A lot of teams are going to prepare and they know me right now and maybe have different solutions,” he said. “I need to learn how to drive both ways, be a better defender, a better leader, be more vocal.”
  • The Blazers acquired sharpshooting wing Vit Krejci before the trade deadline to upgrade their perimeter rotation, but he struggled to close the season, possibly in part due to a left calf bruise. Still, Freeman says the team remains intrigued by Krejci’s defensive tools, his shooting, and his team-friendly contract, which is partially guaranteed for next season and non-guaranteed for the following season (subscriber link).
  • The mass layoffs from the Portland organization weren’t limited to the business or media side of operations. Blazers scout and WNBA legend Tina Thompson was one of the cuts, as Sean Highkin of the Rose Garden Report relays (Twitter link). Highkin notes (via Twitter) that Thompson was particularly close with Damian Lillard, who recently recruited her son to Weber State.
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