It's Damian Lillard's time

BOSTON -- Back in late December, before anyone thought seriously about the Portland Trail Blazers as a playoff team or even really thought anything about them at all, Damian Lillard knew something was wrong. They were playing the Miami Heat. The game was close and Lillard was rolling. Naturally, it was time for Dame to do his thing. The pain in his foot wouldn’t let him.

"At that point in the game before I hurt my foot I was like, ‘I’m going to take this game over. We’re going to win this game.’ And then that happens," Lillard said. "I just felt it. I couldn’t move the same. I was nervous, and after the game I was having a hard time walking."

Lillard figured he’d have to sit out at least one game with plantar fasciitis. That was bad enough, considering that he had never missed a game during his pro career. Making things worse was that the Blazers’ season was teetering toward the kind of irrelevancy that so many had predicted for them. One game became two, two became three and as Christmas approached they were fading fast, losers of five straight and six out of seven.

But then something else happened. The Blazers began to click without their leader on the floor. They beat the Cavaliers by 29 as reserve Allen Crabbe poured in 26 points after drawing Lillard’s starting spot. Then they beat Sacramento and Denver as C.J. McCollum went off for 61 points. The Blazers won four of the seven games that Lillard missed, which was enough to keep them afloat. More importantly, they had become a group that was not just a collection of players built around their magnetic star, but a team that reflected what Dame Lillard is all about. "It’s not just me doing everything," LIllard said. "I’m not carrying the team and having to do it all by myself. It’s not me. It’s the group. I came into camp saying we’re going to be better than people think. We’ve been able to do what we’ve done because everybody felt that way. Everybody came in and said, ‘I’m better than what they say I am. I can bring more to this team than they say I can bring to this team.’ They took it personally." The Blazers are one of the best stories of the season. Left in the discard bin after losing three starters in free agency and a fourth by trade, no one gave them a chance at competing this year, let alone fighting for a postseason berth. The future looked fine. After all they had Lillard, a smart coach in Terry Stotts and a savvy GM in Neil Olshey, but the 2015-16 season promised to be a painful, albeit necessary step in a rebuilding project that was pegged in years rather than months. Now they look like a playoff team.

Lillard’s numbers this season are outstanding. He’s scoring more and his attempts and assists are up without sacrificing anything in regards to efficiency. His ability to take -- and make -- tough shots off the dribble puts him in a different tier than many of his contemporaries. As one astute observer put it, he’s the closest thing to Steph Curry that we have in the league.

But we knew he was capable of that. Lillard had been Rookie of the Year, an All-Star, an all-NBA performer and his work in the clutch is already the stuff of legend. What makes this Blazers team so successful is how the other players have raised their games alongside him.

"I think he’s playing the same way he always has," coach Terry Stotts told me. "He has more responsibility and he’s taking more on his shoulders. We knew his numbers would be up. More than anything else is his leadership. When we lost seven in a row he never wavered. Everybody talks about elevating his game, I think he’s elevating the team."

"His role is different this year than it has been in the past," Stotts continued. "Much like C.J., now it’s his time because he’s put himself in position to be successful. Same thing with Dame. The first three years put him in a position where he understands the league, he understands team dynamics and it’s just time to be in that role."

Leadership is an interesting quality in the NBA. The best player is often the de facto leader but talent alone is not enough. As young players develop and become stars, leadership becomes part of the deal and many a young player has struggled with the demands. Some are outspoken. Others are reserved. Either way they are scrutinized and studied, their every action and reaction becoming part of the larger team narrative. The real work is done behind the scenes, away from the cameras and the microphones, but their words carry weight both for the tone they convey and the atmosphere they create.

Listening to Lillard calmly dissect a 23-point loss to the Celtics, a few things stood out. There were no justifications given, even when they were offered and plainly obvious -- it was their fourth game in five nights on a long road trip.

Did you just run out of gas?

"I don’t think we ran out of gas," Lillard said. "And that’s not an excuse."

The outcome may have been unacceptable but blame was collective, not personal. If any group was singled out by Lillard it was the guards for not getting back to meet the Celtics’ onslaught, which forced their big men to over-help leaving them vulnerable inside.

They played harder than us.

We just weren’t good enough.

Those are simple pronouns, but their usage is not accidental. They are part of an overall vision crafted by Lillard to bring everyone together and keep them there. He has that indescribable quality that makes people want to follow, like a saner version of Kevin Garnett, earthy and real without the histrionics and f-bombs. When we talked in September before the start of the season, Olshey referenced Chauncey Billups, not so much in his game but in terms of his quiet charisma.

"Chauncey’s the greatest natural leader I’ve ever been around," Olshey said at the time. "That’s a guy that can walk into a room and literally not utter a word and you know that he has the command presence that it’s just understood. I don’t want to compare him to Chaunce because they’re their own people. There’s never been an organization that hasn’t been better by having Chauncey Billups be a part of it, and it’s the same way I feel about Dame." This is not all about Lillard, but it all keeps coming back to him in one way or another. McCollum has become a 20-point scorer, whose playmaking ability allows them to play the same fast, frenetic style even when Lillard takes his rest. They play off each other and both are happy to defer when one or the other gets in a groove. Their big men are young, athletic and particularly adept at rolling to the rim off high screen and rolls, which is Lillard’s bread-and-butter. This is a close-knit group, and that is the clearest reflection of Lillard’s leadership style. Most of them were on the Garden court two hours before their game against the Celtics, which meant they had arrived at the arena early. A small detail, perhaps, but emblematic of their serious yet relaxed atmosphere. Some players were shooting. Others were catching up with Tim Frazier, the 15th man who was caught in a numbers game after a series of deadline trades geared toward the future. Frazier is playing for the Maine Red Claws in the D-League, but he couldn’t help dropping "we" and "us" in casual conversation about his former team.

"Everybody just kind of clicked," Frazier told me. "That’s the biggest thing about this team. There’s no egos. It started off this summer and everybody’s just been there for each other."

The summer is when it all started and it began when Lillard arranged for a team bonding trip to San Diego. The point of the outing, Lillard told me before the season started, was not to learn about each other as basketball players, but as people. He wanted to forge connections that went beyond the court to arrive at a deeper understanding of one another.

Lillard has always been driven by the proverbial chip on his shoulder and in this Blazers’ team he found a collection of kindred spirits. Whatever was achieved in that impromptu training camp, Dame struck the right chord with his teammates and they with him. That trip was the beginning of his emergence as the team’s unquestioned leader. So much has been said, written and insinuated about the breakup of the old Blazers but one thing is perfectly clear: Damian Lillard was ready for it.

"I always believed that I could do more," Lillard said. "I always believed that I could improve and you can put more weight on my shoulders. The one thing now, it’s like, every time there’s a challenge in front of me I kind of block out the fact that it’s a challenge and I go after it."

Player after player will testify to Lillard’s influence; how he sets the tone with his approach first and his words second.

"We have a really young team and he’s done a great job of leading by example and being consistent with his effort and his approach," McCollum said. "Not only in games but in practices as well. He talks when it’s necessary and people listen. People respect him because of his accolades and his work ethic."

Veteran guard Brian Roberts arrived after the All-Star break as part of a trade deadline deal and it didn’t take him long to see it firsthand. His first night in uniform was the Warriors game, a night when Lillard scored 51 points and served notice to the rest of the league that the Blazers were for real.

"That game was an eye-opener just to see the atmosphere in Portland and to see how well these guys are playing," Roberts said. "That showed me right away, like, ‘Wow this team is really legit.’ Ever since then it’s been the same story. It’s impressive how the guys play together, how much they trust each other. How (Lillard) commands the game and how much respect he has with his teammates. He goes about it the right way. He knows what to say, how to say it and when to say it."

In many ways Lillard and the Blazers have already proven their point. They have achieved well beyond anyone’s expectations and established a culture that gives Olshey’s rebuilding project texture and shape. Their work, however, is far from done. They have put themselves in position to make the playoffs by taking advantage of a home-heavy schedule that was short on .500 teams, and it will be much tougher during the final six weeks of the season. The next steps will be difficult, but the Blazers have created a foundation that lies comfortably on Dame Lillard’s shoulders.