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Draymond Green is right about Chet Holmgren, and it’s not close

Draymond Green is right about Chet Holmgren, and it’s not close
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Chet Holmgren got swallowed up by Victor Wembanyama in the conference finals, and the trade talk started before the series was cold. Draymond Green, of all people, is the one pumping the brakes, and the case is stronger than his reputation as a critic suggests.

On his podcast, Green called the trade chatter “ridiculous and premature” and rattled off the résumé: “Chet was just second in Defensive Player of the Year voting, All-Defense First Team, All-NBA Third Team, All-Star, and he have a bad playoff series and everybody like time to trade him.”

The series was a matchup problem, not a verdict

Holmgren shot 27.3% from three and scored four points in Game 7, and Wembanyama physically erased him. The thing the panic ignores is that Wembanyama does that to everyone.

He’s a 7-foot-4 problem with no precedent, and using the one opponent built specifically to beat Holmgren’s game as the evidence that Holmgren is broken is bad analysis. A 24-year-old who anchored a top defense all season doesn’t lose that in seven games.

OKC’s collapse wasn’t a Holmgren collapse

The Thunder went into the series without Jalen Williams and Ajay Mitchell, which left Shai Gilgeous-Alexander carrying the offense alone and Holmgren as the only other shot creation. Scapegoating the big man for a roster that was already down two contributors gets the diagnosis backwards. The offense had no support; Holmgren was the most visible symptom, not the cause.

The trade-value math makes Green’s point for him

A floated Holmgren-for-Alperen Sengun swap is a stylistic mismatch as much as anything. Sengun is an offense-first hub; Holmgren is the rim-protecting, floor-spacing anchor a contender builds its defense around, on a rookie-scale-into-extension timeline that’s gold under the new apron rules.

The franchises that win, as Green put it, are the ones that don’t flinch after one bad week. Coming from the league’s most reliable trash-talker, the defense of a young player carries exactly the weight he intends.

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