Author Topic: Ouch, Portland gets a spanking regarding Miles  (Read 1302 times)

Offline WayOutWest

  • Hero Member
  • *****
  • Posts: 7411
    • View Profile
Ouch, Portland gets a spanking regarding Miles
« on: January 19, 2009, 04:37:44 PM »
Man, has this guy been drinking Hatorade or what?


http://ca.sports.yahoo.com/nba/news;_ylt=AswgluuGC5rDHbt0tfcC4jG8vLYF?slug=aw-milespritchard011709&prov=yhoo&type=lgns

Miles separated Blazers GM from greatness
By Adrian Wojnarowski, Yahoo! Sports
Jan 17, 19:50 EST

Jan 17, 2009 League blocked Blazers' bid to claim Miles Jan 13, 2009
The bully-boy bluff ends now because the Portland Trail Blazers always were without the guts to file a lawsuit over Darius Miles. Their threatening email had been a desperate final act of a franchise awash in arrogance. Blazers officials hoped the threat of Paul Allen?s riches could scare the NBA. Mostly, it made everyone laugh.

For whatever hollow intimidation they used to try to stop the signing of Miles, Blazers officials understood this: They were the last people who would?ve wanted to go under oath about the behind-the-scenes machinations of Miles? injury retirement. Only the Blazers would?ve been on trial. Only they would?ve had to answer the most uncomfortable of questions.

From leaked drug tests and public proclamations of private medical records to trashing Miles to rival executives and daring to claim him off waivers to stash him away on the inactive list, Portland?s front office acted in bad form and bad faith. Yes, the Jail Blazers lived again.

So sure, go ahead and sue the Memphis Grizzlies for signing a player to a 10-day contract who had 13 points in a quarter on LeBron James, then 10 points and seven rebounds in 14 minutes on the Utah Jazz. Miles played his 10th game of the season on Friday night, and this saga finally is over. His $18 million goes back on Portland?s salary cap, and the Blazers deserve the return of every cap-clogging cent.

It isn?t a matter of whether Miles can play in the NBA again, but how well and how long. If he?s just a 10-day contract player, well, he?s the best of those available on the market. When his deal ends Monday, several league executives told Yahoo! Sports they?ll contact his agent about signing him.

Memphis is expected to offer Miles a second 10-day contract, but there could be better opportunities for him.

?I?m pleased with the production Darius has had, especially considering that he?s been off the court for over a year and a half,? Miles? agent, Jeff Wechsler said by phone on Saturday. ?He?s shaken the rust off, and he?s been very productive in the games that he?s played.?

The irony of it all, of course, is that Miles has turned into an improbable teacher to the Blazers, giving them some lessons on professionalism and humility. Yes, he had been immature for most of his career. He had made terrible mistakes. Only now, he has grown up. After having him with the Celtics in the preseason, the Boston Celtics? Danny Ainge and Doc Rivers believe it. So does more and more of the league now.

Through it all, Miles never wished ill will on Portland. His comeback never has been about costing them salary-cap space on his injury retirement case. Management wanted out of his $48 million contract in Portland and found a way. All along, Miles told the Blazers he would try to play again. He honored his word.

And the better he has looked, the worse it has reflected on Portland GM Kevin Pritchard. As much as anyone, this mess has exposed him. He wanted to be the star in the good times in Portland, wanted all the bouquets and bows for his work on the job. He started to believe his own clippings, his own mythology, and he thought he could get away with anything.

From the start, Pritchard stumbled into the one rabid NBA market where a general manager can aspire to celebrity. Portland declared Pritchard the Golden Boy, the Gambler, and played songs about him on the radio. Never once did he seem embarrassed. Never did he do much but furiously feed the rush to declare him a genius.

He bragged of draining three cell-phone batteries a day. He bought high-risk stocks, and he never laid up on a par-5. He loves those little details about himself getting into the papers. True? Who knows? It sure made for a fast-rising legend, though. He wanted everyone to believe that he worked harder and longer and smarter. Maybe he thought it all portrayed a confidence, but it mostly masked an insecurity.

He had taken the San Antonio Spurs? computer scouting programs and made them bigger and better. ?Kevin?s baby,? the local paper said the Blazers called it in their offices. Rip City wanted a hero to make the Jail Blazers go away, and Pritchard indulged himself in it all.

Portland owner Paul Allen gave Pritchard the biggest stack of chips to bring to the table, and Pritchard flaunted them to everyone. He stockpiled draft choices like Reagan did nuclear warheads, buying up millions of dollars worth of picks from cash-strapped teams over the past several seasons. He never has been afraid to rub that advantage into the faces of his peers. The Blazers still haven?t been to the playoffs under him, but any opposing GM on the wrong side of a deal with Portland is considered to have been Pritch-slapped.

It?s strange, but every transaction in Portland has been treated like a validation of Pritchard?s genius. Now, his apologists are blaming Paul Allen and president Larry Miller for the Miles mess, only it doesn?t work like that. Pritchard is the face of the franchise because he made it that way.

Pritchard has mismanaged the Miles situation from the beginning. Once the league doctor agreed that Miles? knee injury was a career-ender, Pritchard?s dubious intentions came tumbling out of him.

?Two doctors said Darius had the worst microfracture injury they had ever seen,? he publicly said. ?They would never have him play basketball, and the odds of having knee replacement surgery [are] high. I hear that, and as a general manager, I didn?t want it on my conscience ? that I had a kid have to go through a knee replacement surgery.

?That?s a pretty major surgery. They saw [two bones] and replace [the knee]. It?s a bad deal.?

His conscience, huh? Those were words directed at the rest of the league, trying to tell every other team that Miles was too far gone for them to consider bringing back. He must have believed people were stupid. All around the NBA, it made everyone think: Pritchard sounds scared that Miles isn?t done at all. Why else would he be trying so hard to convince everyone otherwise?

Bad enough that Pritchard spoke out of turn on a player?s medical condition and possibly violated privacy laws, but it was clear that a campaign to frighten away potential teams was under way. From there, it went underground. If the Blazers couldn?t scare people on Miles? knee, it wasn?t long, league executives say, until Portland turned to his character.

Pritchard has a great eye for talent, but that?s just the start of constructing a contender, a champion. The greats of his profession understand the humbling nature of the job ? genius today, bum tomorrow ? and mostly stay in the shadows, deflecting praise on coaches and players. Once you try to make yourself the star in the good times, you?re asking for trouble when they go bad. So now, his hubris has been Pritch-slapped into silence, and maybe in the long run, it?s the best thing that could?ve happened to the Blazers. Maybe they needed this sobering reminder of reality.

Portland loses cap space now, and it loses some respect. All that arrogance, all those threats and a 27-year-old that Kevin Pritchard and his posse had dismissed as character-free, as the last holdout of the Jail Blazers, taught them a lesson.

Yes, the Jail Blazers made a comeback this season.

Only this time, they wore suits.
"History shouldn't be a mystery"
"Our story is real history"
"Not his story"

"My people's culture was strong, it was pure"
"And if not for that white greed"
"It would've endured"

"Laker hate causes blindness"

Offline rickortreat

  • Hero Member
  • *****
  • Posts: 2056
    • View Profile
    • Email
Re: Ouch, Portland gets a spanking regarding Miles
« Reply #1 on: January 19, 2009, 05:49:16 PM »
They had it coming.  Portland put themselves into a tough spot and then compounded the error by threatening to sue anyone who signed Miles.  Had they followed through, Miles could have sued them for interfering with his right to pursue an NBA career.

Pritchard screwed up and it's gonna cost them.

Offline ziggy

  • Hero Member
  • *****
  • Posts: 1990
    • Yahoo Instant Messenger - ziggythebeagle
    • View Profile
    • Email
Re: Ouch, Portland gets a spanking regarding Miles
« Reply #2 on: January 20, 2009, 12:41:37 PM »
My take.

I don't have a big issue with the email Portland sent out.  It basically said that if a team signs Miles strictly for the purpose of screwing their cap space, then Portland will consider legal remedies.  This was in response to the league stating that Portland couldn't make a waiver claim on Miles, because it was an attempt to circumvent the salary cap rules.  Portland was attempting to put the same standard on the leagues other teams, that the league placed on them.

Was it heavy-handed by Portland?  Yes.  Was the league's actions heavy-handed?  Yes.  So Portland was taking the steps it felt it needed to take to protect its own interests.  That is their responsibility, and it would be imprudent not to do so.

As far as Miles having a claim, he doesn't any longer.  He is free to sign with any team once his 10 day deal ends, and there is no fear of repercussions for any team signing him.  As far as Portland attempting to get him off their cap, again I don't see the issue.  He hadn't played in nearly 2 years.  He rehabbed last year, and he couldn't play, had regular swelling, pain, no lift etc etc etc.  There is a policy in the CBA allowing you to remove a player from your cap space, if he is deemed by an independent 3rd party doctor as physically unfit to play.  In Miles case there were two doctors who came to the same conclusion.  His knee was in terrible shape, he had bone-on-bone in his knee, and the doctors agreed that this was the worst micro-fracture surgery/injury that they had ever seen.  The knee is a classic case for expected long-term replacement.

As far as Wojnarowski hammering Pritchard, it isn't surprising, and not entirely unjustified.  Pritchard has done a very good job, and he has taken a few GM's with his wheeling and dealing, and as a result I am sure there is a certain amount of embarrassment, which gets manifest as invective towards Pritchard.  Pritchard is a high energy guy, and he has worked very very hard to change the team.  He has been positive, and aggressive, and not been afraid to roll the dice.  He also has an owner who is willing to step up an spend $3 million on a draft pick, so it makes his wheeling and dealing even easier.

At the same time Pritchard loves to talk, and I think he has allowed the whole thing to go to his head.  There are a lot of really marginal GM's who have no guts, and who will take the path of least resistance, and those teams always suck.  They don't like to have to justify why Portland can turn it around in 2-3 years, while they have sucked for 7-8.  When Pritchard comes out running his mouth, it can easily piss people off.  It is a fine line.  He wants to create a buzz and energy about the franchise, and it has been a great thing.  The players are excited, the fans are excited, the media is excited.  At the same time, you can come off as arrogant, and put a great big bulls eye on your chest.  There is no doubt Pritchard has done that, and Wojnarowski is just speaking what a lot of the league feels about him.
A third-rate mind is only happy when it is thinking with the majority. A second-rate mind is only happy when it is thinking with the minority. A first-rate mind is only happy when it is thinking.

A quotation is a handy thing to have about, saving one the trouble of thinking for oneself.

AA Mil

Offline WayOutWest

  • Hero Member
  • *****
  • Posts: 7411
    • View Profile
Re: Ouch, Portland gets a spanking regarding Miles
« Reply #3 on: January 20, 2009, 12:47:23 PM »
...Portland can turn it around in 2-3 years, while they have sucked for 7-8.

IMO that's all that really matters in Portland in the end.

It was obvious to someone like me, who has no knowledge about any of the parties involved, that the author has an axe to grind.
"History shouldn't be a mystery"
"Our story is real history"
"Not his story"

"My people's culture was strong, it was pure"
"And if not for that white greed"
"It would've endured"

"Laker hate causes blindness"

Offline Skandery

  • Hero Member
  • *****
  • Posts: 1710
    • MSN Messenger - skandery27@hotmail.com
    • View Profile
    • Email
Re: Ouch, Portland gets a spanking regarding Miles
« Reply #4 on: January 21, 2009, 12:58:15 PM »
I'll tell you, I've NEVER been impressed with Adrian Wojnarowski.  This particular article was an egregious example in a long line of mediocrity from this guy.  I think the level of NBA coverage in fact has suffered since he's been the main Yahoo writer for the NBA.  It was great when Dan Wetzel was the main guy, then again he was so good they moved him up to writing about everything (and anything) under the sun.  Seriously I've seen Wetzel articles from NFL to MMA to Womens soccer. 

This article reeks of just what WOW said, an axe to grind.  There is absolutely no reason to write that article with the venomous tone in which he spewed towards the Portland franchise and Pritchard.  Oh and poor, widdle Darius Miles, all he wants is to play basketball . . . Come off it.  Miles has been a ball-n-chain around Portland since he arrived and continues to be such.  Were there smarter, more subtle way to handle the situation for Portland?  Maybe.  Devote an article expounding on those topics rather than coming off as jealous and juvenile regarding Portland's GM.
« Last Edit: January 21, 2009, 12:59:51 PM by Skandery »
"But guys like us, we don't pay attention to the polls. We know that polls are just a collection of statistics that reflect what people are thinking in 'reality'. And reality has a well-known liberal bias."