What the rest of the league thinks of the Trail Blazers
It’s probably the most savage attack on Kevin Pritchard and the Blazers you’re going to read anywhere. This guy is plugged in to the NBA, I’d say, because a lot of what he’s saying is the same stuff I’ve been hearing from people I know who work around the league. Here are a few samples of what you’ll read:
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.
And this:
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.
And this:
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.
And this to end it:
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.
The people I know in the league never begrudged Portland’s attempt to get Miles’ salary off their cap. Any team, believing a player was washed up, would have done the same. Where the problem began was the piling on — the extra attempts by the Blazers, both public and private, to discourage other teams from taking a chance on him. I pointed out in a newspaper column months ago that Pritchard’s comments on Miles’ physical condition were possible violations of the player’s medical rights. Pritchard’s remarks were taken by many teams as an attempt to discourage them from taking a chance on Miles.
Remember, the undertone of all the things coming out of Portland about Miles was that he was out of shape. Fat. He had poor character. He’d be getting his money, anyway, and without that incentive he would NEVER work hard enough in his rehab to get back on an NBA court. But that was not the case.
Just yesterday I got a call from a friend who works for another franchise who was still shaking his head in disbelief. “Man, that e-mail they sent out put them in line for being accused of anti-trust violations,” he said. “Not to mention how bad it made them look. You can’t keep someone from trying to get a job. What could they have been thinking about?”
Look, the Blazers’ only course here is to put this behind them and learn from it. And I pass it along so that fans of the team understand that the opinions Adrian Wojnarowski shared in that Yahoo column aren’t conjured up in some drug-induced haze. They are the prevailing opinion around the NBA, as near as I can tell.



Unless this affects the way the Blazers are able to do trades, etc, who cares what the rest of the league thinks about us? Look at Memphis and their shady dealings in the past, no one pitches a fit anymore.
Maybe KP does need to be brought back down to earth. I think he has done a great job overall and am glad to have him.
Miles if you remember goes in cycles with trying the I am changed routine. Wish him the best, hope he has changed, but am not buying this. He did what he had to do to get on a team. He was an angel here for awhile too.
For the love of God lets move on and get over this already. We sound like Bob W and his ignorant rants when we keep going over and over and over on the same ol thing.
I disagree with almost everything in that opinionated, angry story. I do, however, wish Darius the best of luck. Memphis is using Darius to improve its team, and just like the email stated, the Blazers and I have no issues with that.
Adrian does tend to go overboard.
His book about Bob Hurley is good, though:
http://bojack.org/2005/11/tough_love.html
Geez, Wojnarowski, have a cup of decaf…..
I still can’t wait for Miles knee to totally go out, because it WILL happen. It would serve him right. He is a good for nothing thug that has no business being in the NBA. When it happens it will give him more time to stop into the Dolphin II and make it rain again!
Taking diet pills to lose 30 pounds so you can then start working out so your knee doesn’t have an even greater chance of giving out is working very hard in rehab indeed.
decaf mike
Dwight I am sorry I said something strong here
about this situation.
The combo of that loss and then reading that crap
really put me over the edge.
I still am in a funk over it.
Sorry.
WHO CARES!!! CRUSH EVERYONE!!! KEEP STOCKING UP ON DRAFT PICKS AND PRITCHSLAPPING PEOPLE!! BECOME THE EVIL EMPIRE AND LET THE OTHER TEAMS KEEP CRYING!!! WAAAA WAAAAAA WAAAAAAAAA
To me, this article is a bi-product of everything KP has done in his tenure with Portland. It’s a jealous reaction to all of KP’s success. Woj is an uninformed idiot. He implies that KP is only successful because he has the luxury of Paul Allen’s wallet, which is garbage. Nash & Patterson had the same luxury and so did Whittsit. Whittsit had some success but he was ultimately the guy who tore this team down. KP and Tom Penn built it back up. I would bet that “WOJ” has never even talked to KP. I believe KP’s say in the Miles situation was limited to being a figure-head. I think the jealousy that exists from other NBA execs comes with the territory. Jerry West faced some of that when he was with the Lakers because of all of the great moves he made. These jealous fools should worry about making better decisions for their teams rather than being critical of KP for being smart. Kp is not the insecure one. It’s the dumb asses that made the following trades that are insecure: Roy for Foye.. 5th pick, Lafrentz for Telfair and Theo… Lamarcus Aldridge for Tyrus Thomas… What’s Kp supposed to do, make a bad deal just to please those idiots? It’s not KP’s fault that those guys are stupid. KP, you’re the man. Screw “Woj”.. Just some ass-clown trying make a name for himself by tearing down a good exec. As for the Miles scenario: the goal was to remove him from the team. Mission accomplished. They may have made some PR mistakes but he’s not a Blazer anymore and that’s the important thing. Cap hit or no cap hit.
Yep your right Dwight, The yankees, Lakers, Celtics, Steelers, Tiger Woodsect…they all are so worried about what others think about them
NOT…they care about winning championships. There not interested in popularity contests with their heated rivals, there interested in winning. I swear sometimes you write with such a naive scope…
For the record Darius was fat, underachieving, and a complete pain the ass. At the final year of his previous contract, he played hard and listened to his coach/players and had the brass convinced he has changed as a player. After he signed his fat contract, it was the same ol underachieving, griping, and whining Darius. He suckered the team and the fans and such betrayl will never be forgotten…
It goes without saying that coming off of such a surgery combined with his poor attitude that it was more than fair to assume his playing days were limited at best. 2 independent docs also backed the blazers saying medically the knee is fragile at best…
Now suddenly Darius wakes up…atleast enough to play scrub minutes for the worst franchise and team in the NBA. Now suddenly Darius tries to play instead of half assing it like he did with the blazers,clippers, and cavs
Call the blazer brass the villains all you want, but the real jerk has and always will be the ever underachieving Darius Miles. Long after Darius is gone, this franchise will continue to reach for bigger and better things…
Darius will sit in his chair wondering what might have been…
sad but true
Dwight, go away.