A Look At Where Six Of The Best-Known Jail Blazers Ended Up, and What They Have to Say About PDX

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Zach Randolph said:
"I'm a gangster," he allegedly told police in 2006, "not a Blazer."
Zach Randolph said:
In 2012, Randolph told the sports website Grantland that Portland police and media were unfair: "They don't take well to young, black urban kids coming out, having came from nothing. You come to Portland with braids, come with cornrows, people can't relate to that. They peg you a different way and look at you a different way. If a guy's got braids, he's a thug."
Or, maybe if you tell police you're a gangster, they believe you. :dunno:
 
"Those were the good I'm days.... Those were the good old days!"
 
Related article:

Portland Has Forgiven Tonya Harding. But What About the Jail Blazers?

4412_Lede_Blazers_Cover_2.jpg


I mostly posted it just so I could share that photo.

The authors conclusion:

"But two things can be true at once. Portland can be a racist city with a problematic attitude toward black athletes, and Ruben Patterson can be a piece of shit. One narrative doesn't blot out the other."

BNM
 
Related article:

Portland Has Forgiven Tonya Harding. But What About the Jail Blazers?

4412_Lede_Blazers_Cover_2.jpg


I mostly posted it just so I could share that photo.

The authors conclusion:

"But two things can be true at once. Portland can be a racist city with a problematic attitude toward black athletes, and Ruben Patterson can be a piece of shit. One narrative doesn't blot out the other."

BNM

Sheed could totally land a quadruple axel.

How the heck can a city of over a million individuals be racist? Undoubtedly we have our share, but I don’t think it’s a widespread issue. Primarily white and lacking in black culture and community? Sure.
 
For one thing, the scorn directed at those teams looks very different today. To be frank: Portland was a racist city with a small-town mentality that wasn't ready for that era's squad of young, big-city, black players.

Last time I checked, Portland had had an NBA team for about three decades before the Jail Blazers came to fruition. And most all of its fan favorites happened to be young, big-city black players. This apparently deep-seeded bigotry was strangely not a big issue.

This type of historical retelling is silly and reeks of 2010s social activist tripe. I think the common denominator with most (90%) of the criticism at the time was not Portland's latent racism but the embarrassing, boorish, and idiotic behavior from a simultaneously toxically overpaid group of guys that never recovered on the court from getting ass-rammed by Shaq and Kobe.
 
Interestingly, all but one of those guys seem to have landed on their feet.

Sheed, who got the most heat, was IMO not a bad guy at all, a short fuse, but strong family man and involved in community. Patterson, I could not forgive.
 
Interestingly, all but one of those guys seem to have landed on their feet.

Sheed, who got the most heat, was IMO not a bad guy at all, a short fuse, but strong family man and involved in community. Patterson, I could not forgive.

I love Sheed. He got a bad rap here imo.
 
Besides the yellow hummer what has Sheed done to be called a jail blazer?

Be black and get techs?
 
Oh that was Donaghy he threatened????

I LOVE AND HAVE AN ALL NEW RESPECT FOR RASHEED WALLACE.

I don't. Doesn't matter who it was. Just happened to be Donaghy. Sheed's temper cost the team wins. The ejections and suspensions added up. Sure would have been nice to have HCA in some of those series against the Lakers and Spurs. Would it have made a difference? We'll never know.

But, that doesn't make him a Jail Blazer, just immature and selfish.

BNM
 
Yeah, Bonzi, rather late in the game, began to realize what he threw away.

Some years ago I wrote an article, which was published, call Sweet and Sour Sheed. Still lurking in some old Word file on my hard drive.
 
Yeah, Bonzi, rather late in the game, began to realize what he threw away.

Some years ago I wrote an article, which was published, call Sweet and Sour Sheed. Still lurking in some old Word file on my hard drive.

I'd love to read that.
 
dviss, PM me an email. I am pretty sure I can still unearth it.
 
Unearthed the article. It was written shortly after Sheed won a title with the Pistons, so some of it is dated. I'll send a copy to anyone interested if you PM me your email.
 

The Oregonian was hick, making Blazer fans think the Blazers were worse than some other teams. The sophisticated Seattle media hardly noticed Sonic fights, leaving Gary Payton's reputation untarnished.

Clicking on a 2000 article in the right margin of your article, I get:

http://articles.chicagotribune.com/...isle-pacers-president-donnie-walsh-coaching/2

And Rick Pitino, followed his recent blast at Boston fans a few weeks ago with a wild threat to suspend several players who were bickering on the bench during a blowout loss to the Magic. Pitino promised "major suspensions and major trades," but wound up backing off...

And depending on the playoff outcomes, Paul Westphal could be in trouble in Seattle, where his highly emotional team is on the edge of a breakdown. After a Vernon Maxwell-Gary Payton fight last week and a loss to the Knicks, their fifth straight at home, Westphal cited the poor play of Maxwell and Vin Baker, saying: "It's not a team problem. It's a couple of players. We've got some guys standing around watching the game. [They should] buy a ticket if that's their attitude."

...Slugging Sonics: Seattle's Westphal, who seemingly has witnessed more fights now than Mills Lane, says the team's turmoil is no surprise. "From the first day we put this team together, we said, `Buckle up, we're going to be a roller coaster,'" Westphal said. "Sometimes the roller coaster goes up, sometimes it goes down." But the biggest fallout of the Sonics' dysfunction may be the inevitable trade of Payton.

... Star-crossed Nets center Jayson Williams, out for the season after breaking his foot as he was about to return from a broken leg, remains optimistic. Said Williams: "My father says everything happens for a reason. I don't know. Maybe it was God telling me I wasn't ready. Well, God could have whispered it to me." [From jlprk: Williams later murdered someone, but you don't see the Nets media holding their fans in paralysis for years like the Oregonian did.]
 

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