I remember thinking as I walked to the Memphis media room that the Blazers have a solid foundation in Roy and McMillan because the star and coach frequently communicate. Sometimes it's McMillan seeking out Roy, like that night. And sometimes it's Roy seeking out McMillan.
As it turns out, I was right about McMillan having something he needed to get off his chest with Roy in Memphis. As he has done so often this season, McMillan asked Roy for the pulse of the team. Why did he think the team came out so flat against Memphis? Was he riding them too hard? Were they too complacent about clinching the day before? Was there anything he could do?
Roy said he told the coach he felt the players were fine, they were just suffering from an indirect hangover from clinching.
"It's like the whole summer, preseason and season you shoot for clinching the playoffs,'' Roy said. "And now that we did it, it's like we took a deep breath and said 'All right.' It's like we had to find ourselves again.''
Roy told McMillan that he felt the Grizzlies game - during which the Blazers trailed by 18 in the first half - was a sufficient wake up call.
"I told him that I thought the second half of the game we realized that it's not about playoffs, it's about pride,'' Roy said. "Memphis kind of brought that back out of us, that attitude. They were coming at us. And we felt like, all right, we can't just cruise.''