wizenheimer
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2) In almost any form of business if an employee divulges sensitive company material they are usually fired. You can spin it any way you want but Hughes shouldn't have been yapping about it before free agency started.
that's undoubtedly true generically, but in this case, I think there's some important context to consider (I started googling about that context to be sure)
to start with, Hughes made those comments at least 3 days after Olshey traded Batum to Charlotte. I think that trade was an obvious sign that Aldridge would be leaving and the team was headed for a rebuild. So basically, Hughes let out a secret that was no longer a secret. Now, it did go against the grain of Olshey's good-ship-lollypop PR malarkey that he was trying to sell fans. At that point, any fan that believed what was being peddled would believe anything
so yeah, sure....Hughes didn't toe the company line but essentially, the company line was bordering on a pack of lies
something else my googling jogged my memory about was the long-term "plan" Olshey had:
Aldridge was quoted, saying:
https://www.blazersedge.com/2015/7/...agent-news-neil-olshey-portland-trail-blazers"I'm happy to stay, happy to be here, happy with the direction the team has gone the last year or two... This has no impact on my interest in staying in Portland. I just want to get a five-year deal. I feel like that's the best decision on my part."
Aldridge's statements went well beyond the financial:
"I want to be the best Blazer — ever. If I stay the rest of my career, I should be able to catch Clyde by then. I should be able to leave a mark on a big-time franchise that is going to be seen forever. And I will be able to say I played here my whole career. This city has embraced me and grown with me. I have so much history, it just makes sense to stay."
"This was not the situation," the source tells Blazer's Edge. "Olshey wanted Aldridge to sign an extension badly. Aldridge was reluctant. He was not sure he wanted to play in Portland and he told Olshey he wouldn't extend. Olshey knew it would look bad and wouldn't help Aldridge, the team, or his own image. He asked Aldridge to call Freeman and tell him those things to keep the pressure off. This was premeditated, set up by Neil."
sure looks like Olshey was running a long con on Blazer fans. Yeah, I guess you could argue that he was doing what all GM's do to try and maintain the trade value of assets or discourage competition for free agents. But Portland didn't trade Aldridge at the deadline so that consideration was gone.I wasn't upset that Hughes was fired. I do think if you weigh actions: Hughes telling the fairly obvious truth that cut against PR, or Olshey running a PR con on Blazer fans, Hughes didn't commit much of a sin
