alex42083
Thanks Brandon
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The ship ran aground and he was the captain. As a result, he will take the blame.
"I mean, we were playing some bad basketball. Something was going to happen, you just knew it," McMillan said Tuesday in his first interview since his firing. "To sit here and think that I wasn't going to be looked at ... I wasn't sitting here thinking I was untouchable. They made a tough decision, but they made it, and I respect that."
Publicly, he will say the NBA lockout was the biggest factor in the demise of his team. If ever there were a time he needed the normal September getting-acquainted period and an October training camp, it was this season, when the Blazers were introducing a new point guard and a reshaped roster that featured five new players. Instead, there was a hastily assembled training camp in December, which on Day 1 began in ominous fashion with a trifecta of bad news: the retirement of Brandon Roy, another medical setback for Greg Oden and a heart ailment for LaMarcus Aldridge.
McMillan was already coming into the season with heightened anxiety. Entering his seventh season in Portland, and coming off three consecutive one-and-done playoff appearances, he said he felt he needed to get out of the first round to keep his job.
"If there was a year I needed the preseason, it was this year," McMillan said. "But I get it. Regardless of what you have done in the past, in pro sports you've got to win."
http://www.oregonlive.com/blazers/i...es.html?utm_source=dlvr.it&utm_medium=twitter
