Portland Trail Blazers fire GM Kevin Pritchard less than hour before NBA draft
By Anne M. Peterson, APThursday, June 24, 2010
Blazers fire GM Pritchard as draft starts
PORTLAND, Ore. — The Portland Trail Blazers fired general manager Kevin Pritchard after six seasons with the team, ending months of speculation that he had fallen out of favor with billionaire owner Paul Allen.
The Oregonian newspaper reported about an hour before the Thursday’s NBA draft started that Pritchard had been dismissed. The team confirmed the firing at the conclusion of the night.
“This process was more public and took longer than any of us would have liked, but that was indicative of how critical a decision this was for the franchise,” Allen said in a statement. “We want to thank and acknowledge Kevin for his solid work in getting us to where we are today. Parting ways with a popular general manager is not something we take lightly. In the end, we decided to make a change.”
Pritchard ducked out of the Blazers’ practice facility before the conclusion of the draft. He did not return phone messages.
Blazers president Larry Miller said Pritchard met with Allen, the co-founder of Microsoft and owner of the NFL’s Seattle Seahawks, earlier in the day. He would not specify why Pritchard was let go.
“I’m not going to get into any details as to what transpired or why,” Miller said.
Pritchard is under contract through next season and the Blazers will honor his contract. A search firm had earlier been hired to vet candidates for the job.
A rumored possible replacement, Oklahoma City Thunder general manager Sam Presti, recently denied that he had been contacted about the job. Miller said Denver Nuggets executive Mark Warkentien, also said to be interested, was not being considered.
Pritchard joined the Blazers as director of player personnel in 2004 and briefly served as interim head coach after the Blazers fired coach Maurice Cheeks in 2005.
He was promoted as general manager in 2007 and was charged with rescuing the Blazers from their “Jail Blazers” reputation as a team of malcontents who couldn’t manage to stay out of trouble.
Pritchard built a promising young team around guard Brandon Roy, who was chosen the league’s rookie of the year before becoming a three-time All-Star. Pritchard was also a staunch supporter of 7-foot center Greg Oden, the top pick in the 2007 draft who has been plagued by injuries.
Pritchard appeared to have the support of Portland’s fan base. Several online petitions backing him surfaced when the rumors about his uncertain future began to swirl in late March, after the Blazers abruptly fired Tom Penn, Portland’s vice president of basketball operations.
Penn was widely considered a salary-cap specialist and key to many of Pritchard’s past player moves.
The Blazers said only that Penn was dismissed for “philosophical differences.” But Warren LeGarie, who represents Pritchard and Penn, made comments to several reporters suggesting Penn’s firing was a message to Pritchard.
At the time Allen issued a statement in support of Pritchard but added his performance would be evaluated at the end of the season. When word got out that the Blazers had hired a search firm, the firing seemed only a matter of when, not if.
Last week Pritchard spoke uncomfortably with reporters, suggesting he would fight for the job by repeating “may the best man win.”
But ultimate timing of Pritchard’s dismissal was awkward at best.
“I admire the professionalism he exhibited tonight. He deserves a lot of kudos. He ran the draft,” Timberwolves president David Kahn said. “I just think that he deserves to be commended for acting that way. You would have never known from dealing with him on the phone tonight that this is a guy who that happened to. And he must be a pretty special guy to be able to withstand that. I admire him greatly.”
Pritchard asked to lead the team through the draft.
“I would hope that the fans would trust that we are going to do everything we can to make this organization better, because that’s what we’re going to do,” Miller said.
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