Boogie! wrote:Derozan's take on the whole situation is coming across as super petty.... Honestly i don't think he's ever been the brightest guy and I think he just has a really difficult time putting everything into perspective...
Most professionals would be able to accept the responsibility for their failures... Both him and Casey on their way out both acted in such a way that imo tarnishes their reputation of being good professionals.
What did they honestly expect? That they could keep getting swept year after year with no consequences, with everyone sucking their dick and blaming everyone else? It's honestly ridiculous but the raptors take blame in creation this monster. From as soon as he was drafted they be been sucking him off as the future of the franchise with no consequences with no accountability t he y rotated every role player around him to try to get better and for him to a t like he should be the only guy on the tram to Not get the blame is arrogant.
A quote from the great Jimmy McGinty springs to mind;
"Winners always want the ball... when the game is on the line"
While this of applicable literally here is also a figurative relevance as well.
Winners are willing to shoulder the result of what happens because the want the ball in their hands, the buck ultimately stops with them be it a win or a loss.
While I have been a fierce defender of DeRozan during his tenure in Toronto, the interview made it a very clear he has no interest in the accountability aspect of being "a star" and that's why we were never going to take that next step as long as he was the best player on the roster.
If he can't look back at his performance in the playoffs over the past five seasons and feel some degree of responsibility for the team having such a putrid playoff record compared to their regular season record, how could he ever be expected to lead a team? Accountability starts from the top.
Boogie! wrote:Even the way he phrases the comment "so it's just me and Casey" just reeks of someone that cannot comprehend the situation properly. What would make him feel better if Masai traded every single player away? Would that make more sense to him?
You get swept in back to back seasons by the same team largely as a result of the same lethargic performance, I would say that the head coach and the "star" player is the first place you look.
Most players should understand that.
Maybe he can take some solace in the fact that Alfonzo McKinnie was a waived. Now he can sleep at night knowing it's just: me and Casey and McKinnie