Betta Bulleavit wrote:MAQ wrote:sonny wrote:That's exactly what I thought to myself when I saw it live, and exactly what I thought when I watched the youtube clip here a year later. Bill said nothing wrong in this statement.
Before that night, Bill Simmons stated that Doc Rivers "quit" on the Celtics; sensationalizing what had actually happened. It was the Celtics FO that had effectively quit on that unit as it was constructed (with good reason) and wanted to start the rebuild. Doc didn't want to be a part of that and the two parties mutually went their separate ways. That's much different that the message that Simmons was trying to push. He started a smear campaign on Doc based on a situation that was set in motion by the organization.
From Doc:
http://greenstreet.weei.com/sports/bost ... ton-media/“We had a lot of success there, and I had a great run, an absolutely fantastic run in Boston, but sometimes you just feel like your gig is up. And I really felt that. My gig was not up with the city or with the fans. I just thought it was time to make a change team-wise. My feelings have never changed with the fans there.”
“That was my intention, and I don’t know what changed. It wasn’t anything that Danny or Wyc or ownership did or anything the players did. It clearly wasn’t the city. I just felt like I needed to change my voice.”
“I just thought that, after nine years, I didn’t know if my job had run its course in Boston. That’s where the change came. Honestly, I thought I would be a coach there forever, but it got to a point with me that I just felt strong about it. It was nothing that anyone did. It was nothing that Danny did. I thought what may have irritated Danny at some point was that I just couldn’t give him an answer.”
“I didn’t know the answer, and I told him that. I said I didn’t know if I was coming back. This is what started everything. I said, ‘What can I do to help you?’ And he said, ‘Well, you can make a decision or there are other teams that we can possibly make a deal with, and then we can get something for you, because just leaving doesn’t help us.’”
“But I can tell you it had nothing to do with their age. I told Danny, ‘Man, I just don’t know if my heart’s in the rebuilding, but I don’t know if it’s not.’”
“I just needed time to just get through losing this year, and I just needed more time. We hadn’t been knocked out this early in a while, and it just kind of rocked me a little bit. I just wanted time, so it’s funny — I never thought about Paul, Ray, Kevin, where they were at in their careers or anything.”
I just wanted to make sure I was ready and into doing the job. Again, Danny and I talked about it, and I can’t do something if my heart’s not right. I can’t do it. And I wasn’t sure yet.
From Boston's management:
http://greenstreet.weei.com/sports/bost ... vers-saga/Ainge scripted a clear timeline of what led to The Indecision this past week, when discussion with the Clippers about compensation for allowing Rivers to walk from the three years and $21 million left on his contract heated and cooled several times. Ultimately, Ainge landed an unprotected 2015 first-round pick for Rivers.
May 3: The Celtics lost to the Knicks, and to Ainge’s surprise Rivers expressed concern about returning.
May 8: Ainge approached a still hesitant Rivers, who asked what his options might be moving forward.
May 9: The Celtics sent Rivers a letter alerting the coach they expected him to fulfill his contract.
“In subsequent weeks”: A still uncertain Rivers expressed to Ainge his interest in the Clippers’ opening.
Doc’s going to a great situation — a place he chose to go and a place he wants to be. It’s not a place that I chose for him to go or a place that I want him to be.
“I’ve been around this game long enough to know that we’re all replaceable,” added Ainge. “I think Doc’s grateful for his nine years here, and he’s looking for a new chapter. He felt like it was time for a change. I think he felt like, in his opinion, we all needed a change. That was his rationalization or justification of him going to the Clippers.”
“Doc felt that a change would be good for our current players,” said Ainge, “that maybe a new voice would be better.”
“When we signed Doc to the highest-paid coaching contract in the NBA a couple years ago, we knew the ages of our players, and we knew that we would be at a phase — maybe it would’ve been last year, maybe this year, maybe next year — that a time for rebuild would be in store, and we talked about that,” said Ainge. “At that time, before it hit him, he was all on board, and I thought like I did do a very good sales job on Doc at that time. Maybe he did a sales job on me. We knew that this time was coming. Everybody knows.”