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Burning Article on Steve Patterson by John Cazano

badboy783

Veteran
Joined
Dec 9, 2013
Messages
182
He really burns him down in this one. I don't know a whole lot about Steve Patterson but we've mostly heard good things about him around here. Is this guy just a scorned writer or is there more stuff about Steve like this?

"If you're like me, you expected some decent entertainment might come from Texas after the Longhorns put Steve Patterson in charge of the ranch.

 

After all, this is the former Trail Blazers president who once announced that he couldn't trade Damon Stoudamire for a folding chair. Also, the guy who grandstanded to the public and the Blazers coaches by slapping Darius Miles with a $150,000 fine while simultaneously negotiating a back-room deal to refund Miles every penny -- "with interest."

 

That Miles fiasco caused Patterson to rush back early from a trip to Texas, coincidentally, to perform a crisis-management news conference in which the dolt read from a teleprompter at halftime of a Blazers game, remembering to

"(smile)" and "(smile bigger)" where it directed him to do so.

 

Patterson spit through his teeth when he got especially angry. At the time, my daughter was in kindergarten and I recall taking a call from Patterson while I stood in a Chuck E. Cheese restaurant. The Blazers executive's voice fumed through my cell telephone, spewing profanity, while some poor teenager wearing the restaurant mascot uniform walked past, headed to the breakroom.

 

They were both bad acts.

 

Patterson ran the Blazers organization aground, ending a two-decade playoff streak. The Blazers had the worst record in the NBA and were last in revenues. The Rose Garden was thrown into bankruptcy under Patterson's watch. He fired 108 people and because of that wasn't ever really trusted. Media didn't like the guy, and he didn't like media. But as a columnist I

secretly loved Patterson because he was amazing theater.

 

He called me to lunch one day after publicly accusing me of "lying" about the Miles fine-refund negotiations he'd privately conducted with the small forward. I'd presented him with a copy of the document he'd drafted and sent to Miles' agent for review. He admitted it was a mistake. Patterson shrugged, but apologized for saying that I'd lied.

 

I believed he was sorry. We shook hands and ate soup. A few hours later, of

course, Patterson again claimed in an interview with another media outlet that I'd made up the whole thing.

 

The beauty of this Patterson-to-Texas thing isn't that we know for certain that UT won't fully realize its potential under his leadership. He's older, and presumably wiser. It might very well prove that he's learned something between his stint working for Paul Allen and the spot he finds himself in now. Arizona State went OK for him, I guess. It might also prove that Texas' athletic department -- with all those boosters and all that tradition -- is such a big machine that a

owl sitting on a fence post could run it.

 

The true beauty is that we get to enjoy what promises to be an entertaining show with no pain inflicted on the sports teams you care about.

 

Patterson once threatened to fire a line of staffers at the practice facility because a trade proposal appeared in The Oregonian. He lined up the secretaries,demanding to know who leaked the deal. He roared, saying he'd fire them all to ensure he got the guilty party. One of the women cried.

 

What Patterson never knew, and to this day probably doesn't care to know, is that the source of the leak was -- himself. He'd accidentally left the trade proposal in plain view on a fax machine tray at the practice facility.

 

That was Patterson.

 

Still, he implemented a long line of security measures. He raised fears across the organization that emails would be searched, and computers scoured, searching for anyone who might leak company secrets. His staff didn't much like that, and naturally, became eager to sink the guy.

 

Patterson grew paranoid. The organization felt like it was holding its breath. In the end, when Patterson was eventually let go by Allen, it felt like the first day of summer vacation at One Center Court.

 

We all know Patterson's act. This is a guy who sat mostly silent while the Blazers were faced in 2007 with the Kevin Durant vs. Greg Oden draft dilemma, and then, after Oden flamed out, offered to anyone who would listen that he thought all along Portland should have drafted Durant.

 

Yeah, us too, bub.

 

I shook my head when Texas coach Mack Brown was rumored to be stepping down, then not stepping down, then, of course, stepping down again. And I smiled when Brown alluded to a tell-all book he'd write or an interview he'd grant

someday. Patterson is sure to have earned a chapter, even in his short tenure.

 

We had to laugh, too, this week when we heard Patterson say that he's in charge of the hiring process, even as an eight-member hiring committee has been formed. I nearly fell over when I heard him say, "At the end of the day, there's been a

lot of malarkey in the press over the last couple of weeks."

 

At the end of the day... is only the beginning, Texas."

www.oregonlive.com/sports/oregonian/john_canzano/index.ssf/2013/12/canzano_steve_patterson_and_te.html

 
Canzano is the Kirk Bohls of Portland.

As long as you keep that in mind when reading his schtick, you'll be just fine.

 
I don't know much about the writer or Steve Patterson but it did give me pause because we've heard nothing but great things about Steve so far.

 
joeywa, your signature quote "This is the place where brilliant minds assemble to willfully pool

ignorance with questionable logic in order to reach absurd conclusions" also describes some other, more important entities - the CFR, RAND, and US Congress for example.

 
...he lost me at "in charge of the ranch". i did not read another word!...

 
Badboy, he and Patterson didn't get along. He has an agenda.

Read this:

Two sides to every Patterson

Published: Tuesday, March 06, 2007, 8:50 AM Updated: Tuesday, March 06, 2007, 9:53 AM

Casey Holdahl By Casey Holdahl

By now, just about everyone who would care to do so has an opinion on Steve Patterson's now completed reign as president/general manger. Two guys who probably know as much about the situation as anyone (outside of the Trail Blazers organization that is) are John Canzano of The Oregonian and Kerry Eggers of the Portland Tribune. Both have penned columns on the subject, so I thought I'd put together a compairson of the two articles, without comment, for your enjoyment.

First though, if you haven't read them yet, here's John Canzano's column printed Friday, March 2 entitled "Punching out was a long time coming" and here's Kerry Egger's column that ran today entitled "Patterson had his hits and misses".

On Steve Patterson's more controversial actions:

Canzano: "Patterson fired so many people it felt like he was flipping pages in a magazine. He negotiated a kickback of Darius Miles' $150,000 fine, with interest, behind the backs of his coaching staff, then fumbled his way through the fallout. And he was at the center of the Rose Garden Arena bankruptcy fiasco, which cost Allen $100 million more than what it would have cost him to buy the building outright in the first place."

Eggers: "Patterson was hatchet man for many dozens of layoffs during the time he was in power, employees with a combined annual salary that might equal about what Allen spends on his yacht crew. We'll never know whose idea that was, nor the ill-conceived notion to flutter the Rose Garden into bankruptcy. I'll guarantee you, though, that Patterson was not acting unilaterally.

You think he wouldn't rather have had 100-some more employees to try to keep the waning fan base from deserting?"

On the situation Steve Patterson inherited from Bob Whittsitt:

 

Canzano: "Let's see. Patterson's franchise finished with the worst record in the NBA a year ago, and the team was last in revenues. The value of the franchise, routinely among the top half of the league while Bob Whitsitt ran things, recently was placed last in the league by Forbes Magazine.

Eggers: "When he arrived in 2003, Patterson inherited a public-relations disaster from the much-despised Bob Whitsitt. Patterson and General Manager John Nash had little choice but to light a torch to a "Jail Blazer" roster that included Rasheed Wallace, Bonzi Wells, Jeff McInnis and Ruben Patterson.

By the time the clear-cutting was done, the Blazers had gone from competitive to the worst team in the NBA."

[snip]

"When Patterson took over, the Blazers were incurring a record $120 million annual loss. That figure was down to $45 million to $50 million last year - still deplorable, but moving in the right direction. Patterson was instrumental, too, in facilitating the letter of intent for Allen to buy back the Rose Garden for what will be less than full value from Portland Arena Management."

On the Darius Miles fine reimbursement:

 

Canzano: "Over lunch once, Patterson told me that giving Miles his money back was a mistake. He seemed to get it. And I asked him why, instead of apologizing to fans who surely would have forgiven him, he instead participated in that orchestrated halftime news conference -- the one in which Patterson scripted his speech with the words "smile" and "smile bigger" after his speech punch lines.

He just shrugged."

Eggers: When the document negotiating a kickback of Miles' $150,000 fine for insubordination surfaced in the media, it made Patterson look bad. And he compounded the problem with a woefully scripted halftime news conference. But the document was only a draft of a proposal from Miles' agent, Jeff Wechsler, that hadn't been signed.

In place of the fine, Patterson's idea was for Miles to help repair his image by buying $30,000 worth of tickets for five years to donate to children's charities. Miles wasn't going to, and didn't, get off the hook for the $150,000.

The likes of Patterson's proposal, incidentally, is not uncommon in the NBA - the Blazers had done the same thing with Damon Stoudamire's $250,000 fine after his third marijuana arrest.

On player personnel decisions:

 

Canzano: "Patterson can point to accomplishments, primarily players who perform better on the court and, for the most part, behave off it. But in the end, what we have here is a man who was unable to get out of his own way.

Insiders will tell you that it was Kevin Pritchard, then the player personnel director, and not Patterson who had primarily orchestrated the ambitious draft-day bonanza last June that resulted in an NBA-record six trades."

Eggers: "... the character issue had been addressed, and after what appears to be a remarkable 2006 draft - the combined effort of all those in the Portland front office, not just player personnel director Kevin Pritchard - the team appears headed in the right direction.

Darius Miles' bloated contract was Allen's idea, not Patterson's.

On drafting Martell Webster, rather than Chris Paul:

 

Canzano: "As Patterson spoke on Thursday, only one player peeked out from the weight room across the way -- Martell Webster. And Webster had every right to be interested, because there's a good chance it would have been Chris Paul peeking out of that room if Patterson hadn't overruled Pritchard two drafts ago."

Eggers: "Patterson never nixed the idea of drafting Chris Paul. It was a group decision to trade the third selection in the 2005 draft to Utah for the sixth pick (Martell Webster) and an additional first-round pick that wound up landing the Blazers' Jarrett Jack."

On Patterson's relationship with the media:

 

Canzano: "And those in the know say Patterson gagged Pritchard from talking to the media at various junctures, to ensure the flow of credit moved toward the top."

Eggers: "Initially, at least, Patterson brought about a detente with media turned off and tuned out by Whitsitt. Patterson's relationship with the media deteriorated, though, capped by the short-lived decision late last season to have public-relations employees tape all interviews for use on the team's Web site.

The Blazers' ex-president recently placed a media gag order on Pritchard, among other personnel, saying comments were to come from him. That made it appear Patterson was jealous of the credit Pritchard was getting for the 2006 draft."

In conclusion:

 

Canzano: "Everyone kept trying to sift through Thursday's wreckage and make sense of it. Sad day for the franchise? Happy day? I don't think we'd be wondering about it had the guy in charge not alienated everyone with his personality.

What Patterson never really wrapped his head around, was that Blazers fans wanted to believe all along. That all they needed to reconnect wasn't a phony pledge, politics, or promises. What they needed to believe again, was hope.

He's finally given it to them. "

Eggers: "The Blazer franchise is in better shape than it was when Patterson hit the scene in 2003. That doesn't make him a genius or a saint. But let's not send him out of here wearing a dunce cap, with a "kick me" sign taped to his derriere."

And also this from ESPN:

A Good Day for John Canzano

March, 2, 2007

3/02/07 2:41 PM ET

 

 

 

The Oregonian columnist called for Steve Patterson's job ages ago, and now Patterson is finally gone. I have to suspect that Canzano has been writing this column in his head for months.

 

 

 

One fascinating passage:

 

As Patterson spoke on Thursday, only one player peeked out from the weight room across the way -- Martell Webster. And Webster had every right to be interested, because there's a good chance it would have been Chris Paul peeking out of that room if Patterson hadn't overruled Pritchard two drafts ago.

 

Wow. I did not know that. He also says that Patterson wanted to cut Ime Udoka at the start of this season.

 

 

 

The article blames Patterson for a lot of bad stuff--probably all deserved as far as I know. (It also ignores the reality that the Blazers are much better situated today than when Patterson took over. It's just true!) Then Canzano makes a great point about how if Patterson had a little charisma he could have no doubt skated through his various mistakes. I'm certain Canzano is right about that. My shard of first-hand evidence that Steve Patterson's not charismatic: I met him for the first time in the Las Vegas airport last Monday, and was alarmed at how disappointingly cold and wooden the exchange was. Canzano's column closes like this:

 

Everyone kept trying to sift through Thursday's wreckage and make sense of it. Sad day for the franchise? Happy day? I don't think we'd be wondering about it had the guy in charge not alienated everyone with his personality.

 

 

 

What Patterson never really wrapped his head around, was that Blazers fans wanted to believe all along. That all they needed to reconnect wasn't a phony pledge, politics, or promises. What they needed to believe again, was hope.

 

 

 

He's finally given it to them.

And this from Twitter when Patterson took over the ASU program:

John Canzano @JohnCanzanoBFT

Follow

 

Steve Patterson, former Blazers exec, now running ASU athletic dept. yikes. Discuss.

10:20 AM - 28 Mar 2012

Yet another Q&A here, where he continues to berate Patterson's performance in Portland.

Having lived up here for the better part of 12 years, I've seen this hack first hand. With regards to Patterson, he actually was instrumental in cleaning up the "Jail Blazer" image and bringing in solid players of good character. He was not, (as hinted at above,) responsible for Oden. He had virtually nothing to do with that draft IIRC.

Even after Patterson left the Blazers, and had been gone for some time, (left the Blazers in 2007,) Canzano is still writing less than flattering pieces about Patterson.

See this from March of this year; yet another jab at Patterson.

So in conclusion, I think you could say that Mr. Canzano has clearly had an ax to grind with Patterson. I think he's a hack with a forum.

 
badboy783, thanks for the article. Entertaining and informative (if accurate)
I would tell you that it's pretty far from accurate Austinite.

 
Portland was a mess when he got there. I didn't know they were losing $120m a year before he arrived. Ouch!

 
Portland was a mess when he got there. I didn't know they were losing $120m a year before he arrived. Ouch!
Yeah, and I think that was before legal fees for the criminal players. Ha!

 
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