Let's flashback to the "JailBlazer" Era....

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Good times. They didn't win diddly poo, butthey provided humorous moments, and how not to live life as an NBA player. Since the Blazer franchise, is back in the playoffs, and a large amount of BlazerNation wants to to pretend that this era never happened, how us NTers show love to Trader Bob Whitsitt, Sheed, Mighty Mouse, JR Rider, Rube, Bonzi, Double D,and so forth....

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[font=helvetica,arial][font=helvetica,arial]Losing Their Grip[/font][/font]
[h3][font=helvetica,arial]Their once-ardent fans turned off by players' misdeeds and front-office ineptitude, the Trail Blazers are showing how quickly an NBA franchise can alienate its customers[/font][/h3]
[font=helvetica,arial]By L. Jon Wertheim[/font]

[font=helvetica,arial]Issue date: December 24-31, 2001[/font]

[font=helvetica,arial] Cheering for the Blazers today seems almost dirty, tantamount to selling one's soul for a cheap thrill. -- Martin Fisher of Bend, Ore., in a letter to The Oregonian, Nov. 11, 2001[/font]

[font=helvetica,arial]On the morning of Dec. 7 the Portland Trail Blazers gathered outside their arena to serve breakfast and distribute Christmas trees to families in need. It was clear that Rasheed Wallace would rather have been anywhere else. The team's best player and co-captain, Wallace spent most of the 90-minute session speaking on a cellular phone, the hands-free device dangling from his right ear, and, like most of his teammates, he checked his pager incessantly. When a Blazers employee suggested that Wallace wear a Santa Claus hat, he declined, saying cryptically, "I'm a supervisor." At one point a teenager beseeched the 6'11" Wallace for an autograph. "You ain't got a Sharpie?" Wallace responded. As the kid retreated to find Wallace's preferred writing implement, the player cursed at no one in particular and yawned uninhibitedly.[/font]

[font=helvetica,arial]A similar lethargy had been in evidence among the Trail Blazers the previous night. With thousands of the Rose Garden's 19,980 seats unoccupied, Wallace & Co. slogged through a 95-89 loss to the Charlotte Hornets. Save first-year coach Maurice Cheeks and a few bench players, the Blazers seemed as indifferent to the game's outcome as the fans, who reserved their loudest cheers for the T-shirt giveaways during timeouts. After the defeat David Fahey, a Portland electrician, looked at the $75 ticket stub for his last-row loge seat and shook his head. "I'm a die-hard Blazers fan," he said, "but this is embarrassing."[/font]

[font=helvetica,arial]Bad management, bad actors and bad basketball have alienated fans in many NBA cities, but Portland offers a compelling case study. The only pro sports franchise in a small market (pop. 529,121), the Blazers have been a civic treasure for three decades, the NBA's answer to the Green Bay Packers. Blazermaniacs packed 12,666-seat Memorial Coliseum for a league-record 814 straight sellouts from 1977 to '95. Even today, those arriving at Portland International Airport are greeted by a large poster of the downtown parade held after the franchise won the 1977 title, an image that's as much a part of the local tableau as Mount Hood and Multnomah Falls. Clyde Drexler, Terry Porter, Mychal Thompson and dozens of players like them became year-round residents, volunteering at the Boys Club and playing Santa at the mall (not to mention donning the red-and-white hat). "You had to have been here," says Bill Schonely, the beloved Blazers announcer for 28 years who was forced out by the team two seasons ago. "The community embraced these guys, and they hugged back."[/font]

[font=helvetica,arial]Now the relationship is strictly arm's length. Average attendance at the Rose Garden had dropped to 19,171 at week's end, a 5.5% decrease from last season. According to a source at the local NBC affiliate, which will televise 25 games this year, ratings for the Blazers are down as much as 50% from the mid-'90s. (Over the summer, after an attempt to squeeze more money out of its deal with AT&T engendered a bitter, public dispute, the team failed to renew a contract to air 25 additional games on cable.) In November, The Oregonian asked readers whether they remained Portland fans. Of the 107 respondents, 57 identified their feelings as "fed up, no longer on board, good riddance" and 27 had "big-time misgivings but still [follow] the team somewhat." Only 23 were in the "Go Blazers forever" camp. "I watch sports to have fun," wrote Gary Lewis of Tigard, Ore. "I don't watch the Blazers anymore."[/font]

[font=helvetica,arial]Only 18 months ago Portland came within minutes of winning the Western Conference championship before bowing to the Los Angeles Lakers. Although the current Trail Blazers are flush with talent and depth, through Sunday's games they were 11-11 despite their $84 million payroll, which is second only to the New York Knicks'. These Blazers don't induce mere apathy among many Portlanders; they inspire antipathy. "I don't even talk about the Blazers on my show, because I know listeners will tune out," says Colin Cowherd, a Portland sports-radio host on KFXX. "Check that. Sometimes we have a contest to see who was most disgusted and left the game earliest."[/font]

[font=helvetica,arial]The contrast between the old and the new was thrown into sharp relief last March, when the team retired Drexler's number 22 jersey. At halftime of the game against the Vancouver Grizzlies, Drexler, flanked by former teammates, spoke eloquently about his fondness for the community. That he made only perfunctory mention of team president Bob Whitsitt and owner Paul Allen was lost on no one. A standing ovation followed. Then, less than two minutes into the second half, Wallace was ejected for arguing a call. The Blazers, in first place at the time, fell to the lowly Grizzlies, then dropped 16 of their remaining 24 games, including three straight losses to the Lakers in the first round of the playoffs.[/font]

[font=helvetica,arial]In populist Portland, which feels more like a large village than a small city, the dubious character of the players is Exhibit A in the fans' estrangement. The linchpin of the team, Wallace, attended his introductory press conference in Portland wearing a T-shirt reading, F*CK WHAT YOU HEARD. In the five seasons since he has been a serial boor, twice setting the league record for technical fouls. In one game late last season he threw a towel in the face of teammate Arvydas Sabonis and had to be restrained from going after coach Mike Dunleavy. Though he vowed before this season to silence critics with his performance, all his shooting percentages are down from last year. At week's end he was leading the league in technicals with eight, on pace to accrue 30.[/font]

[font=helvetica,arial]Wallace's primary complement, 36-year-old Scottie Pippen, has shifted to cruise control now that he's earning the fat payday ($18.1 million this season) that eluded him in Chicago; through Sunday he was averaging 9.0 points, the fewest since his rookie year. Fourth-year swingman Bonzi Wells is an emerging star, but he hasn't captured the public's imagination. Not that he minds. "We're not really going to worry about what the hell [the fans] think about us," Wells says. "They really don't matter to us. They can boo us every day, but they're still going to ask for our autographs if they see us on the street. That's why they're fans and we're NBA players."[/font]

[font=helvetica,arial]More offensive still is the off-court conduct of a team nicknamed the Jail Blazers. The NBA's patron saint of transgressing, Isaiah Rider, was arrested on a misdemeanor charge of gambling in public the same week the team acquired him, in 1996. On top of a series of suspensions and bad acts during his three tumultuous seasons in Portland--including a citation for marijuana possession after he was caught smoking pot out of a soda can--he called the city a "racist area," adding, "Forty miles from here, they're probably still hanging people from trees." In 1998 forward Gary Trent, already on probation for assaulting his pregnant girlfriend, assaulted an acquaintance outside a Portland community center for at-risk youth because the victim mistakenly triggered the burglar alarm at Trent's home. (Trent served five days for probation violation and reached a settlement with the man.) Last season the team signed guard Rod Strickland less than two months after his second drunk driving conviction in four years.[/font]

[font=helvetica,arial]Whitsitt, in turn, touts former guard Greg Anthony as more emblematic of the Blazers' sterling character. In 1999, however, the team forced Anthony to apologize to beat writer Rachel Bachman for allegedly making inappropriate sexual comments. (Anthony, who was traded last summer to the Chicago Bulls for a second-round pick, says, "The charges are absurd. I was told by team management that if I apologized the whole thing would go away.") "When players are getting paid as much as these guys, the fans have a right to expect them to behave themselves," says Harry Glickman, the team's founder, president from 1987 to '94 and now president emeritus. Adds Schonely, "What management doesn't realize is that Portland fans would rather root for a so-so team of good guys than a contender filled with bad apples."[/font]

[font=helvetica,arial]That notion has been lost on Whitsitt, who has taken so many hits he calls himself "the Portland pinata." Following the 1999-2000 season he traded power forward Brian Grant, a civic-minded, throwback player, for the troubled Shawn Kemp. In July, after dealing Steve Smith, the 1998 J. Walter Kennedy Award winner for good citizenship, to the San Antonio Spurs, Whitsitt signed the Seattle SuperSonics' free-agent swingman, Ruben Patterson. Two months earlier Patterson had entered a modified plea to attempted rape for allegedly forcing his children's nanny to perform a sex act while his wife was in the hospital for surgery. Although at his sentencing Patterson asserted the act was consensual, he was forced to register in Oregon as a convicted sex offender. "When you get the facts, his situation is no different from other folks' who haven't been publicized," Whitsitt says. "He really is a good guy." (Last February, Patterson was convicted of misdemeanor assault after breaking the jaw of a man he believed had scratched his BMW.)[/font]

[font=helvetica,arial]"The Blazers seem to have forgotten that the fans are the customers," says Thompson, a Minnesota Timberwolves broadcaster who still has a home in suburban Portland. "When you're the only game in town, it's easy to get lazy." (Told of Thompson's impressions, Whitsitt says, "I wouldn't use Mychal's comments. Every year he's trying to get a job with us, O.K.?")[/font]

[font=helvetica,arial]In his eighth season in charge of the Trail Blazers after eight years as president of the Sonics, Whitsitt operates like a Rotisserie team owner, amassing the best players available with little regard for unity. "I wasn't a chemistry major," he says. The result is a tantalizing collection of talent that invariably combusts. With roles and substitution patterns ill-defined, the players' grousing over minutes has become as predictable in Portland as overcast skies. "We have no identity," says point guard Damon Stoudamire.[/font]

[font=helvetica,arial]Moreover, many will never forgive the 45-year-old Whitsitt for failing to relocate to Portland from Seattle. While Whitsitt defends that choice--"Red Auerbach ran the Celtics from Washington, D.C.," he points out--detractors find it a revealing snub. "This might sound provincial, but we expect the president of the Portland team to live in Portland," says Jon Spoelstra, who ran the Blazers' marketing office from 1979 to '89 and wrote the bestseller Marketing Outrageously with Dallas Mavericks owner Mark Cuban. "Fans are used to having an absentee owner but not absentee management."[/font]

[font=helvetica,arial]Others say that Whitsitt is following the marching orders of Allen, the Microsoft cofounder whom Forbes estimates to be worth $28 billion. Allen's wealth has its decided advantages. He built the $262 million Rose Garden in 1995 with scant reliance on public funds and thinks little of lavishing nearly $60 million over three years on a marginal player like Kemp. He's also undaunted by the prospect of diminishing revenues. When you're willing to pay $30 million in luxury tax for a mid-level playoff team, do you really lose sleep over a few thousand empty seats or the financial consequences of fan backlash? (Allen declined to speak to SI.)[/font]

[font=helvetica,arial]For a team often insensitive to its fans, Portland is hypersensitive to criticism. Top brass, including Whitsitt, has requested meetings with Oregonian editors, then arrived toting a stack of articles with the passages the team deems objectionable highlighted. Two seasons ago reporter Abby Haight wrote a story praising the Indiana Pacers' new arena, Conseco Fieldhouse. The following day the Blazers contacted sports editor Dennis Peck, expressing outrage that Haight had implied the Rose Garden wasn't as nice a venue. "As a courtesy, we listen," says Peck, who has also been chided by the team after positive stories about former Blazers, such as Grant, have appeared. "But [ultimately] we ignore it. We're here to do journalism."[/font]

[font=helvetica,arial]In the final game of the playoffs last season, Blazers fan Katherine Topaz and her boyfriend's eight-year-old son brandished a TRADE WHITSITT sign. When Topaz refused to put it away, she was ejected from the Rose Garden. After her plight made national news and she became a symbol of the disenfranchised fan, Whitsitt apologized to Topaz and the team sent her a gift basket--albeit with $5.38 in postage due.[/font]

[font=helvetica,arial]To some extent, the sea change in Portland is symptomatic of the times. During Thompson's era players were paid handsomely but bought their groceries at Fred Meyer like every Portlander and lived in subdivisions where neighbors baked them cookies after good games. Today's multimillionaires reside in gated mansions and often have a staff to do their shopping or pump their gas. (Allen makes sure the players' cars are waxed and washed during each practice.) Whitsitt raises a fair point when he says, "The 'when-it-was' era had three players [Drexler, Porter and Jerome Kersey] who were with the franchise 10 seasons or longer. That's special, but with today's free agency and salary cap and media and fan pressure, you can't find that anywhere."[/font]

[font=helvetica,arial]Whatever the case, Portland fans who are feeling alienated may never return. "You have to work twice as hard to get them back," says Spoelstra. "Look at the Hornets. They led the league in attendance and now can't draw flies." (Crowds in Charlotte have dropped from an average of 24,042 in 1996-97 to 10,303 at week's end.)[/font]

[font=helvetica,arial]Perhaps in a tacit admission that the team could use an image makeover, a new television ad for the Blazers features Wallace and Wells sneaking onto a court to play one-on-one after the janitor has gone home. The running joke in Portland, however, is that the way things are going, all the Blazers may soon be playing in an empty gym. As the team is fast learning, selling your soul is one thing. Finding willing buyers is quite another.[/font]

[font=helvetica,arial]Issue date: December 24-31, 2001[/font]

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December 16, 2002
[h1]Lousy At A Luxury Price[/h1] [h2]Scottie Pippen sees a grim season for the overpaid, disaffected Blazers[/h2]
Ian Thomsen
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[font=helvetica,arial]They have the highest payroll in NBA history, yet all too often the Trail Blazers act like a CBA team going nowhere. After a 103-88 loss to the visiting Mavericks on Dec. 4, which dropped Portland to 7-9, co-captain Rasheed Wallace and two other Blazers were whooping it up in the locker room as they watched a game on TV, "acting like we had won," says co-captain Scottie Pippen, who, in a wordless expression of contempt, strode past the players, flipped off the set and shut the TV cabinet doors.[/font]

[font=helvetica,arial]"We'll get better, but we ain't going to make it a total turnaround," the 37-year-old Pippen says. "It's impossible because of the makeup of our team. It's always new personnel; it's always, now we've got to see how this guy plays and how we're going to fit him in. You can't keep doing that."[/font]

[font=helvetica,arial]He blames the team's woes on owner Paul Allen and president Bob Whitsitt, arguing that they have assembled the deepest roster in the league with little regard for team chemistry. When the luxury tax makes its long-anticipated debut this summer, Allen will owe the league some $50 million for his $105 million payroll. That means he'll be paying $155 million for a team that's touch-and-go to make the playoffs. After losing more than $40 million last year, tops in the NBA, the Blazers could be $100 million in the red this season. But instead of getting any credit for their free spending, says Whitsitt, "we're getting beat up for it."[/font]

[font=helvetica,arial]At the same time, Whitsitt empathizes with fans turned off by the so-called Jail Blazers. Last Friday, Wallace and Damon Stoudamire entered not guilty pleas to misdemeanor possession of marijuana, even though the police report states that both players admitted they had been smoking pot in a car on Nov. 22. Charges of felony domestic assault against Ruben Patterson were dropped last week after his wife refused to cooperate with the prosecution, though she had told the 911 dispatcher that her husband "tried to f--- choke me." Whitsitt fined Patterson $100,000 and threatened additional fines of $10,000 for every day that he fails to receive "appropriate counseling" (penalties that the players' association is likely to appeal).[/font]

[font=helvetica,arial]While Whitsitt's primary goal is to bring down the payroll by letting Pippen's contract run out at a savings of $39.4 million in salary and luxury taxes next season, he says he might move Pippen for promising young players to try to take Portland in a new direction. But who would the Blazers turn to then for leadership-Rasheed Wallace?[/font]

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Post articles, pics, inside stories, opinion. Whatever you wanna do. Let's light a fatty, and reminisce.
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I was at a Warriors game years ago where Rasheed Wallace went into the stands after a fan. It wasnt to the extent of the Ron Artest melee in Detroit, but stillto this day, I wonder why this wasnt a bigger deal.
 
Originally Posted by dland24

I was at a Warriors game years ago where Rasheed Wallace went into the stands after a fan. It wasnt to the extent of the Ron Artest melee in Detroit, but still to this day, I wonder why this wasnt a bigger deal.


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Chris Mills and his goons were abput to hijack the Blazers' bus. Mighty Mouse was pleading with the dudes not to test CM.
 
You being a Laker fan, and making this thread, is why I said you're trying too hard. Dont try and throw the franchise under the bus when we completelyturned it around.


I cant find the Chappelle's Show clip where the dudes are in the car smoking weed, and go "Damon Stoudemire"... "Rasheeed... Wallace
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Originally Posted by KingJay718

Originally Posted by dland24

I was at a Warriors game years ago where Rasheed Wallace went into the stands after a fan. It wasnt to the extent of the Ron Artest melee in Detroit, but still to this day, I wonder why this wasnt a bigger deal.


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Chris Mills and his goons were abput to hijack the Blazers' bus. Mighty Mouse was pleading with the dudes not to test CM.


Yep. One of the most unknown, least publicized stories in NBA history. Mills standing in the way of the Blazers bus with a gun. Crazy, crazy story.
 
Originally Posted by I DONT PASS

Yo quick Q why doesnt Nate let his players wear headbands?
Since when? LaMarcus Aldridge wore a headband for a few games like a month ago.
 
Originally Posted by 18key

You being a Laker fan, and making this thread, is why I said you're trying too hard. Dont try and throw the franchise under the bus when we completely turned it around.


I cant find the Chappelle's Show clip where the dudes are in the car smoking weed, and go "Damon Stoudemire"... "Rasheeed... Wallace
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Not even bro. I give yall muy props. And we're developing a nice lil' rivalry as a bonus. I'm happ to see the Blazers on the upswing,
 
Originally Posted by I NaSmatic I

Originally Posted by I DONT PASS

Yo quick Q why doesnt Nate let his players wear headbands?
Since when? LaMarcus Aldridge wore a headband for a few games like a month ago.
since forever my dude. He had some kind of injury so he let him wear a headband to protect his ear or something
 
i happened to love the jailblazer era
and i still need to find a damon stoudamire jersey



go blazers
 
[h4]Somebody school me on the incident with Chris Mills.
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But check out this article about Ruben Patterson.


When the Portland Trail Blazers were Jail Blazers
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By J.E. Skeets

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With a solid .500-+%* record out West, three future stars in Brandon Roy, LaMarcus Aldridge and Greg Oden and a supportive fan base, it's easy to forget just how messed up the Portland Trail Blazers once were.

Well, The Big Lead posted an interview with The Oregonian's John Canzano yesterday that serves as an excellent reminder. Here's one example from the humorous (but sad) Jail Blazer days:

Whenever the Blazers sign a player to a 10-day contract the equipment manager provides the player with a free set of team-issue luggage. Sort of a welcome gift. Nothing incredibly fancy, but it's way better than the stuff I have. So Omar Cook is signed a couple of years ago, and the luggage is placed in front of his locker. Cook was flying in from out of town, so he's not there yet. Ruben Patterson, the team's registered sex offender, sees the luggage, knows Cook isn't around yet, and Patterson basically just decides he's going to abscond the luggage. He just rips the name tags off and takes it. Nobody says a word, either. It's not anything violent, but it demonstrates the lack of decency and respect that permeated.

That's low, Ruben. Real low. I'd be devastated if you stole my luggage. (Note: No I wouldn't. Please steal my luggage, Ruben.)

Anyway, if you're in the Jail Blazers mood, you'll be glad to know there's lots more stories where that came from, including a classic about the time Rasheed Wallace threatened to punch Canzano in the face. Seriously.

Can you believe there used to be a team that was even more dysfunctional than Isiah's New York Knicks?
 
Didn't Gilbert Arenas also have a Chris Mills interaction that nearly ended with him getting murked?
 
Originally Posted by ai3plus1penny

[h4]Somebody school me on the incident with Chris Mills.[/h4]


This is to the best of my memory. I was there, but only like 13 at the time. The Warriors and Blazers were involved in a hard fought battle which included afew scuffles, a few technicals, and constant booing from the crowd. Rasheed Wallace was involved in a few of the scuffles, a couple with Mills. When the gameended, people started throwing bottles and trash at Wallace when he was attempting to leave the court. Rasheed ran into the stands and tried to fight somefans. (the part of which I was referring to earlier, when I said I was shocked that this didnt get nationwide news coverage)

After the game, as the story goes, when the Blazers bus was attempting to leave the arena, Chris Mills stood in front of the bus blocking it. While the bus wasstuck because of him standing in front of it, he was holding a gun and challenging Blazers players to get off the bus. This story was rarely ever talked aboutas well.
 
mills got into a heated argument with bonzi wells during the gm (it was building up the whole gm)
fans threw stuff and rasheed went into the crowd
mills brought the burner out along with his boys after the gm and stood in front of the blazers bus
damon, a fellow az wildcat with mills, told them that mills stays strapped and pleaded to his teammates to stay on the bus
security was called to escort mills out of arena so the bus could leave

those blazer teams were so talented
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who is chris mills? never seen a pic of this dude? what happened between him and glibert? arenas make a bad joke? a funny face?
 
I thought Mills blocked the bus from exiting with his SUV and and came out with a trench coat, and like you say Damon told all the dudes he went to collegewith Mills, pipe down, but I never heard anything about actually brandishing the weapon
 
Warriors-Blazers melee sorted out
League disciplines Wells, Wallace

Brad Weinstein, Chronicle Staff Writer

Sunday, December 22, 2002

While the Warriors await word from the NBA about fines and suspensions, the league moved swiftly Saturday to discipline the Portland Trail Blazers for theirpart in Friday's melee at the Arena in Oakland.

About 90 minutes before the Trail Blazers played the Seattle SuperSonics on Saturday night in Portland, the league announced that Bonzi Wells had beensuspended two games without pay -- a reported $140,000 -- for throwing a punch and fighting with the Warriors' Chris Mills.

Also, Rasheed Wallace, who won the game with a buzzer-beating jump shot, was fined $15,000 for attempting to go into the stands after the on-courtaltercations.

A league spokesman said the NBA is continuing its investigation and that Senior Vice President Stu Jackson is expected to make another announcement today,presumably before the Warriors' 6 p.m. game in Sacramento. NBA security officials interviewed several Warriors on Saturday, including Troy Murphy, GilbertArenas, Jason Richardson and Mills.

The Wells-Mills tangle sparked a series of skirmishes that occurred after Portland's 113-111 victory, the first of four regular-season meetings between theteams (the next matchup is Feb. 19 in Portland).

During the uproar, Murphy nearly came to blows with Wallace, Richardson appeared to throw a punch at Wells and one Warrior, believed to be Arenas, picked up acourtside chair while on the outskirts of the scuffling.

Murphy denied that he threw any punches, saying of the chaotic scene: "It's dangerous. You don't know if someone is coming to make peace with youor trying to punch you. There are guys coming from every angle."

Warriors coach Eric Musselman was upset about an Associated Press report that said he shoved Wells.

"I was going in as a peacemaker," Musselman said.

Meanwhile, Mills would neither confirm nor deny a report in the Saturday edition of the Portland Oregonian that he parked his car in front of the visitingteam's bus, got out with friends and challenged the Trail Blazers, who needed a police escort to leave the Arena. A source told The Chronicle after thegame that Mills tried to get into the Trail Blazers' locker room but was restrained.

"I've got no comment on that whole incident," Mills said after Saturday's mid-morning practice. "It was nothing. Small thing."

Moments later, Mills added: "I'm not that dumb. The bus would run me over, I'm sure."

Portland coach Maurice Cheeks, speaking to reporters before Saturday's game,

said: "I've never seen anything like that. That's for sure. . . . You know, that can be kind of scary, be kind of frightening, because youdon't know what's going through a guy's mind like that. For all of us on the bus, it was scary.

"It was like a movie."

Mills and Murphy believe the incident can further unite the Warriors, even if they were somewhat divided during the confrontation.

Co-captain Antawn Jamison said he, along with Erick Dampier and Danny Fortson, left for the locker room immediately after Wallace's basket and missedeverything. Jamison thought the rest of his teammates were slow to join him because they were waiting for the officials' instant-replay review of thelast-second shot.

Jamison, who called the incident a "disgrace to the NBA," bristled at the notion that he was not there for his teammates.

"By the time I was coming back" to the court from the locker room, Jamison said, "it was already over with. My teammates know that in any kindof situation, I have their backs and they have my back. If someone would think that (I don't), they don't know who I am."

Did it bother Mills that a few teammates were not present?

"We all should be in this together, no matter what," Mills said. "If there was somebody in the locker room when stuff was going down, theywouldn't be at the top of my list of people I want with me in a foxhole. I'm not exactly sure who was around or what, but I would hope that nobody wasgoing to the locker room when the altercation happened."

The Trail Blazers were heading toward their locker room after the first wave of the fracas when fans showered them with debris. Security guards handcuffed aman who appeared to swing at Wallace, who tried to retaliate with the aid of teammates.

"I think the security people did a pretty good job," Warriors Chief Operating Officer Robert Rowell said. "If anything, that thing really couldhave gotten out of hand and it didn't. Obviously, we're going to pay a lot of attention moving forward to continued crowd control."
 
Originally Posted by KingJay718

Originally Posted by dland24

I was at a Warriors game years ago where Rasheed Wallace went into the stands after a fan. It wasnt to the extent of the Ron Artest melee in Detroit, but still to this day, I wonder why this wasnt a bigger deal.


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Chris Mills and his goons were abput to hijack the Blazers' bus. Mighty Mouse was pleading with the dudes not to test CM.


True story, C Mills had the thang on him.

The thing is, leaving The Coliseum there's only TWO possible locations you're going too. You're either going to Oakland Airport which is 2 milesaway, or you're going to the Marriot on Hegeburger, about 1.5 miles away.

If I was on that bus I'd be a lil shook too
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I still remember *%!$ got heated at that game. My dude Gilbert was on the bench and the second temps started flaring son grabbed a chair and headed towards thefloor bout to go bad.

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Portland was so close till they gave up. Men only if i watched the nba when i was really young i would remember this. Men I wish i could back intime.
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Couple reason why i hated the lakers was shaq and kobe man i hated that team witha passion
 
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