1. Welcome! Please take a few seconds to create your free account to post threads, make some friends, remove a few ads while surfing and much more. ClutchFans has been bringing fans together to talk Houston Sports since 1996. Join us!

Shinn had doorbell turned off trying to avoid Silas

Discussion in 'NBA Dish' started by dragon167, May 10, 2003.

  1. dragon167

    dragon167 Member

    Joined:
    Nov 15, 2002
    Messages:
    747
    Likes Received:
    1
    Funny stuff. :confused:


    http://espn.go.com/nba/news/2003/0509/1551733.html

    NEW ORLEANS -- Paul Silas was ringing the doorbell of the man who had just fired him, and nobody was coming to the door at George Shinn's house.

    Silas kept ringing, and someone inside disconnected the chime.

    So Silas knocked and knocked and knocked until Shinn's son finally answered, telling Silas that his father was in the shower.

    "I said, 'Well tell him to get on down here,''' Silas recalled.

    The co-owner of the New Orleans Hornets and the ex-coach eventually had a talk, which Silas said was amiable in the end.

    Silas managed to chuckle as he told his knock-knock tale, a story that has exacerbated the negative fallout from the Hornets' firing of the popular coach.

    Hornets owners Shinn and Ray Wooldridge, reviled in the Carolinas before they moved the team from Charlotte last summer, barely made it through one season in New Orleans before their latest public relations debacle.

    Shinn, the majority owner and Silas' next-door neighbor, ordered Wooldridge to deliver the news of his firing in a short phone call to Silas -- which prompted Silas to make the short walk to Shinn's house for further explanation.

    A week later, Shinn, Wooldridge and general manager Bob Bass haven't explained precisely why Silas was fired or discussed which candidates they are considering to replace him. They've confirmed only an interview with Tim Floyd, who lives in New Orleans and had three-plus losing seasons with the Chicago Bulls.

    Silas took the Hornets to the playoffs the past four seasons, twice getting to the second round. Known as a coach who can motivate and win respect from NBA players, he was widely praised for keeping the team successful through the death of Bobby Phills in 2000, the illness that kept Jamal Mashburn out of the 2002 playoffs, and injuries to Davis throughout the 2002-03 season.

    When Philadelphia eliminated the Hornets in the first round of the playoffs, local fans were not terribly critical -- in large part because the Hornets' two best players were playing hurt -- Mashburn with a bone chip in the middle finger of his shooting hand; Davis with a bone bruise in his left knee.

    Team officials have implied the decision to fire Silas had nothing to do with money. Silas' $1.5 million salary was about half the average for coaches. The Hornets offered him $2 million before contract talks broke off last summer.
     
  2. KellyDwyer

    KellyDwyer Member

    Joined:
    Aug 30, 2001
    Messages:
    3,660
    Likes Received:
    86
    Shinn and Woolridge deserve a team full of Catos and Benoits.

    Coached by Brian Hill.
     
  3. giddyup

    giddyup Member

    Joined:
    Jan 24, 2002
    Messages:
    20,466
    Likes Received:
    488
    ... and to think: Shinn was roundly criticized for not bringing Michael Jordan into the fold.
     
  4. SirCharlesFan

    SirCharlesFan Member

    Joined:
    Apr 8, 1999
    Messages:
    6,028
    Likes Received:
    143
    The NBA was *STUPID* for letting these clowns move to New Orleans. In a few years, the New Orleans Hornets will be in the same situation as they were in Charlotte. Attendance will be terrible, fan interest will be low, and the owners will still be cheap and disliked by everyone.

    I don't understand why they let these bums move the team to New Orelans just to ruin one of the few remaining markets the NBA could have for expansion and/or relocation.

    Can the NBA force a teams owners to sell the team?
     
  5. Puedlfor

    Puedlfor Member

    Joined:
    May 30, 2000
    Messages:
    5,973
    Likes Received:
    21
    They've done it before - but I think the NBA is too solidly entrenched behind its owners now to ever do that, even though the game would be better without guys like Shinn or Sterling.
     

Share This Page