The Portland Trail Blazers “came close to firing” head coach Terry Stotts after the team, who garnered the No. 3 seed in the Western Conference, was swept by the sixth-seeded New Orleans Pelicans in the first round of the playoffs, according to ESPN's Zach Lowe. Teams with vacancies for a head coach, including the Phoenix Suns, had begun engaging third parties about Stotts' potential interest in their jobs, per Lowe.

The Blazers were stumped after losing the first two games at home and struggled to recover, getting swept by a Pelicans team that just started to figure things out and peaked at the right time.

Damian Lillard, the franchise player, who likely had more to lose and a lot to answer for after an embarrassing playoff exit, fought for Stotts — vouching for him when late owner Paul Allen came asking. General manager Neil Olshey did too, fighting even harder to keep him.

“I was asked what I thought, and I just said I love him as a coach,” Lillard said. “We all love him.”

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Most importantly, Lillard kept the locker room from imploding, giving a sense of stability and keeping the blame game away from any disruptions, taking all the blame squarely on his shoulders — publicly and privately.

“I grew up that way,” Lillard said. “Let's say we had to clean the house, and my job was to clean the kitchen. My brother is supposed to do the bathroom. My sister is supposed to clean the living room. If I do my job but that other stuff ain't done, then we didn't do it. That was my upbringing. We all go down together.”

Terry Stotts got to keep his job, and the Blazers have been rewarded with a new sense of unity and the top seed in the West, now in a three-way tie for the league's best record.