Calvin Booth Breaks Silence: The Untold Story Behind His Dramatic Denver Exit and Fallout with Michael Malone
Booth didn’t want to conduct an “autopsy” of the day he and Malone got fired, but when I asked what he was told, it’s clear that one detail still stings: the organization told him they didn’t want there to be a “winner or loser” in the situation between him and Malone.
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“When you say a winner or loser, that’s a reference to a game,” he said, his voice shifting. “It’s not a game to me. It’s my life.”
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Booth believes four factors converged to cost him his job. First, the Nikola Jokić effect: when you have the best player in the world, everything else gets taken for granted. Second, the friction between a tenured champion coach and a first-time GM. Third, ownership. Booth believes the Kroenke family, for all its success across sports, doesn’t place the same value on front-office executives that other organizations do.



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