Former head coach Mike McCarthy has remained quiet since his unceremonious exit back in December. The man who ran the Green Bay Packers for 13 years, winning 135 games and a Super Bowl. One can imagine someone of his stature received a proper sendoff for his incredible service to the organization. Nope. McCarthy was fired before the season was even over following a rough loss at Lambeau Field to the Arizona Cardinals.
While he knew the defeat wasn't a good look, McCarthy didn't believe he would be fired. At least not yet. There was still an outside chance, however slim, that the team could make the playoffs. It turns out new GM Mark Murphy had no intention of at least letting McCarthy finish out the season.
McCarthy explained to Rob Demovsky of ESPN what happened and how appallingly bad the entire process was handled.
"Obviously. It couldn't have been handled any worse. Anytime you lose a close game, it's a difficult time emotionally afterwards, but when you lose a home game at Lambeau Field in December, it's really hard. And that hasn't happened very often. I walked out of my press conference, and I'm thinking about the game, thinking about how our playoff shot was now minimal. That's where my head was at. And when I was told Mark Murphy wanted to see me -- and the messenger was cold and the energy was bad. Mark said it was an ugly loss, and it was time to make change... ...Every time I released an individual, you get your words right. There's a personal component to it. You know he has a family. He's family. There wasn't any of that. So that was off."https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ye-96KRp-Ls







