the two guys on my **** list the most right now (and i assume a lot of people's) are greene and schneider. but the biggest difference is, schneider mans up and says he has to be better. whereas greene always just points to bad breaks and bad bounces.
What Greene is doing is a psychological tactic, one that's often taught to athletes and performers. Look up Martin Seligman's work on optimism, but basically it's this: they found that, more often than not, winning teams don't take things personally - they blame things on bounces, bad luck, etc. Teams that did worse say, "I've got to be better, I can't do that, I should do this, etc."
I don't care what the athletes say to the media because it's not meant to be the truth and it's not meant to be enlightening. It's meant to bring as little extra attention as possible to the other guys in the locker room.