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Brown, 91, prepares to broadcast final NBA game

Hubie Brown had just taken his first college coaching job in 1968 and didn't expect that he'd also be asked to teach.
So, for his one year as an assistant at William & Mary, he taught two elective basketball courses.
Brown, now 91 and set to work his final game as a broadcaster, never stopped teaching the sport in more than 55 years since. But his audience grew from college students to players, coaches and TV viewers all over the world.
"It's the most remarkable thing and it's not hyperbole: He has probably taught more people about the game of basketball than anybody that's ever lived," broadcasting partner Mike Breen said.
Brown and Breen will work ABC's telecast of Sunday's game between Philadelphia and Milwaukee, where Brown got his first NBA opportunity as an assistant coach with the Bucks teams featuring Kareem Abdul-Jabbar and Oscar Robertson in 1972.
For the next five decades, he'd move from the coach's box to the TV table and back, earning induction into the Naismith Memorial Basketball Hall of Fame in 2005 for his contributions to basketball.
Brown has called 18 NBA Finals between TV and radio during his 35 years as a national TV and radio analyst. Yet he says he'll be nervous Sunday as he was before doing every game, despite his extraordinary preparation that included watching both teams play at least twice in the week beforehand.
"You're always nervous," Brown said. "That's me. I don't worry about anybody else. Because you want to be able to paint the picture, you want to be able to educate the fan to another level of expertise, and you realize it's a team doing it, not yourself."
The team, for Brown, is his partner along with the director and producer. The time they spend together preparing, becoming like family, reminds him of coaching.
Not surprisingly, his players recognize aspects of his coaching in his broadcasting.
"I used to love listening to him, because he was quite different than any other broadcaster that was on the air," said Hall of Famer Bernard King, who led the NBA in scoring while playing for Brown with the New York Knicks in 1984-85.
"And I think that the fans that love basketball, the intricacies of the game, he would help the viewer understand exactly what happened and why it happened. And so the viewers are being educated as they watch the game, not just being entertained, and that was a high mark of what he did as a broadcaster."
Those who listened through the years recognized some of Brown's trademarks, such as calling the lane "the painted area," and offering strategy tips for a team by saying "you must."
"My favorite is when he was really happy about a play, like he'd always say: 'That's it! That's it! That's it!'" Breen said. "And then when he got mad, you could tell when he got mad, when you weren't playing the game right, just in the tone in his voice."
Brown was so detailed in his own coaching that King said the Knicks even had a specific play for when an opponent missed a free throw, called power right, in which the forward would sprint down the left side, cut across the lane and post up on the right block.
So when Brown was impressed with what other coaches ran, he wanted to highlight it.
"That's always a tribute to the coaching staff for preparing their teams, and you never want to not be able to emphasize that to the fans when you see it," he said.
Brown had no experience and no plans for TV when he was first approached to do work for USA Network in 1981. He would return to coaching the next year with the Knicks, and then it was back to broadcasting from the time he left in the 1986-87 season until returning to coaching in 2002 with Memphis, where he would win his second NBA Coach of the Year award.
Even when Brown finished there, he wasn't done being a coach. Breen was calling the NBA Finals on ABC for the first time in 2006 and was nervous, trying too hard to follow instructions to tailor his vocabulary toward first-time viewers the event would draw.
At the first timeout, while Miami and Dallas were getting their instructions, Brown gave some of his own.
"He grabbed me by the arm -- and grabbed it tight -- and he looked me in the eye and he says, 'Just call the game the way you always call it and we'll be fine,'" Breen said. "And it just relaxed me."
On Sunday, it will be Breen's turn to help Brown through after a difficult past year in which both his wife and son died.
"He's not interested in people showering him with love and tributes," Breen said. "But the goal is to let him analyze the game like he always does, teach the game to the viewers, but at the same time pay him the tribute that he deserves, because he's given his life to the game."
Sources: Simmons nears buyout, eyes Cavs, Clips

Ben Simmons is finalizing a contract buyout with the Brooklyn Nets to become a free agent, sources told ESPN's Shams Charania and Brian Windhorst. Simmons will meet with the Cleveland Cavaliers and LA Clippers starting Friday as he decides his next home.
Simmons, 28, has spent three seasons in Brooklyn since he was acquired in a deal that sent James Harden to the Philadelphia 76ers. He has dealt with a variety of injuries in those years and has played more than 40 games just once with the Nets.
This season, Simmons is averaging 6.2 points, 5.2 rebounds and 6.9 assists in 25 minutes per game. At 6-foot-10, Simmons remains a versatile defender and a strong passer for his size, but his limitations as a shooter have made it difficult for him to thrive in certain lineups.
Simmons is in the final year of a five-year, maximum contract he signed with the Sixers. He's set to hit free agency this summer.
Trade deadline reactions: Answering the biggest questions

The 2025 NBA trade deadline is officially behind us with a whirlwind of deals that have left much to be discussed as we continue through the rest of the regular season.
The blockbuster trade of Luka Doncic to the Los Angeles Lakers for Anthony Davis kicked off an exciting week also highlighted by the dramatic end of the Jimmy Butler saga with the Miami Heat.
A cascade of deals has altered the landscape of the NBA, raising the stakes even higher in both conferences for the postseason and beyond.
What should we make of these major deals? Who will be the next superstar on the move? Our NBA insiders give their takes on this historic trade deadline and what we should keep an eye on in the coming months.
This season's trade deadline was ____?
Michael C. Wright: Shocking and historic. The stars in the West seemingly moved all over the place. In Los Angeles, a new superstar duo of LeBron James and Doncic has emerged. The Lakers then grabbed a lob threat to help Doncic in Mark Williams from the Charlotte Hornets. Anthony Davis and Kyrie Irving will now team up in Dallas, and the Mavs also added wing help in trading for Caleb Martin. The San Antonio Spurs hit the gas on their rebuild by acquiring speedy point guard De'Aaron Fox to pair with Victor Wembanyama. Then, the Warriors finally landed their star in Jimmy Butler, who just ended arguably the most dramatic standoff between a player and team we've seen this season.
Jamal Collier: Fun! A few weeks ago, a front office executive told me he was preparing for a quiet deadline and instead, we got one of the wildest weeks in recent memory. From the shock of the Doncic trade, All-Stars and former franchise cornerstones (Khris Middleton, Zach LaVine, Fox) all landing on different teams to finally resolving the Butler drama, this deadline had a little bit of everything.
Dave McMenamin: A reminder why, with the flattened competitive landscape in today's NBA, a handful of teams will convince themselves they are only a move away from being a peripheral participant to a direct contender in any given season. This is the type of parity NBA commissioner Adam Silver envisioned when he ratified the latest collective bargaining agreement on behalf of a new wave of owners. The result could be a dearth of dynastic teams, but a surge in spontaneity from front offices that changes the fate of their franchises in an instant.
Chris Herring: Unusual and interesting. If nothing else had happened, the shock of the Doncic-Davis deal would have been a big enough bombshell on its own to make the deadline interesting. But watching other All-Star caliber players such as Fox, Butler and LaVine move clubs -- some in dramatic fashion -- made it a memorable week.
Tim MacMahon: Absolute madness. The insanity started over the weekend when the Mavericks blindsided a pre-prime generational talent by sending Doncic to the Lakers in the middle of the night. That was the most shocking trade in NBA history -- a deal people around the league are still trying to wrap their heads around days later -- but far from the only blockbuster as several maximum-contract stars were moved.
Who will be the next major superstar on the move?
Collier: Kevin Durant. The cat is out of the bag in a major way here. His name was floated so publicly in trade rumors this week that he had to make it known he didn't want to land back in Golden State. The Suns were swept last season and look headed for the play-in tournament this season. Another disappointing finish could mean the end for Phoenix's big three.
Herring: It has to be KD. The Suns are now in the second season with this trio and after a first-round exit last season, a rotating door of coaches and sitting at No. 10 in the West, it simply isn't working. Even if Durant doesn't want to be in Golden State, he can't want the end of his career to merely be about chasing a back-end play-in spot.
Wright: Kevin Durant. All the rumors and speculation regarding potentially trading Bradley Beal and Durant can't be good for the vibe in the locker room for a team struggling at 10th in the West. Devin Booker is essentially untouchable, and Beal has a no-trade clause. But would it surprise anyone if Durant ended up with a new team next season? The Suns were already in talks with the Warriors for Durant, who is under contract for one more season. Those talks certainly didn't increase the likelihood of Phoenix signing him to an extension this summer.
MacMahon: Durant is the obvious answer after the Suns strangely allowed trade speculation to swirl around the all-time great for days and didn't close on a deal. The question is, what's the next domino if or when the Suns and Durant divorce this summer? All-time Suns leading scorer Devin Booker has been adamant that he wants to spend his career in Phoenix, putting a lot of pride in being a one-franchise star. But Damian Lillard was "10 toes down" in Portland for a long time before finally requesting a trade. How patient can Booker be if the Suns keep going in the wrong direction?
McMenamin: Paul George or Joel Embiid. With all the flurry of activity around the league, the Philadelphia 76ers and their 20-30 record traded away KJ Martin in a salary dump and swapped Caleb Martin for Quentin Grimes with the Mavericks. Hardly the maneuvers to try to boost the Embiid, George, Tyrese Maxey trio to make a second-half run. Barring a wild turnaround, this Sixers group will be ripe for a rebuild and Maxey is the only one young enough to stick around to see something like that through.
What offseason/free agency move should we keep an eye on?
MacMahon: Aside from a soon-to-be member of the 30,000-point club potentially being traded? I'll go with Durant's former -- and can never rule out future -- teammate Kyrie Irving. He has a $44 million player option for next season and a lot of leverage in Dallas as the Mavs' leader and only star shot creator in the wake of the Doncic deal. I would wager on Irving remaining in Dallas on a longer-term deal with a raise.
Herring: What sort of contract will the Toronto Raptors offer Brandon Ingram this summer after trading for him? There'd been little interest in him on the trade market for the better part of the last year, with the New Orleans Pelicans (and other teams) reluctant to give him the max deal he coveted. Toronto already has several high-priced youngsters in Scottie Barnes (five years, $224 million) Immanuel Quickley (five years, $175 million) and RJ Barrett ($57 million over the next two seasons), and it's unclear whether Ingram catapults the Raptors into clear playoff contention anytime soon.
Collier: The Chicago Bulls weren't able to find a trade for Nikola Vucevic before the deadline, but they came away believing they laid enough groundwork to continue making moves over the summer. Vucevic will be playing on an expiring $21.5 million contract next season and Chicago is still looking for ways to keep its rebuild pushing forward after trading LaVine.
McMenamin: Aside from Butler, there might not have been a name mentioned more in potential trade scenarios than Cam Johnson of the Brooklyn Nets. The 28-year-old swingman has a value contract -- with $43 million owed to him over the next two years -- and his two-way wing skill set would be coveted by any team with postseason aspirations.
Wright: It'll be interesting to see what LeBron James does over the summer. James has a player option in his deal that could allow him to enter free agency. It's expected that playing alongside Doncic for the rest of this season will make a positive impression on James. But that's not guaranteed. James intends to remain with the Lakers beyond the trade deadline, but a lot can happen between now and this summer, especially if James doesn't see a path for Los Angeles to legitimately compete for titles in his twilight years.
Which team are you most intrigued by after their trade deadline moves?
Wright: The San Antonio Spurs. The Spurs entered the season looking to teach their young players how to win consistently while closely evaluating them to decide how the club will continue to build around Wembanyama. Acting coach Mitch Johnson said that's still the plan. But he stressed that San Antonio won't shy away from the expectations that come with acquiring a player such as Fox. It sounded as if Johnson was expecting a legit postseason or play-in tournament push for the Spurs, who currently sit at No. 12 in the West. Does Fox get them there?
McMenamin: Perhaps I'm biased, but the launch of LeBron James and Doncic -- two superstars with parallel games and a 15-year age gap between them -- fascinates me. L.A. was on the rise before the deadline and dismantled the LA Clippers in its first game after the Dallas deal with Doncic on the sidelines. Will coach JJ Redick be able to keep his team's momentum once Doncic gets onto the court? Or is it asking too much for this team to find a new identity on the fly and immediately contend this postseason?
Herring: It will be surreal watching Luka and LeBron on the same team outside of an All-Star game setting. But beyond that, the Mark Williams pickup is interesting. I wouldn't have guessed the Hornets would deal him, just because he had shown upside when he was available. (Although that caveat is a massive one.) It's a risk for the Lakers given his injury history. But it could lead to a huge payoff if he does stay on the court.
Collier: The Lakers. The anticipation of what Doncic will look like on this team and playing next to LeBron James makes them easily the most intriguing team in the NBA right now. On top of that, they found a center in Williams who should fit well next to them, making them all the more interesting to watch.
MacMahon: The Mavericks have massive pressure to win now and win big after making a stunning trade that enraged their fan base. I've yet to speak to a rival executive who agreed with Nico Harrison's decision -- reasoning was split between giving up a 25-year-old generational talent or failing to maximize the return from trading Doncic -- but most of those execs consider Dallas to be capable of another deep playoff run after acquiring All-NBA big man Anthony Davis and promising 3-and-D wing Max Christie.
Which player are you most surprised did not get traded before the deadline?
McMenamin: It's not the most surprising, but the fact that CJ McCollum is still in New Orleans after the Pelicans traded Ingram and Dejounte Murray sustained a season-ending injury at least raises an eyebrow. The 33-year-old has four games with 36-plus points this season and it would be acceptable to think he would want to be on a team heading in a different direction. His expiring $30.7 million contract for next season will make him a prime trade candidate in the next trade cycle around the draft and free agency.
Wright: Understandably, New Orleans didn't move Zion Williamson at the trade deadline. Due to this season's plethora of injuries, the Pelicans haven't gotten a real chance to see all of their talent on the court. Despite Williamson's immense talent, durability concerns have plagued him throughout his career. It made sense for New Orleans to at least explore what it could acquire in a trade to play alongside its talented up-and-comers such as Trey Murphy III and Herb Jones.
Herring: Chris Boucher, the longest-tenured Raptor and lone remaining player from the 2019 title team. At 6-foot-9, he's not the tallest, but he's still a multifaceted big man. With a 7-4 wingspan and shooting nearly 38% from 3 on four attempts per game, he is posting career-best efficiency and scoring numbers.
MacMahon: It wasn't surprising that Cam Johnson didn't get traded before the deadline since rumors had recently quieted about the possibility. But a month ago Johnson was considered the most likely impact player to be moved midseason. Brooklyn wouldn't budge from its high asking price for Johnson, a versatile 6-8 wing averaging 19.3 points while shooting 41.7% from the field. His trade value will remain high with two years left on his contract, which dips to a $20.5 million salary next season before bumping back up to $22.5 million in 2026-27.
Collier: It felt as if the Bulls would make one more move before the deadline. Either trading Vucevic, failing to cash in on his career shooting season because they believed they could get better offers in the offseason; Lonzo Ball, whom they chose to extend instead; or breaking up their gluttony of guards -- Coby White (about whom they fielded inquires before deciding to keep him), Josh Giddey, Ayo Dosunmu, Ball and newly acquired guards Tre Jones and Kevin Huerter. Chicago even held out its newest acquisitions, including forward Zach Collins, in anticipation they would find a way to reroute them before the deadline.
Norrie suffers gruelling last-16 Dallas Open defeat

Great Britain's Cameron Norrie suffered a gruelling three-set defeat against American Reilly Opelka to exit the Dallas Open in the last 16.
British number two Norrie, 29, lost 4-6 7-6 (7-5) 6-4 in a match that lasted two and a half hours.
There was little between the pair, with both winning 71% of their points on serve and sharing the 202 points played equally.
Wildcard Opelka found the edge though - recovering from a set down to win a second-set tie-break before breaking in the third game of the final set.
Norrie held his serve after that but was unable to recover the break.
Bath's next generation form backbone of England U20s

Offiah is another from a sporting family. His father Martin won four Challenge Cups with Wigan during a stellar rugby league career, his cousin is Brighton defender Odeluga Offiah while, this week, his younger brother Phoenix joined Tottenham's academy.
"Overall in the household we're just quite competitive, except for my mum - my mum just tries to stay relaxed, stay out of it," Offiah said.
The teenage back caught the eye when he scored a try on his Bath debut in the Premiership Rugby Cup win against Bristol last November.
"I was at school and my 10 was another kid my age, and I'm going from that to Finn Russell at 10 and he's throwing four-man miss-passes," Offiah said.
"The level of training and how quick everything is and the intensity and the attention to detail, execution, everything it's such a big step up that you have to very quickly snap into it and I would like to say I did that."
Short-term, making a positive impression at Bath and getting more opportunities there is the aim. Long-term Offiah is thinking big, with England and the Lions in his sights.
"If you're not aiming for that it's like why are you playing rugby?" he said.
Gatland's Wales hope for light through storm clouds

If he is a man who fears for his future, Gatland was in relatively relaxed mood when he conducted his press conference close to Nice Airport.
Gatland refuted Biggar's "biggest game" comments. This is a coach who has prepared Wales for Grand Slam matches and Six Nations deciders and two World Cup semi-finals.
Biggar's assessment was based on the consequences of another defeat, and the head coach acknowledged the importance of the match and that Wales are desperate for a win.
Gatland, who has a set of gates named after him at the Principality Stadium, continues to divide opinion in Wales.
There are some who point to his poor record since 2020, who believe his coaching methods are outdated and insist a change is required.
There are others who believe he is still the man to turn things around and he is doing the best he can with the quality of the squad at his disposal.
His supporters lay the blame for the malaise in Welsh rugby solely at the door of the Welsh Rugby Union (WRU).
There are also those who believe Gatland and the WRU must share responsibility for the respective failures on and off the field.
After an independent review, Gatland was given a vote of confidence for the 2025 Six Nations, despite a calendar year where he oversaw 11 defeats.
The mood music is the New Zealander might well be moving on at the end of the tournament, barring a miraculous turnaround.
Whether victory or defeat this weekend in the Eternal City affects this prospective scenario remains to be seen.

Peter O'Mahony has been recalled to the Ireland team for Sunday's Six Nations game against Scotland at Murrayfield.
The Munster flanker, who was not included in the matchday squad for last week's win over England, is handed his first start since last summer's tour of South Africa by interim head coach Simon Easterby.
Wing Mack Hansen and tight-head prop Finlay Bealham have been passed fit to start, while Robbie Henshaw replaces Garry Ringrose at outside centre as Easterby makes two changes.
Sam Prendergast is again given the nod at fly-half with Jack Crowley to be used off the bench.
Hooker Dan Sheehan and back row Jack Conan are kept among the replacements despite eye-catching displays off the bench against England.
Easterby said bringing O'Mahony back in for this game was a decision "we have been thinking about for a couple of weeks".
"Certainly after the England performance, we felt like it was a good chance to bring Pete in and bring his experience to the table and keep Bairdo [Ryan Baird] involved off the bench," said Easterby.
Saim Ayub ruled out of Champions Trophy, PCB confirms

At 40, LeBron passes MJ as oldest to score 40

LOS ANGELES -- After becoming the oldest player in NBA history to top 40 points in the Los Angeles Lakers' 120-112 win over the Golden State Warriors, LeBron James stated the obvious about the achievement.
"What do I think? That I'm old," James said Thursday after scoring 42 points on 14-for-25 shooting to lead the Lakers to their 10th win in the past 12 games. "That's what I think. I need a glass of wine and some sleep, that's the first thing I think about."
James, at 40 years and 38 days old, is about a month older than Michael Jordan was when he scored 43 points on Feb. 21, 2003, for the Washington Wizards at 40 years and 4 days old.
"The biggest thing is we got the win, obviously," James said when asked about being linked to Jordan, his childhood hero, in yet another statistical category after 22 seasons in the league. "But throughout my journey, anytime I've been named or in the category or whatever the case, crossed paths with any of the greats, it's always humbling. Just to know where I come from. And I love the game so much. So it's pretty cool."
Facing a familiar foe in Stephen Curry on Thursday night, it was James' 3-point shot that was locked in. He hit his first five 3-point attempts, including three straight in a 28-second span in the second quarter -- the final one of the sequence came from the Lakers' logo at center court, 34 feet from the basket.
The moon shot put L.A. up 45-23 with 9:09 remaining in the second quarter, causing Warriors coach Steve Kerr to burn a timeout as James raised both his arms and egged on the raucous home crowd.
James has been dedicating part of his pregame routine to practicing the deep "logo" 3s this season, with Lakers assistant coach Greg St. Jean rebounding for him.
"I always work on things that I'm going to shoot in the game or plays that I'm going to do in the game," James said. "So, it pays off, for sure."
James is also the youngest player in league history to score 40 in a game. He dropped 41 for the Cleveland Cavaliers on March 27, 2004, when he was 19 years and 88 days old.
"I think with LeBron, we've run out of words and superlatives and descriptions to sort of capture what he's doing at this stage of his career and at this age," Lakers coach JJ Redick said. "It continues to be remarkable, it really does. And he really led us tonight."
James added 17 rebounds and 8 assists, with new teammate Luka Doncic watching from the bench in a black Lakers sweat suit.
L.A. is now No. 5 in the Western Conference standings, a game behind the No. 4 Houston Rockets with Doncic targeting Monday against the Utah Jazz for his Lakers debut, a source familiar with his plans told ESPN.
And then it will be James' turn to watch his teammate up close.
"I've been watching him since he got into this league," James said of Doncic. "And what he's capable of doing is special. He's a super-duper special talent."

PHILADELPHIA -- Alex Ovechkin scored his 879th career goal to move to within 16 of breaking Wayne Gretzky's NHL goals record and the Washington Capitals beat the Philadelphia Flyers 4-3 on Thursday night.
Ovechkin, 39, scored with 53 seconds left in the first period, taking a centering pass from Martin Fehervary and flicking it past Ivan Fedotov to tie the score at 1-1. It was Ovechkin's 26th goal of the season.
He has now had a goal in four straight games, the 34th time in his career that he has scored in four consecutive games, which ties Mario Lemieux for the most in NHL history. The only other player with at least 30 such streaks is Gretzky (30), according to ESPN Research.
Ovechkin's goal gave him 40 points for the season, making him just the ninth player in NHL history to record 40 points in at least 20 seasons.
The 39-year-old Ovechkin also has 51 career goals against the Flyers in his career, which is tied for his second most against a single opponent (Carolina Hurricanes 51, Winnipeg Jets 56).
"You become a little bit numb to it, but you still, after games, you take a step back and go, this is just incredible how he continues to score at this level, at the age he's at," Capitals coach Spencer Carbery said. "We just enjoy it, and we're glad he's on our side. It's exciting, and it brings a lot of energy to our team, teammates, coaching staff, to watch what he's doing and continuing to find ways to put pucks in the back of the net, and in big moments, big games, big goals, in tight games."
Jakob Chychrun scored the winner for Washington with 7:55 left off a cross-ice pass from John Carlson.
Connor McMichael and Lars Eller also scored for Washington, which trailed 3-2 after two periods. Charlie Lindgren made 19 saves.
Matvei Michkov scored two goals and Tyson Foerster had one for the Flyers, who dropped their fifth straight game and have lost seven of their past eight. Fedotov made 14 saves.
Information from The Associated Press was used in this report.