Where's Larry Brown coaching next season?

Where will Larry Brown coach next season?

  • Atlanta

    Votes: 1 5.6%
  • Denver

    Votes: 3 16.7%
  • Chicago

    Votes: 0 0.0%
  • Cleveland

    Votes: 0 0.0%
  • Dallas

    Votes: 1 5.6%
  • Golden State

    Votes: 0 0.0%
  • Phoenix

    Votes: 2 11.1%
  • NCAA basketball

    Votes: 1 5.6%
  • Another NBA team not listed

    Votes: 5 27.8%
  • Nowhere

    Votes: 5 27.8%

  • Total voters
    18
  • Poll closed .

PurpleHaze

All-Star
Poll:

Atlanta
Denver
Chicago
Cleveland
Dallas
Phoenix
Golden State
NCAA Basketball
Another NBA team not listed
Nowhere

Brown desperately wants to get back into coaching but where does he end up? Knicks and 76ers are surely out of the picture. Besides existing NBA openings I made some guesses on possible jobs available in Denver, Atlanta, Cleveland, etc. He recently interviewed for head coach at Stanford University, so back to college is not out of the question. I would be surprised if it's nowhere - but that's possible too.
 
Last edited:
I'm surprised you didn't put Charlotte up there. Michael Jordan has said he would love for Larry Brown to coach there.
 
I thought about Charlotte and also LA Clippers among a couple others. I believe Brown interviewed for Charlotte last season and I know Theus did. Only 10 poll spots and there's one for "NBA team not listed."
 
I can see him reuniting with AI in denver.

I agree that's possible. I haven't cast my vote (guess) yet as I'm waiting a bit to see how several NBA playoff teams fare. Coaches like George Karl, Avery Johnson, etc. could see the ax fall depending on how they do. Now it appears even Flip Saunders may be on thin ice.
 
Last edited:
I picked Dallas, for a couple of reasons:

1. If the Mavericks don't get out of the first round, Mark Cuban is gonna clean house from top to bottom. I can see him going after Larry Brown for name value alone...

2. I already hate the Dallas Mavericks so I wouldn't have to change that because of their new coach.

3. I already hate Larry Brown so I wouldn't have to change that because of his new team.

Looks like a win-win-win situation to me, except when it gets to April and beyond and Dallas once again folds like a cheap suit.

:p
 
Denver is the msot likely location for a few reasons:

1) Considering the amount of talent this team has, it is grossly underachieving. Unless Denver manages to make it all the way to the finals through some miracle, George Karl's position looks bleak.

2) Larry Brown is notorious for instilling discipline in his players - usually to the point of excess. If any team needs discipline though, it is the Denver Nuggets.

3) Larry Brown has always been known as a great defensive coach whose offensive schemes are sometimes lacking. The Nuggets don't have to worry about offense as they are capable of putting up 120 easily; they do, however, need defensive help BADLY.

4) For all the much publicized conflicts between Iverson and Brown, Brown still managed to get the best out of Iverson. There has always been a mutual respect there - enough so that both parties would be willing to work together again for mutual benefit.
 
Probably the Bobcats. Most of those teams in the poll are almost certainly keeping their current coaches.
 
I don't know, seems like Brown has helped most of the teams that he's coached. At least recently. Philly went to the Finals, Detroit went to the Finals. And there's mounting evidence that he was not the problem in New York, despite what their media reported. I think they were just in denial about how much of a cancer Isiah Thomas was until he made it abundantly clear. If nothing else he's a huge step up from the interim coaches they've had since they started that franchise.
 
Jordan reportedly bringing in Brown as next Cats coach

http://sports.espn.go.com/nba/news/story?id=3373007

CHARLOTTE, N.C. -- Well-traveled Larry Brown has reached an agreement to return to the NBA as coach of the Charlotte Bobcats, a person familiar with the decision told The Associated Press on Monday.
The person, speaking on condition of anonymity because an official announcement has not been made, said Brown was expected to sign a contract on Tuesday. The Bobcats have called an afternoon news conference for what they termed a "major basketball announcement."

Fast Facts

nba_g_lbrown_65.jpg

• Larry Brown was inducted into the basketball Hall of Fame as a coach in 2002.
• In an NBA career that has accumulated 1,010 wins and 800 losses over 23 seasons, Brown won one championship -- in 2003-04 with the Pistons.
• As a college coach, Brown took UCLA to the NCAA championship game in 1980 and won it all with Kansas in 1988.
• Like Bobcats part-owner Michael Jordan, Brown played under legendary coach Dean Smith at North Carolina.
• He played five seasons in the ABA and coached in the league four more. -- ESPN Research



The 67-year-old Hall of Famer will be taking over his ninth NBA team, and it will be his first coaching job since a messy exit from the New York Knicks in 2006. Brown will replace Sam Vincent, fired on Saturday after going 32-50 in his one season.
Reached early Tuesday, Vincent said he wasn't surprised that part-owner Michael Jordan decided to bring in a veteran coach.
"Michael never said that he was hiring coach Brown. He just said they were going to make some decisions that were in the best interest of the organization," Vincent said. "So I kind of assumed of going in the direction of hiring a veteran coach and someone who was very popular in the community."
Brown's agent, Joe Glass, refused to confirm or deny that his client was headed to Charlotte.
"I have no information on Larry Brown," Glass said early Tuesday.
Brown won the NBA championship with Detroit in 2004 and the NCAA title with Kansas in 1988. He resigned last week as executive vice president of the Philadelphia 76ers, and Glass indicated Brown wanted to return to coaching.
The move means Bobcats part-owner Michael Jordan has turned to a fellow former North Carolina Tar Heel to try to get the fourth-year Bobcats into the playoffs for the first time. Jordan and Brown both played for former North Carolina coach Dean Smith.
Brown, inducted into the Basketball Hall of Fame in 2002, is one of five NBA coaches with at least 1,000 victories.
While he's had contentious splits with several teams, he's had success at nearly every job before his poor season with the Knicks in 2005-06.
Terms of Brown's deal in Charlotte were uncertain. But it's likely he will get a much larger salary than Vincent. Having never coached in the NBA before, Vincent made about $1.5 million this season. He has one year left on a two-year contract.
"I wish coach Brown all the success in the world," Vincent said. "I think he'll have a great group of guys and I wish him nothing but the best."
Vincent entered the job last spring confident, saying he'd be "incredibly discouraged and disappointed" if the fourth-year franchise didn't reach the playoffs.
But Vincent struggled to develop a steady rotation and often clashed with players. The Bobcats finished with one fewer win than in 2006-07 under Bernie Bickerstaff, who moved to a front-office position.
Vincent's firing marked the second time in Jordan's checkered history as an NBA executive that one of his coaches lasted only one season. Leonard Hamilton resigned after going 19-63 with the Washington Wizards in 2000-01.
Jordan was eventually fired by the Wizards. He bought a minority stake in the Bobcats in 2006 and took over the decision-making from Bickerstaff.
Now Jordan has turned to the veteran Brown to try to give a boost to the struggling Bobcats, who have also struggled to win over fans. The Bobcats ranked 24th out of 30 teams in attendance this season.
 
Soooo...he'll sign a multi-year contract and then want them to buy him out after one?:rolleyes:


Yeah! It always amazes me that he can screw over team after team and yet, other teams just keep hiring him. The sad part is that each team thinks that, with them, he'll be different.

If we do not learn from history, we are doomed to repeat it.
 
Yeah! It always amazes me that he can screw over team after team and yet, other teams just keep hiring him. The sad part is that each team thinks that, with them, he'll be different.

If we do not learn from history, we are doomed to repeat it.


It's too bad more people don't remember this quote.
 
If true.........what a shame!! I like the Bobcats and they can only be hurt by Mr Ego Brown.
I beg to differ. The Bobcats are in a position where they can benefit from a coach like Brown; unlike the situation in New York, he's got better guys in Charlotte character-wise and, more importantly, the core of the Bobcats (with the exception of Wallace) all spent at least two years at a major college program, and (also unlike New York) can be coached.

I think that, within two years, Brown will get the Bobcats in the playoffs.
 
Back
Top