Wizards Suspend Brown for Rest of Playoffs

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From FOXSports:

WASHINGTON - Kwame Brown joined the Washington Wizards to much fanfare as the first high school player chosen No. 1 overall in the NBA draft. Now it appears likely he'll leave the team in disgrace, suspended on Tuesday for the rest of playoffs.


The Wizards told Brown he was no longer welcome, leaving him behind as they flew to Chicago for Wednesday's Game 5 of their first-round series against the Bulls.



"We had some philosophical differences," president of basketball operations Ernie Grunfeld said.

Brown is in the final year of his contract and hoped to have the type of breakthrough season that would net a huge payoff this summer. He played just four minutes in Saturday night's Game 3, then didn't attend Sunday's practice or Monday's Game 4 victory. The team had said he was absent because of a stomach virus.

Asked whether Brown was really sick, Grunfeld said: "He talked to our trainer and he told him he had a stomach flu."

Asked whether Brown was upset over a lack of playing time, Grunfeld said: "Everybody likes to play as much as they can. That's typical for the NBA."

Brown won't travel with the Wizards or participate in any practices for the remainder of the season.

"We're going to do things a certain way. These players are committed to that," said Grunfeld, referring to the remaining players on the roster. "And those are the type of players we want around us."

The suspension - announced after Brown, Grunfeld and coach Eddie Jordan met for about 10 minutes before practice - throws into serious doubt Brown's future with the team.

He turned down a multiyear contract extension last fall, making him a restricted free agent at the end of the season. Grunfeld had previously said he would like to keep Brown. On Tuesday, he was more ambiguous.

"He's still part of our organization," Grunfeld said. "We'll deal with that in the offseason. He's going to be a restricted free agent in the summer, and we'll deal with that at the appropriate time."

A message left for Brown's agent was not immediately returned.

Brown has been a major disappointment since the Wizards drafted him out of Glynn Academy High School in Georgia in 2001. After a miserable two years dealing with the demanding Michael Jordan, Brown showed glimpses of his potential last season when he followed a 30-point, 19-rebound game against Sacramento with a 27 and 11 performance against Atlanta, but he often languished in single digits.

He averaged 10.9 points and 7.4 rebounds for the season, just enough improvement for the Wizards to hope that his long awaited breakout was on the horizon.

But Brown broke a bone in his right foot during a pickup game last summer and started the season on the injured list. He played in just 42 games, starting 14, and was essentially a big-body role player off the bench. He averaged 7.0 points and 4.9 rebounds and was frequently booed at home.

Brown's numbers were much better on the road - a result, he claimed, of the treatment he received from the Wizards' fans. Gilbert Arenas even appealed to fans not to boo Brown before the Wizards' first home playoff game Saturday. The fans responded by cheering Brown graciously when he entered the game for his four minutes of play.

Brown began his first postseason with flair, scoring all of his 13 points in the first half of Game 1 at Chicago. But he scored just two points in 21 minutes in Game 2.

Brown's off-the-court lowlight was a DUI arrest in Georgia in 2003. Just 19 when he was drafted, Brown also struggled adjusting to life in the NBA. As a rookie, he was chewed out regularly by Michael Jordan and coach Doug Collins. Later, Brown spoke with bitterness about the criticism he received.

Four years ago, the Wizards imagined that Brown would one day lead them to the playoffs. Now they will continue in the postseason without him.

"This is not a distraction for us," Eddie Jordan said. "We're a close-knit family. We're moving forward. We're committed to winning." Added forward Antawn Jamison: "I love Kwame to death, just like a little brother. Hopefully he can get situated."
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I wonder how much $$ he'll command as a free agent. He had his career game vs. Sacramento, so Petrie may be interested a la Buford/Ostertag.
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OK, maybe I won't suggest we take a flyer on him this summer. Then again, we've done well with big guys with bad reps from Washington in the past.
 
Knucklehead.


remains a thought this summer though -- if anything, makes being able to get him more likely. But I would take it as obvious that you couldn't just sign him and turn the position over to him. Would need to have another starting quality guy around in case he flopped.
 
I say sign him.

Then for our "In case he's a flop," we trade for Pau Gasol, who I just read may be on the block.

Peja, Bobby, and a draft pick for Pau Gasol and James Posey...I doubt they'd like it, but it's worth a try.... I digress, though, no need to hijack the thread.
 
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Brown should of went to college. He will be out of the NBA in 3 years or less. His attitude and poor work ethic is unappealing to most, if not all, teams.
 
LPKingsFan said:
OK, maybe I won't suggest we take a flyer on him this summer. Then again, we've done well with big guys with bad reps from Washington in the past.

Exactly what I thought. I haven't even read the whole article yet. The best part is he played the whole year under Eddie's version of Princeton O. He definetly has youth and athleticism that we could use - somehow.
 
Brown should of went to college. He will be out of the NBA in 3 years or less. His attitude and poor work ethic is unappealing to most, if not all, teams.

Right on.....this is exactly why Stern wants the age limit. I mean this guy is still a baby....did you read some stories about him. Here:

There was the time they discovered that he was eating Popeyes fried chicken for every meal, including breakfast, because he didn't really know how to grocery-shop. The sports management firm that represents Brown, SFX, assigned Richard J. Lopez, a 36-year-old business manager, to shepherd him. Lopez found that he essentially became a parent.

Lopez took Brown to a Giant supermarket and helped him fill a cart with food. Then Lopez drove Brown home to his rented apartment in Alexandria and hard-boiled a dozen eggs for him and put them in the refrigerator.

One morning before a Wizards game, Brown called Lopez, and said, "I have nothing to wear. Everything's dirty."

Lopez knew Brown had a closet full of new suits – he had helped hang them there. "Kwame," he explained, "you have to take those suits to the dry cleaners." That was fine, Brown said, but he didn't know how to do that, and he still didn't have anything to wear.

Lopez drove over to Brown's apartment, and found the suits in a heap by the bed. Each time Brown wore one, he would take it off, wad it up and throw it in a corner.

Lopez picked up a suit from the pile, got out the iron, and began ironing.

It was Lopez who helped Brown find his apartment, a four-bedroom condo in Alexandria. Lopez also got him a deal on a Mercedes S500, and a free cell phone, and helped him set up his cable service, and get an ATM card, and all the other things that go with being an adult. At first, Brown's mother, Joyce, was there to help, and there was a temporary roommate to keep him company, an acquaintance from Brunswick attending Howard Law School. But then his mother went home to care for her other children, and the roommate got a place closer to campus.

Finally, the condo was empty, except for Brown and Lopez. Brown looked at his manager. "Are you going to stay over?" he asked tentatively. Lopez, stunned, realized Brown had never spent the night alone before. Lopez took off his shoes.

geez, talk about being a baby.......maybe I shouldn't say it...but his mom didn't do a good job of preparing him for adult life, IMO.
 
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That is REALLY sad. But he clearly was not college material either. I think the NBA needs to have farm teams or something directly realted to a pro team. Then guys who are good prospects, but aren't college material have a way to develop their game and learn. Why do colleges and players need keep up a charde that some of these guys are actually real students? Give them another option.
 
kennadog said:
That is REALLY sad. But he clearly was not college material either. I think the NBA needs to have farm teams or something directly realted to a pro team. Then guys who are good prospects, but aren't college material have a way to develop their game and learn. Why do colleges and players need keep up a charde that some of these guys are actually real students? Give them another option.

Agreed. There are so many athletes that are not "real students" that they should not waste a slot on the charade. Save the slot for someone who wants to learn.
 
Whoa...pardon all the typos. A friend once called me the world's best typo-ist. That post lived up to that! :D
 
That's just pathetic. It's unfair that because of guys like that Stern wants to impose an age limit on the NBA. I mean, I'm barely 19 and a half and I can do everything he couldn't do, I mean, I can even cook a meal for myself if need be. Just because he's a failure at life doesn't mean that other talented players who can fully take care of themselves should be kept from joining the NBA.
 
Idiot. Thats all I could say when I heard the story...

Bonzi Wells did the same thing..skipped shootaround as if he didn't expect their to be consequences as stupid as it was cuz he let his team down..I can kinda see why he did it...he didn't care about game 4 cuz he knew in his mind they were gonna lose....but Kwame...talk about idiot he decides to skip practice shootaround whatever it was the day after game 3 so now their series is an actual "series" where any one of the two unproven teams could take it....why? Why did he do this? Cuz he played 4 lousy minutes in game 3 and instead of being mature about he decides to skip practice and call out sick to game 4 of the playoffs--I said of the PLAYOFFS--I mean maybe he really was sick..but still come on this is the playoffs it is possible to go to practice and sit out cuz you are sick...don't just skip it...and it is possible to play limited minutes in game 4 cuz you are sick but don't bail on your team in this type of situation...its just not right...

I don't think Kwame will ever live up to his once said hype...why?...cuz quite frankly I don't think he really wants to and IMO he's made that pretty clear...his abilities on the court don't excite me and I feel like their are better big guys out there that you could get for cheap...
 
BullKing said:
Right on.....this is exactly why Stern wants the age limit. I mean this guy is still a baby....did you read some stories about him. Here:



geez, talk about being a baby.......maybe I shouldn't say it...but his mom didn't do a good job of preparing him for adult life, IMO.

That is totally ridiculous. Most of that stuff is common sense. My 11 year old has more sense than that come to think of it so does my 3 year old niece.
 
Age limits have nothing to do with it. Some people want it, some people don't. College helps because if they are playing college ball there is a higher chance that the NBA could evaluate desire.

The solution is an AA/AAA system. One that mimics baseball and hocky.
 
i love when people bring up the age limit thing when one person messes up, but they fail to talk about the Kobe's, Garnetts, TMac's, Oneals, Tyson Chandlers........ its common sense! if he hasnt learned by now he needs to show up to practice and actually give a crap about his team than he will never learn! I mean i knew that when i was in junior high! either you show up to practice and act like you care or you dont play! why would it be any different in the NBA?

on that note i have to say..... "practice, what we talking bout practice? Not a game man but practice!"
 
Tyson Chandlers
lol, Tyson is not a good example....both He and eddy struggled for the first 4 years in the league....after 4 years of struggling they are finally "NBA ready". They should've both went to college.
 
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