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GINNNNNNNNNNNNOBILI
11-25-2004, 10:29 PM
resigned as coach of grizz reported on tnt

Manu20
11-25-2004, 10:31 PM
Who is replacing him???

Johnny_Blaze_47
11-25-2004, 10:33 PM
Damn. I hope it's not due to illness or anything.

Happy trails, Hubie.

GINNNNNNNNNNNNOBILI
11-25-2004, 10:34 PM
Lyonell Hollins, i guess he was an assistant

ducks
11-25-2004, 10:36 PM
said it was due to health reasons

timvp
11-25-2004, 10:36 PM
Good luck, Hubie. Hope to see you back in the booth.

Aggie Hoopsfan
11-25-2004, 10:38 PM
Bummer, Hubie's a good guy.

Johnny_Blaze_47
11-25-2004, 10:38 PM
said it was due to health reasons

:depressed

Johnny_Blaze_47
11-25-2004, 10:43 PM
http://www.nba.com/grizzlies/news/brown_retirement_041125.html

Grizzlies Head Coach Hubie Brown Announces Retirement

Memphis, Tennessee, November 25, 2004 -- Grizzlies President of Basketball Operations Jerry West announced that after a successful 33-year basketball coaching career, Grizzlies Head Coach Hubie Brown is retiring. Grizzlies Assistant Coach Lionel Hollins has been named the team’s interim head coach.

“Unexpected health-related issues will not allow me to continue coaching the Memphis Grizzlies,” said Hubie Brown. “This situation was unforeseen and absolutely non-existent at the beginning of the season.”

Brown, who joined the team on November 12, 2002 as the sixth head coach in team history, coached the Grizzlies to an 83-85 (.494) record during his tenure. Last season, his first full season at the helm, Brown led the Grizzlies to one of the biggest turnarounds in NBA history. Under his command, the Grizzlies won 50 games, shattered almost every team record and earned the team’s first-ever playoff berth. His 78-78 record through the 2003-04 season with the Grizzlies made him the only coach in team history to have a .500 record, becoming the winningest head coach in team history. After the outstanding 2003-04 season, Brown was named the NBA’s Coach of the Year, winning the award for the second time in his 15-year NBA career.

“This is an extremely sad day for me,” said Grizzlies President of Basketball Operations Jerry West. “This franchise is by far better from the leadership and guidance of Hubie Brown, and we will be forever grateful to Hubie. Hubie has helped this team and organization receive the respect and stature it deserved. On a personal note, I had an incredible working relationship with him during our short time together, and his legacy will be felt by all of us.”

Brown’s coaching career spans 33 years, including 15 with the NBA, in which he led the New York Knicks to two playoff appearances during five seasons (1982-87), the Atlanta Hawks to three playoff appearances during five seasons (1976-81) and led the Kentucky Colonels to an ABA (American Basketball Association) Championship in 1975. He also spent 15 years as a highly regarded teacher at coaching clinics and as an NBA broadcast analyst for three television networks, was nominated for a Sports Emmy in 1994 and 1999 and received the Curt Gowdy Electronic Media Award from the Naismith Memorial Basketball Hall of Fame in 2000.

Hollins takes over as the Grizzlies’ interim head coach for the second time in his career. He first joined the Grizzlies as the lead assistant in Vancouver during the team’s inaugural season in 1995-96. Hollins served that role for four and a half seasons before taking over as head coach midway through the 1999-00 NBA season. As Interim Head Coach, Hollins guided Vancouver to an 18-42 finish, 22-60 overall. In 2002-03, he returned to the Grizzlies to serve as assistant coach.

Hollins’ coaching experience includes seven years (1988-95) as an assistant coach with the Phoenix Suns. While with the Suns, Phoenix compiled a 394-180 overall record, while posting 50 or more wins and reaching the playoffs in seven consecutive seasons. Phoenix also reached the 1993 NBA Finals, while winning two Pacific Division Titles in 1993 and 1995. He began his coaching career at his alma mater, Arizona State University, where he served two years (1985-86, 1987-88) as an assistant coach.

ducks
11-25-2004, 10:49 PM
“Unexpected health-related issues will not allow me to continue coaching the Memphis Grizzlies,” said Hubie Brown. “This situation was unforeseen and absolutely non-existent at the beginning of the season.”

OUCH!

ducks
11-25-2004, 10:53 PM
I wonder if mem knew this could happen and wanted to beat the spurs for him the other night

TwoHandJam
11-25-2004, 11:14 PM
Fuck, does this mean Phil Jackson will be jonesing for the job now?

IcemanCometh
11-25-2004, 11:22 PM
wow

IcemanCometh
11-25-2004, 11:22 PM
ESPN's Jim Gray reported that Mike Fratello is the leading candidate to replace Brown.

But jim gray is a douche

xcoriate
11-25-2004, 11:44 PM
Get well soon Hubie

mattyc
11-26-2004, 12:40 AM
Is rather sad to see a Basketball brain the ilk of Hubies being outted from the game due to health reasons. :(

ALVAREZ6
11-26-2004, 01:04 AM
wow, yea hubie ws gettin old huh?

ALVAREZ6
11-26-2004, 01:13 AM
Lionel Hollins is going to take over as the interum head coach for the Grizz, who was an assistant.

adidas11
11-26-2004, 12:17 PM
He is 71 years old. And I doubt Phil Jackson will be returning to coaching anytime soon, if ever.

Phenomanul
11-26-2004, 01:06 PM
He is 71 years old. And I doubt Phil Jackson will be returning to coaching anytime soon, if ever.


Don't be surprised if Phil does want to come back.... Didn't West lure him to LA the first time around....

ducks
11-26-2004, 01:07 PM
west and phil left angry if I recall correct

Jimcs50
11-26-2004, 02:41 PM
More than likely Prostate cancer is the reason.

IcemanCometh
11-26-2004, 02:47 PM
West and Phil do not like each other. Phil forced West out.

exstatic
11-26-2004, 03:56 PM
Fuck, does this mean Phil Jackson will be jonesing for the job now?

Phil only takes jobs where the team has already recently been to the conference finals. Makes him look like a good coach, or something.

timvp
11-26-2004, 03:59 PM
Plus Phil Jackson and Jerry West hate each other.

grjr
11-26-2004, 04:00 PM
Don't be surprised if Phil does want to come back.... Didn't West lure him to LA the first time around....

I believe 2 of the top 5 players in the league lured Phil to LA. I don't think Bonzi Wells fits that description.

Manu20
11-26-2004, 04:04 PM
Phil Jackson only coaches good players. In LA he had Shaq and Kobe and in Chicago he had Jordan and Pippen that is the only reason he has 9 championships.

dcole50
11-26-2004, 04:54 PM
sad news.

i think it was very admirable of hubie to return and try to coach the grizz. lots of coaches would have left after the year he had last year, especially considering the fact that memphis will not be a 50 win team again, in my opinon at least.

boutons
11-26-2004, 05:27 PM
Brown Cites Lost Spirit for Retirement

November 26, 2004
By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS



Filed at 5:03 p.m. ET

MEMPHIS, Tenn. (AP) -- The grind of the NBA finally got to
Hubie Brown, who at 71 had neither the fervor for the job
nor the good health needed to remain the coach of the
Memphis Grizzlies.

Brown called it quits just seven months after being
selected Coach of the Year, citing the rigors of the
day-to-day life in the league and a health issue he
described as non-catastrophic.

``I need on a daily basis an energy and a stamina, and then
with me it's a spirit. But the key is spirit. See, the
spirit is what gives you the passion on a daily basis,'' he
said in a 50-minute news conference in which every question
received his typically lengthy answers.

``One day you wake up, you don't have that, and that's when
you've got to understand that it's a time you've got to
walk.''

Lionel Hollins took over as interim coach, and team
president Jerry West was vague as to how long Hollins might
remain in the post.

In explaining his reasons, Brown pointed out that he had
coached 188 games with the Grizzlies over slightly more
than two years, which he equated to six years for a high
school or college team.

The grind of seven-day workweeks and endless travel became
more than he wanted to endure.

Brown led the Grizzlies to a franchise-best 50-32 record
last season and the franchise's first playoff appearance.

He said his medical condition, which he did not detail, was
something that developed three weeks ago. He had an
extensive physical prior to this season before deciding to
return.

``I've had things come up that your body gives you a
warning sign, and you'll see. Until you get up there, you
aren't going to understand it,'' Brown said.

Brown stepped down a day after the Grizzlies fell to 5-7
with a 93-84 loss to the Seattle SuperSonics. His career
coaching record is 424-495, or 528-559 including ABA games.


West, who had hoped Brown would stick around for another
year with a team that just moved into a new arena, said it
will be tough for him to stay without Brown.

``My future will be decided when I feel like he feels
now,'' said West, who came out of retirement himself in
2002 to take over the Grizzlies after 18 years as general
manager of the Los Angeles Lakers.

Hearing that Brown had lost his spirit surprised New York
Knicks coach Lenny Wilkens, who called him the embodiment
of the sport.

``He'd rather talk basketball than eat,'' Wilkens said.
Every conversation I've had with him, it's about the
game.''

Brown returned to coaching in 2002 after a 16-year break
during which he became a highly regarded television
analyst. He also coached the Atlanta Hawks from 1976-81 and
the Knicks from 1982-86.

At every stop, Brown's teams won more games in his first
full season than in the previous year. He leaves as the
winningest coach in Memphis history, 83-85.

Brown broke the news to the Grizzlies before they left
Thursday night for Minnesota.

``My biggest regret is that I didn't meet them when I was
in my 40s and 50s because I had more to give than I do now
because I was more alert, more astute, more observant and I
saw more,'' Brown said, ``and I apologized to them because
I met them too late in my life.''

The news shocked the Grizzlies who spoke with reporters
after a shootaround in Minneapolis.

``I'm sorry because he was the greatest that I've ever been
around, and he gave us everything he had at the age that he
is,'' Gasol said.

Bonzi Wells, who had a troubled career before Memphis
picked him up last December in a trade with Portland,
credited Brown with giving him back his spirit for the game
and called him a great mentor and teacher.

``Just wanting to go out and work hard for somebody every
day, that's the way he made me want to play every day, and
I'm going to miss that,'' Wells said.

West said Hollins may remain the Grizzlies' coach for a few
games or the rest of the season. West also wants to keep
Brown, the man he calls a ``walking encyclopedia,'' on in
some capacity.

Brown said he will return to speaking at coaching clinics.


The Grizzlies had some friction earlier this season when
Jason Williams started yelling at Brown and his son and
assistant coach, Brendan Brown, during the third quarter of
a loss to the Mavericks in Dallas on Nov. 7. Williams did
not return to the game.

Asked if that contributed to any stress, Brown quickly
dismissed that as an issue.

Memphis forward Shane Battier thinks Brown deserves to
spend some time with his wife, Claire, and his
grandchildren while the Grizzlies try to continue building
on what the coach started.

``We're all luckier people to have worked with him for the
two years that we did,'' Battier said.

Copyright 2004 The New York Times Company

adidas11
11-26-2004, 06:29 PM
Quote: "I believe 2 of the top 5 players in the league lured Phil to LA. I don't think Bonzi Wells fits that description."

Kobe Bryant was only on the third team All-NBA when Phil joined the Lakers. Kobe was not considered a Top 10 NBA player at the time.

Slo spurs fan
11-27-2004, 03:43 AM
And he's still out from best 10 now!