THIS WEEK:
- Dee gets an A
- Frozen in time
- Blitz Bits
Former Celtic Brown gets his âDream Jobâ
Dee Brown was Dee Brown before Dee Brown. While the University of
Illinois guard electrified the nation in leading his team to the 2005 NCAA
Finals, the first Dee Brown was a 1990 Celtics first round draft pick and 1991 NBA
Slam Dunk Champion. Both men have a habit of pleasing the crowd.
The former Celticâs latest command performance was on ESPNâs âDream
Job.â The most recent incarnation of that program had Brown battling fellow
ex-NBA players Matt Bullard, Darryl Dawkins, Gerald Wilkins, Dennis Scott and
J.R. Reid for a chance to become an ESPN studio analyst. Brownâs entrance into
this competition was involuntary.
âThey called and asked me,â says the former Jacksonville standout. â
I was working in the Orlando Magic front office and had done some fill-in
radio and TV games. I guess ESPN got wind that I was pretty good.â
What started as a whim has turned into a new career path for Brown.
He states, âI thought that I would have some fun with it. I was never trying
to get a job in broadcasting. (Celtics PR chief) Jeff Twiss told me that I
should get into television, but I had too much on my plate. I will say this.
âDream Jobâ brought me back to competition. You just donât get that once
you retire.â
The competition brought out the best in Brown who, despite some harsh
first show criticism from judges Al Jaffe and Stephen A. Smith, was head and
shoulders above his NBA brethren.
âAfter the first show, I had a feel for what they wanted,â says Brown
who played for Toronto and Orlando in addition to Boston. âI bring a lot of
knowledge to the table as a guy who played in the NBA, coached in the WNBA and
worked in an NBA front office. I am a perfectionist. I didnât just want
to win. I wanted to prove to myself that I could do this.â
Brown relates the judgesâ criticisms to his early days as a Celtic. â
My first year in Boston, I thought my name was âRook.â (Ex-Celtic coach)
Chris Ford was much tougher on me than Stephen A. Smith could ever be, but I
wouldnât trade those times for anything.
âI played with the Big 3 (Larry Bird, Robert Parish, Kevin McHale) and
then was the link between them, Antoine Walker and the Rick Pitino era. When
I go to Boston, they roll out the red carpet for me. Iâll always be
remembered as a Celtic.â
The finals of âDream Jobâ pitted Brown against Bullard. Brown says
that content made the difference. âTo be the best analyst, I have to give
information that fans canât get on their own, stuff that only a player, coach
and executive would know. I have to tell them why something happened on the
court.â
The âDream Jobâ formula forces players to assimilate a lot of data in
a short period of time. Says Brown, âThey throw a bunch of stuff at us. We
get the info on Sunday, then do a few hours of research before doing the show
on Sunday night.â
As with any analyst, Brown had to resist the temptation to emulate
others. He states, âI am Dee Brown, not Stephen A. Smith. I thought of using
clichĂ©s or catch phrases, but thatâs not me. I know (ESPN analysts) Greg
Anthony and Tim Legler but did not speak to them on purpose.
âI talked to (Boston Globe writer) Peter May and my friend Charles
Davis who has worked for Fox and TNT. May told me to be sure to have up to date
facts. Charles told me to look at the camera, be animated and let the video
speak for itself.â
While Brown seeks to make his mark as an analyst, as a player, he did
just that by pumping up his Reebok sneakers during the memorable 1991 Slam Dunk
competition. âI had no plans to do that,â recalls the 36 year-old Brown. â
Larry Bird and Kevin McHale encouraged me leading into the competition.
âThey were telling me what dunks to try. I told them that neither of
them had dunked in ten years. After the competition, I was at the hotel with
Bird and a group of fans ran past him to get to me. Bird told them, âShoot
like me, but dunk like Dee.â Then, he made me carry his bags to his room.â
Brownâs dunking made him a household name, but his 12-year career was
based on learning. He states, âI can relate to every facet of the game. I
was a starter, a Celtics captain, a sixth man and Iâve been injured. I was
never the best player on the court. Thatâs what made me a good coach.
âGuys like Isiah Thomas and Magic Johnson were so great that they are
not the best teachers. (Current Timberwolves coach) McHale told me that he canât wait to get out of coaching and get back upstairs. Phil Jackson, Larry Brown, these were role players who learned a lot and can teach.â
Brown says he will make his ESPN debut as a studio analyst in a week.
Just as he was at the Slam Dunk Competition, he is, well, pumped. âI canât
wait to get started and I am looking forward to calling out Stephen A. Smith
when he is wrong!â
On ice
For those of you quivering with hockey withdrawal, ESPN networks have
complete coverage of the NCAA Menâs Hockey Frozen Four from the campus of Ohio
State University.
Thursdayâs semifinals will be on ESPN2 and feature Colorado College vs.
Denver at 2:00 p.m. and North Dakota vs. Minnesota at 7:00 p.m. On
Saturday, the Championship game is on ESPN at 7:00 p.m. Thanks to the NHL lockout,
ESPNâs pro hockey broadcasters par excellence Gary Thorne and Bill Clement will
have the call.
Even with no New England entries, the Frozen Four promises to be hockey
heaven. It consistently provides great television thrills, from the 1998
overtime battle between Boston College and Michigan to Maine and UNH going to OT
in 1999 to a pair of amazing finals pitting BC vs. North Dakota in 2000 and
2001 to last yearâs 1-0 Denver win over Maine.
Itâs a must-see for hockey fans looking for something on which to hang their skates.
Blitz Bits
When CBS televises The Masters (third and fourth round coverage, Saturday at
3:30 p.m. and Sunday at 2:30 p.m.), the best talents in golf will be holding
microphones, not clubs. Jim Nantz is simply the best at setting the scene and
calling the shots. Lanny Wadkins, Bobby Clampett and golfâs best analyst,
David Feherty, are superb, and Peter Oosterhuis, Verne Lundquist, Peter Kostis
and Bill Macatee bring data with dignity. All this, plus Dick Enberg with
essays and interviews. Pop a cold one and enjoy.
Legendary on-camera presence Bob Costas again re-invents himself with âCostas
Nowâ debuting May 13 at 9:00 p.m. on HBO. Costas has deftly walked that
fine line between success and overexposure, but he remains utterly watchable.
His new show will combine edgy reporting, slick commentary and humor with one
eyebrow raised. Bring it on.
Beyond the incredible local ratings on UPN38 (17.6 rating), the Red
Sox-Yankees opener did a 2.7 nationally with an average household viewership of
2,396,000 homes, the highest rated and most viewed regular season Major League
Baseball telecast ever on ESPN2.
John Moloriâs Media Blitz column is published in The Providence Journal, The
Boston Metro, The Lawrence Eagle-Tribune, The Salem Evening News, The
Newburyport Daily News, The Gloucester Times, The Lowell Sun, Patriots Football
Weekly, Boston Sports Review, New England Hockey Journal, PatsFans.com,
BostonPressBox.com, BostonSportsMedia.com, RedSoxNation.net and MethuenOnline.com. Email
John at JOMOL3@aol.com.