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Larry Brown (basketball)

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
American basketball coach and former player
For other people named Larry Brown, seeLarry Brown (disambiguation).

Larry Brown
Brown in 2014
Personal information
Born (1940-09-14)September 14, 1940 (age 85)
Listed height5 ft 9 in (1.75 m)
Listed weight165 lb (75 kg)
Career information
High schoolLong Beach (Lido Beach, New York)
CollegeNorth Carolina (1960–1963)
NBA draft1963: 7th round, 55th overall pick
Drafted byBaltimore Bullets
Playing career1967–1972
PositionPoint guard
Number11
Coaching career1965–1967, 1972–2022
Career history
Playing
1967–1968New Orleans Buccaneers
19681971Oakland Oaks / Washington Caps / Virginia Squires
19711972Denver Rockets
Coaching
1965–1967North Carolina (assistant)
19721974Carolina Cougars
19741979Denver Nuggets
1979–1981UCLA
19811983New Jersey Nets
1983–1988Kansas
19881992San Antonio Spurs
19921993Los Angeles Clippers
19931997Indiana Pacers
19972003Philadelphia 76ers
20032005Detroit Pistons
2005–2006New York Knicks
20082010Charlotte Bobcats
2012–2016SMU
2018Auxilium Torino
2021Memphis (assistant)
2022Memphis (advisor to HC)
Career highlights
As player:

As coach:

*Vacated by the NCAA
Career ABA playing statistics
Points4,229 (11.2 ppg)
Rebounds1,005 (2.7 rpg)
Assists2,509 (6.7 apg)
Stats atBasketball Reference
Career coaching record
ABA & NBA1327–1011 (.568)
Record atBasketball Reference Edit this at Wikidata
Basketball Hall of Fame
Collegiate Basketball Hall of Fame

Lawrence Harvey Brown (born September 14, 1940[1]) is an Americanbasketball coach and former player who last served as an assistant coach for theMemphis Tigers. Brown is the only coach in basketball history to win both anNCAAnational championship (Kansas Jayhawks, 1988) and anNBA title (Detroit Pistons, 2004). He has a 1,275–965 lifetime professional coaching record in theAmerican Basketball Association (ABA) and theNational Basketball Association (NBA) and is the only coach in NBA history to lead eight teams (differing franchises) to the playoffs. He also won an ABA championship as a player with theOakland Oaks in the 1968–69 season, and an Olympic gold medal in 1964. He is also the only person ever to coach two NBA franchises in the same season (Spurs andClippers during the1991–92 NBA season).[2] Before coaching, Brown played collegiately at theUniversity of North Carolina and professionally in the ABA.

Brown was enshrined in theBasketball Hall of Fame as a coach on September 27, 2002. On July 8, 2021, theNational Basketball Coaches Association awarded Brown theChuck Daly Lifetime Achievement Award.[3]

Early life and early basketball accomplishments

[edit]

Brown isJewish[4] and was born inBrooklyn, New York.[5] His maternal grandfather Hittelman was fromMinsk, Belarus, and his mother's family immigrated to the United States in 1910 and opened a bakery in Brooklyn.[6] His mother met his father Milton Brown, a furniture salesman, when she was 26 years old.[6] He has an older brother,Herbert, who has been an NBA head coach.[6] In 1947 his father died suddenly of a rupturedaneurysm.[6] His family moved first to Brooklyn, then toLong Beach, New York, onLong Island.[6] His mother lived until the age of 106.[6]

A 5 ft 9 in (1.75 m)point guard, Brown attendedLong Beach High School.[7] He won a gold medal with Team USA in basketball at the1961 Maccabiah Games in Israel, on a team that includedArt Heyman andCharley Rosen.[8][9][10]

Brown attendedUniversity of North Carolina, where he played basketball under legendary coachesFrank McGuire andDean Smith. Brown was an All-Atlantic Coast Conference player in 1963.[10]

Playing career

[edit]

A stellar player for theTar Heels in the early 1960s, Brown was considered too small to play in the NBA. He began his post-college career with theNational Alliance of Basketball Leagues'sAkron Wingfoots, where he played for two years (1964–65). He led the Wingfoots to the 1964 AAU National Championship. Brown was selected for Team USA's1964 Summer Olympics team, which won thegold medal.[4]

After a two-year stint (1965–1967) as an assistant coach at North Carolina, Brown joined the upstartAmerican Basketball Association, playing with theNew Orleans Buccaneers (1967–68),Oakland Oaks (1968–69),Washington Caps (1969–70),Virginia Squires (1970–71), andDenver Rockets (1971–72). Brown was named MVP of the ABA'sfirst All-Star Game in 1968, and was named to the All-ABA Second Team the same year. Brown led the ABA in assists per game during the league's first three seasons, and when he ended his playing career, Brown was the ABA's all-time assist leader. His total of 2,509 assists places him seventh on the ABA's career list, and he holds the ABA record for assists in a game with 23.[11] He was a three-time ABA All-Star.[12]

Coaching and management career

[edit]

Early years: 1969–1983

[edit]
Brown in 1979

Brown's first head coaching job was atDavidson College in North Carolina in 1969. He resigned after less than two months, having never fielded a team or coached a game. He did not discuss the reasons for his resignation, saying only that "it was in the best interests of Davidson and myself".[13] He has later stated that it was a matter of the program reneging on promises made.[14]

Brown coaching UCLA circa 1981

In the summer of 1972, with a sore hip that was plaguing his play with Denver (he later had it replaced), Brown was offered to coach theCarolina Cougars by team ownerTedd Munchak. Despite favoring college coaching over the pros, he elected to take the "great opportunity" and coach for $30,000. He then hired his friend and ex-teammateDoug Moe as an assistant coach. Using a "run-and-jump defense" that emphasized quickness and bench depth that could share minutes (at one point, Brown had four guards he had play equal time), the Cougars won 57 games in his first year;Billy Cunningham, who lept from the NBA, won league MVP that year. The passing-game offense emphasized moving the ball quickly rather than isolation. After the second season, Brown left the team.[15]

Brown left to coach theDenver Nuggets in 1974. He soon built a rapport with the team, and in their first season, they scored 118.7 points per game and won the Western Division for the first time in five years with a 65–19 record.[16] They made it to the Division Finals but lost in a seven-game series to the Indiana Pacers. The Nuggets, now packed in a league that went from nine teams to just seven by its end, won the most games with a record of 60–24. They defeated the Kentucky Colonels in a tight seven-game series reach their first and only ABA Finals. The Nuggets lost three of the first four games before winning Game 5 and leading in the third quarter of Game 6 before the Nets rallied back to win the game and the series. As it turned out, it was the final game of theAmerican Basketball Association and the last time the Nuggets reached a league final until 2023. Despite the high fee to join the NBA and a new placement in the Midwest Division, the Nuggets went 50–32 and won the division title before losing to the eventual NBA championPortland Trail Blazers in the First Round in six games. In the next season, they won 48 games for another division title and managed to win their first playoff series to get to the Conference Finals against theSeattle SuperSonics, where the Nuggets were beaten by the Sonics in six games. In the middle of the 1978–79 season, Brown clashed with general managerCarl Scheer over the latter's refusal to tradeDan Issel and elected on February 2, 1979, to resign under apparent strain of a near emotional collapse.[17][18]

He then moved on to coach forUCLA (1979–1981), leading his freshman-dominated1979–80 team to theNCAA title game before falling toLouisville, 59–54. However, that appearance was later vacated by the NCAA after two UCLA players were found to be ineligible—one of the few times a Final Four squad has had its record vacated. Brown was the head coach for the NBA'sNew Jersey Nets for two years following that, from 1981 to 1983.

University of Kansas: 1983–1988

[edit]

Brown began his tenure at theUniversity of Kansas (1983–1988), replacing the firedTed Owens, who had overseen back-to-back losing seasons in 1981–82 and 1982–83. Brown's impact was felt almost immediately, as the 1983–84 Jayhawks put together a 22–10 record, finished in second place in that year'sBig 8 standings, upsetOklahoma to win the 1984 Big 8 Tournament, and advanced to the1984 NCAA Tournament's Round of 32 before losing toWake Forest. In the meantime Brown signed the most coveted high school player in the country,Danny Manning, to play for KU after signing his father,Ed Manning, to a position as an assistant coach.

Perhaps Brown's finest team at Kansas was the1985–86 team. This squad put together a 35–4 record, the first 30-win season in KU history. They won the Big 8 regular season title for the first time since 1978, defeatedIowa State to win the 1986 Big 8 Tournament, and advanced to the1986 Final Four before losing toDuke in the semifinals.

In the1987–88 season, Kansas got off to a mediocre 12–8 start, including 1–4 in the Big 8, and the end of the Jayhawks' 55-game homecourt winning streak inAllen Fieldhouse. Ultimately, behind the high-scoring ofDanny Manning, KU rallied to win nine of their next twelve games to finish third place in the Big 8 and qualify for the1988 NCAA tournament as a 6-seed in the Midwest Regional. Kansas then proceeded to defeat 11th-seed Xavier, 14th-seed Murray State, and 7th-seed Vanderbilt before meeting rivalKansas State, which had beaten KU twice in three meetings that year. KU upset the 4th-seeded Wildcats 71–58 in the Elite Eight to reach the Final Four in Kansas City'sKemper Arena. Once there, Kansas upset the East Region's #2 seedDuke, 66–59, avenging an overtime loss at home to the Blue Devils earlier in the season. Two nights later, the Jayhawks, who became known as "Danny and the Miracles", upset the Southeast Region's #1-seed and fellow Big 8 rivalOklahoma, 83–79, to avenge a regular-season sweep by the Sooners and win the 1988 NCAA championship. Manning, who scored 31 points and grabbed 18 rebounds in the final, was named Most Outstanding Player of the Tournament. Kansas concluded the year 27–11; the 11 losses remain a record for most losses by an NCAA champion to this day.

Two months later, Brown opted to return to professional coaching, departing KU for theSan Antonio Spurs. In his five seasons at Kansas, Brown had one Big 8 regular season title, two Big 8 postseason titles, five NCAA Tournament appearances, three Sweet 16 appearances, two trips to the Final Four, and one national title. As a collegiate coach, he had a cumulative coaching record of 177–61 (.744) in seven seasons, including a 135–44 (.754) record at Kansas. His efforts led to him being named "Coach of the Year" for the NCAA in 1988 and "Coach of the Year" for theBig Eight Conference in 1986.

After Brown left Kansas to return to the NBA, NCAA sanctions were levied against Kansas in the 1988–89 season as a result of multiple recruiting violations; potential transferVincent Askew was provided with money to leave his campus to visit his ill grandmother, and the "casual administration of a summer jobs program" that was linked to other "violations of NCAA regulations."[19] No players on any of Brown's teams were named in the report, and Askew did not transfer to Kansas. The Jayhawks were given three years' probation and banned from the 1989 NCAA Tournament–to date, the only time a defending champion has been barred from defending its title. They were also docked one scholarship for the 1989–90 season, and barred from paid visits during the 1989 calendar year. As harsh as these sanctions were, the infractions committee seriously considered imposing a "death penalty" on Kansas, which would have resulted in canceling the entire 1988–89 season. Indeed, enforcement director David Berst said that Kansas was "on the bubble" for a death penalty. However, the committee opted against imposing a death penalty because Askew was the only player who received impermissible benefits, and because Brown had returned to the NBA by then.[20][21]

San Antonio Spurs: 1988–1992

[edit]

Brown was hired to coach theSan Antonio Spurs in 1988, signing a five-year, $3.5 million contract.[22] With Brown at the helm, the Spurs won two consecutive Midwest Division titles. In his second season, the Spurs, led byDavid Robinson–who finally joined the Spurs after serving his two-year naval commitment–vaulted from the worst record in franchise history to the best. Brown remained with the Spurs until he was fired on January 21, 1992.[23] He described his tenure later as a rocky one in his press conference for his next coaching position, saying "In San Antonio, we won 21 games my first year, and that never satisfied our owner (referring toRed McCombs). From Day 1, I felt he felt he made a terrible mistake in hiring me, and no matter what we did after that I always felt that was the case...I have a commitment from the Clippers. I think they made a statement, and I think that statement will be made to the players. I don't know if our players in San Antonio ever felt that I was in control of the basketball end."[24]

Los Angeles Clippers: 1992–1993

[edit]

On February 7, 1992, Brown was hired to coach the Los Angeles Clippers.[25] He took a sub-.500 team in 1992 and guided them to their first winning season since the franchise moved to Los Angeles and their first playoff berth since they were theBuffalo Braves in 1976. He followed that up the next season with another playoff appearance in 1993. Brown resigned his position on May 21, 1993.[26] The Clippers claimed to be surprised by the move, as he left with two years remaining on a contract that paid him $750,000 a year while on vacation in May. Brown claimed he resigned in February, which they accepted, although he stated that they tried to later offer him a contract for life (with a request from ownerDonald Sterling himself) that they did not follow up on. He was the first fulltime Clippers coach to finish with awinning record in his tenure and the only one untilVinny Del Negro twenty years later.[27]

Indiana Pacers: 1993–1997

[edit]

Brown was hired by the Indiana Pacers in June 1993.[28] Prior to Brown being their coach, the Pacers had never won a postseason series since joining the NBA. He proceeded to lead them to the conference finals on two occasions. On December 13, 1996, he won his 594th game as an NBA coach with a 97–94 victory over theBoston Celtics. Combined with his wins in the NCAA and the ABA, it was his 1,000th combined win as a head coach.[29] He resigned his position on April 30, 1997, citing his frustration with the team's inability to advance past the conference finals, which he felt was his responsibility. In four seasons, he had gone 190–138.[30][31]

Philadelphia 76ers: 1997–2003

[edit]

Brown was hired as head coach of the Philadelphia 76ers in 1997. The 76ers had lost 60 games prior to Brown's arrival, but they were brightened by the emergence ofAllen Iverson, who won Rookie of the Year. The 1997–98 season was the only one under Brown that the 76ers did not reach the postseason, as they went 31–51. In the strike-shortened 1998–99 season, they finished 6th in the Eastern Conference to reach the postseason for the first time since 1991. They advanced to the Semifinals after a first-round win, but they lost to the Indiana Pacers in a four-game sweep. The following year was essentially a repeat as they lost again to the Pacers in the Semifinals. The 2000–01 season, however, would be different. Bolstered by the efforts of Iverson, who led the league in scoring with 31.1 points per game and the defensive dominance ofDikembe Mutombo, the team rocketed their way to 56 wins, the first 50-win season since the 1989–90 team. They dispatched the Pacers in four games but had to deal with tough opponents in the Toronto Raptors and the Milwaukee Bucks in the Semifinals and Conference finals, respectively. Philadelphia won each of those series in seven games. They faced the defending championLos Angeles Lakers in the2001 NBA Finals, who had not lost any of their postseason games that year. The Sixers gave them trouble in Game 1 of the series, which saw them pull off an overtime win 107–101 with Iverson scoring 48 points. As it turned out, it would be the only highlight of the Finals for the Sixers, who lost the next four games to lose the series. After the season, Brown was named Coach of the Year.

The following year saw the team plagued by injury while making the playoffs as a 6 seed. They lost to the Boston Celtics in five games. The next year, they went 48-34 and made it in as a 4 seed. They beat the New Orleans Hornets in the first round before the Detroit Pistons ended their season with a six-game victory. Brown resigned his post in 2003. Brown also served as Director of Basketball Operations in Philadelphia.[32]

In 2005,Allen Iverson, who frequently clashed with Brown when he played for him in Philadelphia, said that he was without a doubt "the best coach in the world".[33]

Detroit Pistons and U.S. National Team: 2003–2005

[edit]

Brown was hired to replaceRick Carlisle to coach theDetroit Pistons. Brown won his first (and ultimately only) NBA championship during his first year with theDetroit Pistons in 2004, defeating theLos Angeles Lakers four games to one in the2004 NBA Finals. By doing so, Brown became the first, and so far only, coach to lead teams to both NCAA and NBA titles. Brown is also the only NBA coach to take two teams (76ers and Pistons) to the NBA Finals against the same opponent (Los Angeles Lakers in 2001 and 2004), lose the first time, and win the second.

Brown was chosen as the head coach for theUnited States men's basketball team at the2004 Summer Olympics.[34] That team won the bronze medal at the Olympics; it was the first U.S. men's basketball team to fail to win gold at a Summer Olympics since NBA players began playing on the U.S. men's team in 1992.[35]

In May 2005, rumors surfaced that Brown would become theCleveland Cavaliers' team president as soon as theDetroit Pistons finished theirpostseason. At any rate, the Pistons played theSan Antonio Spurs to seven games in the2005 NBA Finals. The Pistons were up two points with 9.4 seconds to play in game 5 and had to defend an inbound play.Rasheed Wallace was assigned to guardRobert Horry. On the play, Wallace trappedManu Ginobili, who passed it away to Horry, who found time to shoot the game-winning three for the Spurs.Chauncey Billups (the Finals MVP from the previous year), who was not in the game for the final play, stated later that Brown "just kind of choked" in that game.[36]

On July 19, 2005, the Pistons, displeased with Brown's public flirtations with other teams—bought out the remaining years of Brown's contract, allowing him to sign with another team.[37][38] A week later, on July 28, 2005, Brown became the head coach of theNew York Knicks,[39] with a 5-year contract reportedly worth between US$50 million and $60 million, making him the highest-paid coach in NBA history.

New York Knicks: 2005–2006

[edit]
Brown (center) coaching the New York Knicks in 2005

On January 13, 2006, the Knicks beat theAtlanta Hawks to give Brown his 1,000th win in the NBA, making him only the fourth coach to do so (at the time, the other three wereLenny Wilkens,Don Nelson, andPat Riley; coincidentally, all three had previously served ascoach of the Knicks at some point in their careers.[40]

Brown's tenure as Knicks head coach lasted one season. The Knicks fired him on June 23, 2006, after he led the team to a 23–59 record. Brown's season with the Knicks was marred by public feuds with his own players, most notably point guardStephon Marbury.[41] After the firing, the Knicks declined to pay the remaining sum (more than $40 million) under Brown's contract on the grounds that he had been terminated for cause. Before the contract dispute was to be heard by NBA Commissioner David Stern, Brown reached an agreement with the Knicks wherein the team agreed to pay him $18.5 million.[42]

Philadelphia 76ers front office: 2007–2008

[edit]

In January 2007, Brown became Executive Vice President of the Philadelphia 76ers.[42] Brown resigned in April 2008.[43]

Charlotte Bobcats: 2008–2010

[edit]

On April 29, 2008, Brown signed to become the head coach of theCharlotte Bobcats – his ninth NBA coaching job.[44] He managed to keep the relatively young team in playoff contention. The following season, Brown guided the Bobcats to the franchise's first ever playoff appearance. Charlotte was the eighth team he had led to the postseason, an NBA record.

On December 22, 2010, Brown parted ways with the Bobcats after the team started the 2010–2011 season with a record of 9–19. His departure was officially characterized as a resignation, but other sources reported that Brown was fired.[45][46] Assistant coachJeff Capel II toldThe Charlotte Observer that the entire coaching staff had been fired.[45]

He returned to Lawrence, Kansas to coach in an exhibition match on September 24, 2011, for the "Legends of the Phog" event, oppositeTed Owens, in which various Kansas Jayhawks Basketball alumni played an exhibition game during the2011 NBA lockout.[47]

Southern Methodist University: 2012–2016

[edit]

On April 17, 2012,ESPN reported that Brown was to be named the new head coach of theSMU Mustangs, replacingMatt Doherty, who had been fired from SMU earlier in March.Tim Jankovich, the head coach ofIllinois State, was hired as the coach-in-waiting.[48]

After a rebuilding season in 2012–2013 (15–17), Brown brought SMU into the national conversation the following year, as the school made its first appearance in The Associated Press Top 25 rankings since 1985.[49] SMU went on to be the overall number one seed in theNational Invitational Tournament, losing in the final game of the tournament toMinnesota, and finished the year with a record of 27–10.[50][51] In the 2014–2015 season, SMU won the American Athletic Conference tournament and secured its first NCAA Tournament appearance since 1993.[52]

On September 29, 2015, Brown was suspended by the NCAA for 30% of the Mustangs' games in the upcoming 2015–2016 season, and the team was banned from 2016 post-season play, placed on probation for three years, and lost nine scholarships over a three-year period. The NCAA found that Brown failed to report violations when a former administrative assistant committed academic fraud on behalf of a student-athlete and he initially lied to enforcement staff about his knowledge of the potential violations.[53]

On July 8, 2016, Brown announced his resignation as head basketball coach.[54]

Auxilium Torino: 2018

[edit]

On June 12, 2018, Brown accepted the proposal ofAuxilium Torino to become the new head coach of the Italian basketball club of theLega Basket Serie A (LBA).[55] On June 17, he officially became new head coach of Torino.[56] He was fired midseason on December 27 with the team's record at just 5–19.[57]

University of Memphis: 2021–2022

[edit]

In June 2021, Brown joined the coaching staff of theMemphis Tigers men's basketball program, as an assistant coach under head coach and former NBA playerPenny Hardaway.[58] Brown had most recently served as an assistant coach in 1967.[58] After the2021–22 season, Brown transitioned to an advisory role for Memphis before stepping down mid-season due to health concerns.[59]

Career playing statistics

[edit]
Legend
  GPGames played  GS Games started MPG Minutes per game
 FG% Field goal percentage 3P% 3-point field goal percentage FT% Free throw percentage
 RPG Rebounds per game APG Assists per game SPG Steals per game
 BPG Blocks per game PPG Points per game Bold Career high
 * Led the league
Denotes seasons in which Brown's team won anABA championship
*ABA record

ABA

[edit]

Source[60]

Regular season

[edit]
YearTeamGPMPGFG%3P%FT%RPGAPGPPG
1967–68New Orleans7836.0.366.213.8133.26.5*13.4
1968–69Oakland7730.9.436.229.7943.17.1*12.0
1969–70Washington8233.7.440.256.8253.07.1*13.7
1970–71Virginia2918.3.404.500.8311.64.25.5
Denver3423.9.360.263.8241.86.18.4
1971–72Denver7626.5.437.200.8112.27.29.1
Career37630.1.412.230.8132.76.7*11.2
All-Star320.7.444.667.7782.05.08.3

Playoffs

[edit]
YearTeamGPMPGFG%3P%FT%RPGAPGPPG
1968New Orleans1740.9.425.222.8203.57.616.7
1969Oakland1633.4.428.000.8443.35.414.0
1970Washington738.4.452.200.8825.09.713.9
1972Denver730.1.420.000.9581.45.19.3
Career4736.4.429.172.8483.36.8*14.3

Head coaching record

[edit]

ABA and NBA

[edit]
Legend
Regular seasonGGames coachedWGames wonLGames lostW–L %Win–loss %
PlayoffsPGPlayoff gamesPWPlayoff winsPLPlayoff lossesPW–L %Playoff win–loss %
TeamYearGWLW–L%FinishPGPWPLPW–L%Result
Carolina[a]1972–73845727.6791st in East1275.583Lost inDivision finals
Carolina[a]1973–74844737.5603rd in East404.000Lost inDivision semifinals
Denver[a]1974–75846519.7741st in West1376.538Lost inDivision finals
Denver[a]1975–76846024.7141st in West1367.462Lost inABA Finals
Denver1976–77825032.6101st in Midwest624.333Lost inConf. Semifinals
Denver1977–78824834.5851st in Midwest1367.462Lost inConf. Finals
Denver1978–79532825.528
New Jersey1981–82824438.5373rd in Atlantic202.000Lost infirst round
New Jersey1982–83764729.618
San Antonio1988–89822161.2565th in MidwestMissed Playoffs
San Antonio1989–90825626.6831st in Midwest1064.600Lost inConf. Semifinals
San Antonio1990–91825527.6711st in Midwest413.250Lost infirst round
San Antonio1991–92382117.553
L.A. Clippers1991–92352312.6575th in Pacific523.400Lost infirst round
L.A. Clippers1992–93824141.5005th in Pacific523.400Lost infirst round
Indiana1993–94824735.5734th in Central16106.625Lost inConf. Finals
Indiana1994–95825230.6341st in Central17107.588Lost inConf. Finals
Indiana1995–96825230.6342nd in Central523.400Lost infirst round
Indiana1996–97823943.4766th in CentralMissed Playoffs
Philadelphia1997–98823151.3787th in AtlanticMissed Playoffs
Philadelphia1998–99502822.5603rd in Atlantic835.375Lost inConf. Semifinals
Philadelphia1999–00824933.5983rd in Atlantic1055.500Lost inConf. Semifinals
Philadelphia2000–01825626.6831st in Atlantic231211.522Lost inNBA Finals
Philadelphia2001–02824339.5244th in Atlantic523.400Lost infirst round
Philadelphia2002–03824834.5852nd in Atlantic1266.500Lost inConf. Semifinals
Detroit2003–04825428.6592nd in Central23167.696WonNBA Championship
Detroit2004–05825428.6591st in Central251510.600Lost inNBA Finals
New York2005–06822359.2805th in AtlanticMissed Playoffs
Charlotte2008–09823547.4274th in SoutheastMissed Playoffs
Charlotte2009–10824438.5373rd in Southeast404.000Lost infirst round
Charlotte2010–1128919.321
ABA Career[a]336229107.682422022.476
NBA Career2,0021,098904.54819310093.518
Career Total2,3381,3271,011.568235120115.511
  1. ^abcdeIndicates season in theAmerican Basketball Association (ABA).

College

[edit]
Statistics overview
SeasonTeamOverallConferenceStandingPostseason
UCLA Bruins(Pacific-10 Conference)(1979–1981)
1979–80UCLA22–10 (17–9)12–64thNCAA Division I Runner-up (vacated)*
1980–81UCLA20–713–53rdNCAA Division I second round
UCLA:37–16 (.698)25–11 (.694)
Kansas Jayhawks(Big Eight Conference)(1983–1988)
1983–84Kansas22–109–52ndNCAA Division I second round
1984–85Kansas26–811–32ndNCAA Division I second round
1985–86Kansas35–413–11stNCAA Division I Final Four
1986–87Kansas25–119–5T–2ndNCAA Division I Sweet 16
1987–88Kansas27–119–53rdNCAA Division I Champions
Kansas:135–44 (.754)51–19 (.729)
SMU Mustangs(Conference USA)(2012–2013)
2012–13SMU15–175–1111th
SMU Mustangs(American Athletic Conference)(2013–2016)
2013–14SMU27–1012–6T–3rdNIT Runner-up
2014–15SMU27–715–31stNCAA Division I Round of 64
2015–16SMU25–513–52ndIneligible[53]
SMU:94–39 (.707)45–24 (.652)
Total:266–99 (.731)

      National champion        Postseason invitational champion  
      Conference regular season champion        Conference regular season and conference tournament champion
      Division regular season champion      Division regular season and conference tournament champion
      Conference tournament champion

National team

[edit]
Statistics
TeamYearGWLW–L%TournamentTGTWTLTW–L%Result
United States200418153.833Olympics853.625Won bronze medal
Career18153.833 853.625 

Achievements

[edit]
  • 1973: Carolina Cougars: ABA Eastern Division regular season champions
  • 1975: Denver Nuggets: ABA Western Division regular season champions
  • 1976: Denver Nuggets: ABA regular season champions (single-division)
  • 1977: Denver Nuggets: NBA Midwest Division Champions
  • 1978: Denver Nuggets: NBA Midwest Division Champions
  • 1980: UCLA: NCAA Championship Game
  • 1984: Kansas: Big Eight Conference tournament Champions
  • 1986: Kansas: NCAA Final Four & Big Eight Conference & Tournament Champions
  • 1988: Kansas: NCAA National Champions
  • 1990: San Antonio Spurs: NBA Midwest Division Champions
  • 1991: San Antonio Spurs: NBA Midwest Division Champions
  • 1995: Indiana Pacers: NBA Central Division Champions
  • 2001: Philadelphia 76ers: NBA Eastern Conference Champions
  • 2004:United States men's Olympic basketball team: Bronze medal at theAthens Olympics
  • 2004: Detroit Pistons: NBA Champions
  • 2005: Detroit Pistons: NBA Eastern Conference Champions
  • 2015: SMU Mustangs: American Athletic Conference Champions
  • College: 1 National Championship, 3 Final Fours in 7 seasons
  • Pro: 1 Championship, 3 Conference Championships, 10 Division Championships, 18 Playoff appearances in 26 seasons, 1,098 career NBA wins

See also

[edit]

References

[edit]
  1. ^"Larry Brown Coaching Record".Stats Crew. RetrievedJuly 3, 2025.
  2. ^"Lawrence "Larry" Brown". Jewishvirtuallibrary.org. RetrievedJanuary 10, 2011.
  3. ^"National Basketball Coaches Association Presents the 2021 Chuck Daly Lifetime Achievement Award to NBA Coaching Icon Larry Brown".Detroit Pistons. RetrievedJuly 12, 2021.
  4. ^abPaul Taylor (2004).Jews and the Olympic Games: the ... Sussex Academic Press.ISBN 9781903900871. RetrievedOctober 26, 2011.
  5. ^Siegman, Joseph M. (May 3, 1992).The International Jewish Sports Hall of Fame. SP Books.ISBN 9781561710287 – via Google Books.
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  7. ^Grasso, John (2015).Historical Dictionary of Basketball. Rowman & Littlefield Publishers. p. 67 pp.ISBN 978-1442255333.
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  11. ^The Official NBA Basketball Encyclopedia. Villard Books. 1994. p. 209.ISBN 0-679-43293-0.
  12. ^Brown, Larry : Jews In Sports @ Virtual Museum
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  15. ^Pluto, Terry (1990).Loose Balls. Simon & Schuster. pp. 255–260.ISBN 978-1-4165-4061-8.
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  19. ^"1988 infractions report".web1.ncaa.org.
  20. ^AP (November 2, 1988)."N.C.A.A. Acts Against Kansas".The New York Times. RetrievedOctober 2, 2016.
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  23. ^"THIS TIME SPURS FIRE LARRY BROWN FOR REAL TO END STRANGE EPISODE".DeseretNews.com. January 21, 1992. Archived fromthe original on January 27, 2016.
  24. ^Howard-Cooper, Scott (February 7, 1992)."Brown Is Surprised by Interest of Clippers : Pro basketball: New coach says he expected to be out of work longer after being fired by Spurs".Los Angeles Times. RetrievedJune 14, 2023.
  25. ^Martinez, Michael (February 7, 1992)."BASKETBALL; Brown's 'Last Stop' Is Job With Clippers".The New York Times.
  26. ^Friend, Tom (May 21, 1993)."PRO BASKETBALL; Brown Is Here, There and Now Nowhere".The New York Times.
  27. ^Baker, Chris (October 22, 1993)."CLIPPERS : Larry Brown Offers Version of His Parting With the Team".Los Angeles Times. RetrievedJune 14, 2023.
  28. ^"Pacers Hire Brown, Who Calls This His Last Stop : Pro basketball: The former Clipper coach and Indiana President Walsh are longtime friends". June 8, 1993 – via LA Times.
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NCAA (2004).NCAA March Madness: Cinderellas, Superstars, and Champions from the NCAA Men's Final Four. Chicago: Triumph Books.ISBN 1-57243-665-4.

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