logo
New York Knicks reportedly offer coaching job to Mike Brown

New York Knicks reportedly offer coaching job to Mike Brown

The Guardian12 hours ago
The New York Knicks have offered their coaching job to Mike Brown and are working to finalize a deal with the two-time NBA Coach of the Year, a person with knowledge of the details said Wednesday.
Brown would replace Tom Thibodeau, who was fired last month despite leading the Knicks to the Eastern Conference finals for the first time in 25 years.
Brown had his second interview with the Knicks on Tuesday before the job was offered, the person told the Associated Press.
The person spoke on condition of anonymity because details of the search were to remain private.
The plan to hire Brown was first reported by ESPN.
Brown earned his second award as the NBA's top coach after leading Sacramento to the playoffs in 2022-23 – ending what was the league's longest postseason drought with its first appearance since 2006 – but the Kings fired him nearly halfway through last season.
He would take over a Knicks team that believes it can contend for the NBA title and made it clear that was the only goal when it made the surprising decision to fire Thibodeau, who like Brown is a two-time winner of the NBA's Coach of the Year award.
The Knicks quickly identified Brown as a candidate they wanted to speak with, while also discussing the job with former Memphis coach Taylor Jenkins and current assistants James Borrego of New Orleans and Micah Nori of Minnesota before offering the position to Brown.
Brown was honored with his first coaching award when he coached the Cleveland Cavaliers, the team he led to the NBA finals in 2007 during his first stint with the organization. He also coached the Los Angeles Lakers and is 454-304 in his career.
Brown also won four championships as an assistant coach, three with the Golden State Warriors and one under Gregg Popovich in San Antonio.
His coaching staff will be discussed in the coming days, the person told AP.
Thibodeau led the Knicks to their only sustained success of the 2000s, with four playoff appearances in his five seasons. They reached at least the East semi-finals each of the last three seasons and reached 50 wins in both of the last two.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

The three things you must include in every itinerary to Kansas City
The three things you must include in every itinerary to Kansas City

TTG

time31 minutes ago

  • TTG

The three things you must include in every itinerary to Kansas City

State-straddling Kansas City (KC to friends) embraces several vibrant districts across Kansas and Missouri. Clients seeking a culturally rich experience in the heart of the US should pay close attention to this authentic, affordable destination, with plenty to tempt food, music and sports fans. In 2026 Kansas City will be in the spotlight as one of the American hosts of the Fifa World Cup 2026, with the area around the National WWI Museum and Memorial set to host the official Fan Festival. In fact, those who follow US sports will be in their element whenever they visit, with American football's Kansas City Chiefs, winners of the 2023 and 2024 Superbowls, among big name local sides and the world's first stadium purpose-built for a professional women's team among landmarks. With KC as part of their itinerary, visitors can also enjoy live performances in the Power & Light District, award-winning restaurants in the Crossroads Arts District, and open-air browsing in the historic River Market area. They might also track down the famous giant shuttlecocks outside The Nelson-Atkins Museum of Art, an acclaimed and sprawling institution offering free admission daily. But if your clients are new to Kansas City they'll do well to start with its trio of traditional draws: jazz, barbecue and fountains. Unesco-listed jazz From the roaring '20s to the early '40s, jazz reigned supreme in Kansas City. The historic 12th Street was particularly known for its music clubs, which along with its gambling parlours and brothels, earned KC the nickname Paris of the Plains. Today, live jazz endures with an impressive 40 dedicated clubs across the destination and KC is the United States' only designated Unesco City of Music. Your clients may enjoy smooth keyboard performances at Green Lady Lounge or late-night jam sessions at the Mutual Musicians Foundation. They can also learn about local legends including Charlie Parker and other icons such as Duke Ellington and Ella Fitzgerald at the American Jazz Museum in the 18th & Vine Historic Jazz District. Barbecue capital

Mauricio Pochettino is bringing fight and focus back to the USMNT
Mauricio Pochettino is bringing fight and focus back to the USMNT

The Guardian

time43 minutes ago

  • The Guardian

Mauricio Pochettino is bringing fight and focus back to the USMNT

There is something cosmically funny about all of this. Late last summer, the United States men's national team went out and hired the most qualified manager it could find. The one with the most impressive coaching resume far of anyone US Soccer had ever employed on the men's side. The most expensive, certainly. By a multiple. The man brought in to arrest the tailspin the USMNT had slowly slipped into after the 2022 World Cup. To finally unlock that elusive next level. To help a golden generation, or at least a shiny one, come good at last. To salvage something, anything, from a World Cup played mostly on home soil a year from now. Not to squander it all. And what should Mauricio Pochettino add to the US national team's brew of aptitudes and attitudes but pluck and grit? The very same underdog mentality, the ferocity and fitness, that had once taken the US from global laughingstocks to merely unembarrassing and then to internationally competitiveness. That sort of mindset had a ceiling, it was decided a decade and a half or so ago. And the Yanks kept on bumping their heads into it. So they hired Jürgen Klinsmann to sprinkle his fairy dust over the team, except he didn't understand how to execute his own lofty plans and dismantled the team's mentality-monster culture in the process. And then Gregg Berhalter brought it back for a bit, only to misplace it again. That was still more or less the shape the US was in three weeks ago. A mirthless two-loss debacle at the Concacaf Nations League in March. Two more defeats to Turkey and Switzerland, both playing at three-quarters speed, in early June. The Americans were underdogs again. Long shots. A soccer community mumbled to itself about those 10 regulars lost to rest and injuries and the Club World Cup. Since then, something elemental has been reclaimed. The USMNT are competitive again, proud again. By going back to basics. They ground out a 2-1 semi-final result against Guatemala in St Louis on Wednesday, courtesy of Diego Luna's 15-minute brace, to reach Sunday's Gold Cup final with Mexico in Houston on Sunday – a record 13th appearance in the regional title game. In the broad assessment of Pochettino's time in charge of the US – likely following the World Cup when he'll probably go chase after some other project, as is the wont of the most sought-after managers – Sunday's penalty shoot-out win over Costa Rica in the quarterfinal will likely loom large. The Americans prevailed in a feisty game, matching the intensity of an opponent intent on making a slugfest out of the bout, showing some personality at long last. On Tuesday, Pochettino elaborated on just how much he appreciated the urgency with which his team had rallied around Malik Tillman that day. The American attacking linchpin was taunted by some of his Tico opponents after missing a penalty, whereupon a big scuffle broke out involving the entire US team. 'It's the whole group,' Pochettino said, clearly delighted that the press conference had landed on the merits of a good scuffle. 'It's the keeper [Matt Freese] also, because he ran 100 meters to be in the fight. That was amazing. That means something. For me, I'm Argentino – we love to fight – that means a lot. 'That means that we are connected, that we care about my teammates,' Pochettino continued. 'That needs to be natural between them. We can select 26 players, but to be a team is a different thing.' He liked, the Argentine said, that after four weeks together, team meals were lively. That the three tables the USMNT eats at have an energy sparking between them that makes them feel like one. Or something. 'That is a spontaneous situation that you cannot force, you cannot push,' said Pochettino. The long and short of it is the Americans are a team again. Certainly, there is sophistication at work in their run to the Gold Cup final as well. This incarnation of the USMNT is increasingly well-drilled in its defensive organization and attacking patterns. A team that was inexperienced and unfamiliar a month ago moves as a unit, shifts shapes in transition, zings the ball around cleanly. Within a clear structure, there is room for Tillman and Luna to express themselves, to roam and to assert their influence both creatively and as the team's high pressers. The Americans have scored some wonderfully well worked goals in this tournament. The victory over Guatemala made for a strange sort of game. The US were utterly dominant early and ran out to a quick 2-0 lead, only to spend the rest of the game defending it increasingly frantically against the world's 106th-ranked team, getting outshot 20-12. Before a heavily pro-Guatemalan crowd at Energizer Park in St Louis, one of the spiritual homes of the American game, Guatemala played in their first Gold Cup semi-final in 29 years. They turned up with a roster that was domestically based but for six players active in the US and Canada and one each in Romania and Moldova. These were not pedigreed players, yet their countrymen in the stands roared for a second successive upset, after Los Chapines dispatched Canada on penalties in the last round. 'Today, I need to tell you, it was like to play in Guatemala, in Tegucigalpa,' said Pochettino. 'And that was good for our players, because it was an atmosphere we didn't expect.' In the fourth minute, Luca de la Torre shot from outside the box, following a long, crisp American buildup. Luna snuck ahead of his marker, José Rosales, snagged the rebound and then tucked it past Kenderson Navarro. Ten minutes later, Luna ran at the box, beat his man with a stepover and located a crack of space and time to rip his shot past Navarro at the near post. From that point, Guatemala would be the aggressors, forcing several strong saves by Freese and seeing a goal disallowed as it put ever more attackers on the field. In the 80th minute, 18-year-old Olger Escobar found some room in the American area and finally beat Freese to narrow the score, provoking a furious final assault. Few things in soccer are quite as dangerous as an unchained team, playing for the equalizer with absolutely nothing to lose. Still the US held on, avoiding the penalty lottery that nearly undid them in the previous round, collecting just enough clearances and disrupted Guatemalan attacks to see out the clock. Perhaps there was something slightly undignified in clinging on against a team that, on paper, ought not be a threat. The other interpretation is that it was a sign of growth. 'It's the grit, it's the determination that we've been lacking, to be honest,' Luna told Fox. 'It's fighting to the end, every ball, every moment.' Presently, it's no use arguing with the USMNT's pint-sized scrapper. For he has come to embody its new ethos. Leander Schaerlaeckens is at work on a book about the United States men's national soccer team, out in 2026. He teaches at Marist University.

Al-Hilal's win over Manchester City lays bare strength of Saudi Arabia
Al-Hilal's win over Manchester City lays bare strength of Saudi Arabia

The Guardian

timean hour ago

  • The Guardian

Al-Hilal's win over Manchester City lays bare strength of Saudi Arabia

So it came to pass that the blue moon was eclipsed by the crescent and the world of football took on a slightly different hue. For the past couple of years, the Saudi Pro League had been dismissed as a destination for the old, greedy, unambitious or all three. On Tuesday, European football woke up to be faced with a new side of Saudi Arabian football as Al-Hilal celebrated a 4-3 win over Manchester City to go through to the quarter-finals of the Club World Cup. If a member of the European elite being turned over by a team that had previously been little-known on the world stage was what the competition needed then this was it. City may point to mitigating circumstances but not all was perfect in the Saudi camp, either. Al-Hilal arrived in the United States on the back of a long and disappointing season. After dominating the SPL the previous year, setting a world-record winning streak of 34 games along the way, the Riyadh giants were very much second-best to the eventual champions, Al-Ittihad. Neymar left in January and there were major frustration that the club did not sign someone of a similar stature as a replacement. Aleksandar Mitrovic, scorer of almost a goal a game since arriving from Fulham, is injured. Salem Al-Dawsari, their best player, is also absent. Since last August, Al-Hilal have played almost the same number of games as City and were without a coach for the final stages of the campaign, appointing Simone Inzaghi just before the Club World Cup started. City fans rightly point to a history before the big-money poured in from Abu Dhabi in 2008. The same is true of Al-Hilal before Riyadh's Public Investment Fund took over the club – along with the three other biggest teams in the country – in the summer of 2023. They had been champions of Asia four times and Saudi Arabia 19, both records. Also, they reached the final of the 2022 Club World Cup, losing 5-3 to Real Madrid after giving Chelsea a good game in the previous edition. Al-Hilal have been minnows, but they have certainly strengthened in the past couple of years. Yassine Bounou in goal, defenders Kalidou Koulibaly and João Cancelo, as well as Rúben Neves and Sergej Milinkovic-Savic in midfield, are good enough to shine in any league. Of the two teams it is also worth noting that City have imported more. Phil Foden was the only Englishman to take to the pitch in Orlando for the Premier League side, while eight Saudi Arabians featured for the winners. The win has gone down well in Asia given it was the first time a team from the world's biggest continent has beaten the world's best at this level. Al-Hilal's success stands in sharp contrast to the performance of the other three sides from the Asian Football Confederation, all of whom were eliminated with a game of the group stage still to play. Their combined record was one win, eight defeats, six goals scored and 27 conceded. Al Ain managed a victory but were thrashed in their opening two games. Urawa Reds of Japan lost all three of their games. Ulsan HD – accompanied by officials from all of South Korea's professional clubs – came and went without anybody really noticing. Sign up to Football Daily Kick off your evenings with the Guardian's take on the world of football after newsletter promotion It was dismal stuff and heightens concerns that the rest of the Asian club game is falling behind that in Saudi Arabia, with the Pro League providing three of the four semi-finalists in the most recent Asian Champions League. Few in Riyadh will care, especially now Al-Hilal have a path to the Club World Cup final and, maybe, a rematch with Madrid. They were plucky outsiders going into the encounter three years ago, just happy to play such an illustrious opponent. That would not be the case now. Whatever happens, Al-Hilal will always have their win over City. It serves as a reminder that the world game is truly that. It could also mean that the next time a big-name player swaps one of the big clubs in the big European leagues for Saudi Arabia, the talk will be less about greed, ambition and the rest, and a little more about whether he can help close the gap with Europe, one that no longer appears as wide as first thought.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store