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    Clippers Are Hiring Tyronn Lue as Their New Coach

    The Los Angeles Clippers are hiring Tyronn Lue as their new head coach, according to two people with knowledge of the deal.The Clippers on Wednesday were finalizing a five-year contract with Lue to install him as the successor to Doc Rivers, according to the people, who were not authorized to discuss the deal publicly. Lue was en route to Los Angeles, one of the people said, after spending the past three days in Houston interviewing for the Rockets’ coaching vacancy.Lue spent the past season as the top assistant on Rivers’s staff after negotiations for him to become the Los Angeles Lakers’ head coach collapsed in May 2019.The Lakers and Lue were closing in on a three-year deal worth about $20 million when Lue walked away from the negotiations, dismayed both by the relatively short term that the Lakers had offered and their insistence on choosing the assistant coaches for Lue’s staff.Lue thought that, after winning a championship in Cleveland in 2016, he should have received a longer deal and the latitude to choose his own staff. The Lakers turned to Frank Vogel after the negotiations with Lue dissolved and, under Vogel, the team won its first championship since 2010.With the Clippers, Lue will become the league’s eighth active coach with at least one championship ring, joining Dallas’s Rick Carlisle, Golden State’s Steve Kerr, Miami’s Erik Spoelstra, San Antonio’s Gregg Popovich, Toronto’s Nick Nurse, Vogel and Rivers, who was recently hired by the Philadelphia 76ers.Rivers is one of the league’s most respected coaches — and leaders — but lost his job with the Clippers last month after their second-round playoff collapse against the Denver Nuggets. That was the third time in Rivers’s coaching career that his team had lost a best-of-seven playoff series after taking a lead of three games to one. It happened twice with the Clippers.Steve Ballmer, the Clippers’ free-spending and title-hungry owner, decided that a new voice was needed despite Rivers’s stature, according to a person familiar with the Clippers’ thinking who was not authorized to discuss it publicly. In Lue, Ballmer has secured a replacement who is accustomed to coaching with the burden of expectations: Lue replaced the ousted David Blatt in Cleveland when the Cavaliers were leading the Eastern Conference with a record of 30-11 in January 2016.Lue and the Cavaliers, led by LeBron James, then won the first major championship in Cleveland in 52 years with a comeback from a three-games-to-one deficit against the Golden State Warriors, who had a league-record 73 wins in the regular season.The Clippers have never reached the conference finals as a franchise, and their two stars, Kawhi Leonard and Paul George, are under contract for only one more guaranteed season before both can return to free agency.The arrivals of Leonard and George in July 2019 seemingly made the latest incarnation of the Clippers the franchise’s most viable title threat, but they could not build on the early promise of victories over the Lakers in marquee television games on opening night and on Christmas Day.Lue will be tasked with establishing the chemistry that Rivers couldn’t produce and with helping George bounce back from the considerable criticism he received for a number of subpar playoff performances.Lue, 43, won two championships as a lightly used reserve guard with the Lakers in 2000 and 2001 and posted a 128-77 record in two and a half seasons as James’s coach with the Cavaliers. After James joined the Lakers through free agency in July, Cleveland started the 2018-19 season with an 0-6 record and dismissed Lue. More

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    Daryl Morey Steps Down as G.M. of the Houston Rockets

    Daryl Morey, the general manager of the Houston Rockets, is stepping down from his post on Nov. 1, he announced Thursday.Morey said managing the Rockets was “the most gratifying experience of my professional life” and that he was confident Houston would “continue to perform at the highest level.”The move came after the Rockets were knocked out of the N.B.A. playoffs in the second round and more than a year after Morey shared an image on Twitter in support of pro-democracy protesters in Hong Kong. The tweet upended relations between the N.B.A. and the Chinese government. China’s state-run television network did not broadcast any N.B.A. games from then until Game 5 of the N.B.A. finals last Friday night.Morey’s tweet, on Oct. 4, 2019, got an immediate rebuke from Tilman Fertitta, the owner of the Rockets, who said in a post on Twitter: “Listen….@dmorey does NOT speak for the @HoustonRockets.”Shortly after the tweet, Commissioner Adam Silver said the Chinese government demanded that Morey lose his job, a request he said he denied. Several Chinese sponsors, including the shoe company Li-Ning and the Shanghai Pudong Development Bank Credit Card Center, suspended their partnerships with the Rockets. In the wake of the controversy, Fertitta referred to Morey as “the best general manager in the league.”In an interview, Morey and Fertitta declined to answer questions about the China uproar and abruptly ended the interview after receiving questions about it. Morey did say the decision to leave Houston was his own. Fertitta said their relationship was not affected by the Hong Kong tweet. “We’ve never had a cross word over it,” he said.Morey said their relationship had “been great the whole time” and that he was not leaving because of a disagreement over the team’s strategy or direction.Morey was an aggressive dealmaker who made 77 trades during his 13-plus years in charge, and he had been at the forefront of the rising use of advanced statistics in N.B.A. front offices over the past decade.In September, shortly after Houston’s elimination from the playoffs, Fertitta said that Morey’s job was “safe” and that he was sure Morey would “pick the right head coach” after Coach Mike D’Antoni’s contract expired.In a statement on Thursday, Fertitta praised Morey as a “brilliant innovator who helped the Rockets become a perennial contender.”Morey was named the league’s executive of the year in the 2017-18 season and has been the general manager of the franchise since May 2007. His rise in the basketball world was considered unusual at the time. He had been a front office executive for the Boston Celtics, but had never played or coached professional basketball, nor had he been a scout. His background was in consulting.Morey is credited with bringing to the N.B.A. the basketball equivalent of “Moneyball,” a way of building team rosters based on advanced statistics. He co-founded the M.I.T. Sloan Sports Analytics Conference, which is held yearly and has grown into a large event attracting those connected to basketball far beyond statistics. In 2018, former President Barack Obama was a speaker.The Rockets have made the playoffs 10 times during Morey’s tenure as general manager. They made the Western Conference finals twice — in 2015 and 2018, each time being foiled by the Golden State Warriors. Morey developed a penchant for making unconventional moves, such as trading away a young, talented center in Clint Capela in February in an effort to play an entirely small lineup. The 2017-18 Rockets put a scare into the Warriors, taking a 3-2 series lead in the conference finals before succumbing to one of the most talented rosters in N.B.A. history in seven games.Morey was also able to acquire superstars, often for a bargain, such as James Harden and Chris Paul, in addition to finding undervalued talent. He gained a reputation as one of the best front office executives in the league, despite the Rockets never getting to the N.B.A. finals. In 2018, Morey was heavily pursued to take over the Philadelphia 76ers, but he ultimately declined their offer.His resignation comes at an awkward time for the franchise: The team is in the process of hiring a new coach and has begun interviews. Houston has not yet announced Morey’s successor, but the strong expectation is that Rafael Stone, the team’s executive vice president for basketball operations and longtime general counsel, will take over, according to the person briefed on the decision. More

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    Chinese State TV to Air N.B.A. for First Time Since Hong Kong Rift

    China Central Television, the state-run TV network, announced Friday that it would televise an N.B.A. game for the first time since a dispute with the league began last fall after a team executive expressed support for pro-democracy protesters in Hong Kong.The move suggested a softening of tensions between the N.B.A. and China that the league estimated had cost it hundreds of millions of dollars in revenue and that elicited criticism from fans and politicians.The change was to begin with Game 5 of the N.B.A. finals between the Los Angeles Lakers and the Miami Heat on Friday night.“On the morning of October 10, the channel of CCTV Sports will broadcast the fifth game of the N.B.A. finals,” the network said in a post in Chinese on Weibo, a Chinese social media platform. “Welcome everyone to watch at the time!”In a separate statement in Chinese, a spokesperson for the China Media Group, which oversees CCTV, said: “In the Chinese National Day and Mid-Autumn Festival that just passed, the N.B.A. expressed holiday blessings to Chinese fans. We have also noticed the good will continuously expressed by the N.B.A. for some time. Especially since the beginning of this year, the N.B.A. has made active efforts in supporting the Chinese people in fighting against the novel coronavirus epidemic.”It was unclear whether the network would resume broadcasting regular-season games next season.A spokesman for the N.B.A. did not respond to a request for comment.The N.B.A. had not been completely off the air in China, and there had been signs that the icy relationship was thawing. Tencent, a streaming network in China, had been airing up to three games a night during the regular season. After the death of Kobe Bryant in January, the Chinese ambassador to the United States, Cui Tiankai, posted a Twitter tribute to Bryant, who was one of the most popular athletes in the country. In February, Huang Ping, the Chinese consul general, publicly thanked the N.B.A. at a news conference in New York for donating $1.4 million to help fight the spread of the coronavirus in China.Even so, CCTV’s airing of a finals game indicated a formal normalizing of relationships between the two entities. Joe Tsai, the owner of the Nets and co-founder of Alibaba, the Chinese e-commerce giant, told Bloomberg Businessweek in January, “Once you are on the air, everything will come back.”The conflict began on Oct. 4, 2019, when Daryl Morey, the general manager of the Houston Rockets, shared an image on Twitter that said “FIGHT FOR FREEDOM STAND WITH HONG KONG,” just days before the Nets and Los Angeles Lakers were to play preseason games in mainland China.The backlash was immediate.N.B.A. Commissioner Adam Silver later said that he had rejected a demand from the Chinese government to fire Morey. But criticism came domestically as well, after the league issued a statement calling it “regrettable” that Morey’s views “deeply offended many of our friends and fans in China.” Several prominent American politicians, like Senator Josh Hawley, Republican of Missouri, have criticized the N.B.A.’s continued business relationship with the authoritarian country.In September, Silver told CNN during a live event: “At the end of the day, I think those are decisions for our government, in terms of where American businesses should operate. I continue to believe that the people-to-people exchanges we’re seeing by playing in China are positive.”Protesters began to appear at N.B.A. games when the regular season began. The league’s relationship with China came under more scrutiny in July, when ESPN reported about abuse at N.B.A.-sponsored basketball academies there, a partnership that the league announced it would be “re-evaluating.”The N.B.A. has long made global expansion — particularly into China, where it now has more fans than in the U.S. — a core part of its mission. In 1979, the Washington Bullets became the first N.B.A. team to travel there, playing exhibition games against the Chinese national team. The scoreboard referred to the team as the “American Bullets.”In the late 1980s, David Stern, the former league commissioner who died in January, negotiated a deal with CCTV to begin airing games in China. In 1994, the N.B.A. finals were broadcast there live for the first time. A decade later, the league held a preseason game in Beijing for the first time. By then, Yao Ming had entered the N.B.A. and become a dominant figure both on the court and culturally in the U.S. and China, his home country.Stern, in a 2006 interview with Sports Illustrated, acknowledged that China’s repressive human rights record concerned him, but he added: “At the end of the day I have a responsibility to my owners to make money. I can never forget that, no matter what my personal feelings might be.”David Chen and Claire Fu contributed reporting. More

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    The One Name the W.N.B.A. Won’t Say

    They will not say her name. Not now, after what these players have been through. It is important not to give her recognition.Think of it as protest jujitsu.The W.N.B.A. finals have begun. On Sunday, the Seattle Storm defeated the Las Vegas Aces, 104-91, to take a two-games-to-none lead in their best-of-five series. Game 3 is Tuesday night.In its 24th year, the women’s league has some of the most incandescent players in basketball but still struggles for broad recognition and respect. In this strange season, which unfolded in a Florida arena without fans because of the coronavirus pandemic, the minimalist environment has provided a bright backdrop for the league’s evolving talent to shine.The legacy of the 2020 season, however, will not only be about on-court action and a championship won. It will also be about the W.N.B.A.’s continued leadership in the battle for human rights.In no way has this been clearer than in how its players have responded to brackish bullying from an unexpected source: the co-owner of the Atlanta Dream, Senator Kelly Loeffler of Georgia.When they talk about her, they refuse to name her.Think back to June, to the raw-edged days after the killing of George Floyd in police custody in Minneapolis. As the nation reeled and launched into self-examination, the W.N.B.A. was among the first professional leagues to say its upcoming season would be devoted to pushing for social justice and promoting the Black Lives Matter movement.That was not a surprise. Nearly 70 percent of the league’s players are Black and a significant number of its stars are lesbian. They are women who know all too well the full brunt of discrimination. That is why they have been leaders in the justice fight for so long.Nor was it a surprise when they faced blowback.The surprise was that the blowback came from within. To be specific, from one of the league’s most influential voices, Loeffler, a Republican who is running to keep her seat in the Nov. 3 election.Loeffler reacted by publicly scoffing at the league’s pledge to double down on social justice support in 2020. She scorned the decision to cover player jerseys with the slogan “Say Her Name,” meant to call attention to the deaths of Black women like Breonna Taylor at the hands of the police.In a letter to the W.N.B.A.’s commissioner, Loeffler wrote, “I adamantly oppose the Black Lives Matter political movement,” before listing a series of inaccurate claims, including that it “promoted violence and destruction across the country.”There was a method to Loeffler’s obstinate stance. She has been engaged in a hard-nosed battle for Republican voters in a conservative state. To gild her bona fides with the far right in her party, she cribbed from a well-worn playbook used by President Trump: To show toughness, verbally attack Black athletes and draw them into a fight.Even if it meant attacking everything that the players on her team — along with the entire league — have stood for.But things have not turned out as she planned. With each of the league’s dozen teams sequestered on a sports training campus near Tampa Bay, the players huddled together. They knew the W.N.B.A. commissioner’s office had denounced Loeffler’s views. They also understood that their cash-compromised league was not exactly in a prime position to demand she put her 49 percent stake in the Dream up for sale. Amid a pandemic and widespread economic calamity, who would be the buyer?So the players strategized, and took her on in their typically thoughtful manner.“We realized, ‘Oh, she wants us to get mad,’” said Sue Bird, Seattle’s veteran guard, remembering the moment as we spoke last week by telephone. “She wants us to try and kick her out. That would give her more attention. This is what she wants.”“We had to find a better way.”Instead of meeting force with force, providing fodder that would only fuel Loeffler’s campaign, the players decided to work around her.Just like jujitsu.Their first move was both decisive and quietly aggressive: In interviews, public pronouncements and on social media, they decided to stop saying the Atlanta co-owner’s name.They refused to give her the dignity.“Words are things,” said Nneka Ogwumike, the Los Angeles Sparks forward who is president of the league’s players’ association, as she walked me through the strategy. “Words have power. And to give energy to a name I think is very meaningful. So, we stopped saying that name.”The next move was more to the point.It began with leaguewide video calls featuring a cast of advisers including Michelle Obama and Stacey Abrams, who in her bid to become governor of Georgia in 2018 nearly became the first Black woman to be elected governor anywhere in the United States. The discussions centered on politics and power.The players began vetting Loeffler’s political opponents in the upcoming election, looking for a way to insert themselves into a race that could end up altering the balance of congressional power. They homed in on one candidate: The Rev. Dr. Raphael Warnock, a Democrat and a pastor of Atlanta’s Ebenezer Baptist Church, where the Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. was co-pastor.Once Warnock addressed the players over Zoom, there was no doubt. “It was clear to us immediately,” Bird told me. “He stands for everything that we stand for. You could literally go down the line of all the things we care about, and we were aligned with him. It was like, ‘Wow, we want this guy in the Senate. This is the candidate that we want in the Senate.’ ”Within days, nearly everyone in the league began showing up for their nationally televised games wearing black T-shirts emblazoned with two words: Vote Warnock.That kind of mass support for a single candidate opened a new chapter in the annals of athlete protests.“It’s unprecedented,” said Amira Rose Davis, an assistant professor at Pennsylvania State University who specializes in race, sports and gender. Davis noted the many examples of individual athletes supporting politicians. That’s been the tradition in sports.“But this is different,” she said. “The coordination. The strategic part. The specificity, taking the time to meet a candidate and then to back that candidate as a group. That has never happened before.”After the player push, the Warnock campaign said it experienced a significant boost in enthusiasm and financial support: A spokesman said $236,000 flowed to the campaign in the days after the T-shirt endorsement began. Though it is impossible to draw a direct correlation with the W.N.B.A.’s activism, at least one major poll shows Warnock surging ahead of Loeffler and the other candidates for the first time.This Senate race is far from over. If no candidate gets a majority of votes, there will be a runoff in January with the top two vote-getters.“If Warnock wins and the byproduct is that a certain someone is not in the Senate, then, hey, we’re all happy,” said Bird, refusing, of course, to say that certain someone’s name.No matter how this season or the election turns out, women’s professional basketball has once again helped lead the way. This time by showing the best way to work around a bully. More

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    Storm Close In on a W.N.B.A. Title

    BRADENTON, Fla. — Breanna Stewart and an unselfish offense have the Seattle Storm on the verge of another W.N.B.A. championship.Stewart scored 22 points to lead five Storm players in double figures in a 104-91 victory over the Las Vegas Aces on Sunday in Game 2 of the best-of-five finals. The Storm will try to win their second title in three years on Tuesday night.“This is our moment to really finish the series and take home the championship,” Stewart said.The Storm, champions in 2004, 2010 and 2018, know it won’t be easy to close out the series.“Stay in the moment. They are good. The score doesn’t indicate it,” said Sue Bird, who ran the show on all three of the Storm’s titles.Two days after she set the W.N.B.A. finals and playoffs record with 16 assists, Bird, 39, had 10 to go along with 16 points. The team had 33 assists to set a W.N.B.A. championship-round record.“Having high assists isn’t abnormal for us,” said Alysha Clark, who added 21 points. “Thirty-three is amazing. Goes to show the unselfishness of everyone on the floor and the confidence we have in one another. Pass up a good shot to get a great shot. When you do those things, 33 assists happen. Wow.”Natasha Howard also had 21 and Jordin Canada added 10 off the bench to go along with Stewart, Bird and Clark’s double-digit efforts.“Our performance today was better than Game 1 having a balanced approach,” Stewart said.The Storm took over after Las Vegas had rallied from a 13-point deficit in the first half to take a 65-64 lead with 3 minutes 22 seconds left in the third quarter. Seattle scored 22 of the next 30 points over the next six minutes to go up double-digits again with Jewell Loyd ending the burst with a 3-pointer that made it 86-73 with just under seven minutes left.A’ja Wilson had 20 points to lead Las Vegas, while Angel McCoughtry and Emma Cannon added 17 each. Cannon provided a spark off the bench for the Aces, who were missing the sixth woman of the year, Dearica Hamby, with a knee injury. The Aces had 15 turnovers to the dismay of Coach Bill Laimbeer.“We’re our own worst enemies sometimes,” he said. “Our turnovers hurt us badly. They are a fine basketball team, and you can’t make those type of blunders against them.”Laimbeer’s team faced two elimination games against Connecticut in the semifinals before winning both to reach the championship round.“Our focus is winning one game,” he said.Trailing by 6 at the half, Las Vegas made a run to take a 53-52 lead on Kayla McBride’s 3-pointer early in the third quarter. The Aces led, 65-64, with 3:22 left in the period before the Storm closed with an 11-3 burst.Seattle held a 48-42 halftime lead behind 12 points from Stewart and Clark. The Storm, who had 17 assists on their 18 baskets, built the lead to 13 before Las Vegas rallied to the 6-point halftime deficit. More

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    Jalen Rose’s N.B.A. Finals Diary: ‘I Can’t Wait for the Game’

    Even in a pandemic, Jalen Rose gets his hair cut about twice a week. He likes to look sharp when he’s on TV, and these days, he and his well-groomed head are highly visible. From the basement of his house in Connecticut, the ESPN analyst and former N.B.A. player tapes “Jalen & Jacoby,” his afternoon talk show with commentator David Jacoby. And at ESPN’s studio at the South Street Seaport in Manhattan, he helps anchor “NBA Countdown” before and during halftime of N.B.A. games — including the championship finals, which started this week between the Los Angeles Lakers and the Miami Heat.Mr. Rose also has a new weekly column and podcast for The New York Post, and he makes frequent appearances on ESPN’s morning show, “Get Up.” His wife, Molly Qerim Rose, is a moderator for the network’s “First Take,” which means they have to share the home studio. “I need to dominate the morning before 10 a.m.,” Mr. Rose said, “because she’s live from 10 to 12 and I need to get out of the basement.”Mr. Rose arrived on the national scene as a member of the University of Michigan’s famed 1991 “Fab Five” recruiting class, which also included Chris Webber, the future All-Star, and Juwan Howard, who now coaches the Michigan team, and whom Mr. Rose recently hit up for an appearance on his show. In his 13-year pro career, Mr. Rose played for six N.B.A. teams, including the Indiana Pacers and New York Knicks.On the air, in addition to game commentary, Mr. Rose also addresses the social and political moment. “It’d also be a great day to arrest the cops that murdered Breonna Taylor!” Mr. Rose said on the air during Game 4 of the Eastern conference finals, several hours after Kentucky’s attorney general announced that no police officer would be charged criminally with her death.“I’m not going to force topics, but I’m not going to run from them, either,” Mr. Rose said in an interview.He grew up in Detroit, and 10 years ago, he co-founded the Jalen Rose Leadership Academy, a public, nonprofit charter high school in the city, whose graduates continue to get financial, academic and emotional support when they move on to college. Interviews are conducted by email, text and phone, then condensed and edited.Monday6:30 a.m. I was up early talent-booking and story-lining. I called the head coach of the University of Michigan basketball team and said, ‘Coach, can you come on ‘Jalen & Jacoby’?” Juwan was a player and a coach in Miami with LeBron James; I was in the locker room celebrating with them one year. So I thought I’d ask Coach Howard to talk about Pat Riley and LeBron — and maybe we can have some talk about injustice. We’ll see.8 a.m. I did my run-walk thing at a track about a mile and half from my house — I ran a few laps and walked a few laps. Then I did some push-ups, a little calisthenics. Nothing too “Men’s Health,” I’m just trying to live to 103 like Grammie did.10:30 a.m. I did “Jalen & Jacoby” and after that, I worked on my New York Post column. The new piece is about back-to-school and how the Jalen Rose Leadership Academy scholars are learning remotely for a couple of months. There is a large portion of the population that doesn’t have the internet and doesn’t have access to laptops. Arn Tellem, the vice chairman of the Pistons, provided laptops to every one of our scholars.3 p.m. Errands. I had to go to U.P.S. and also grab cashiers checks for a couple of gentlemen who drive for me. I was in my Jeep with the top off, at a red light, and I look up — and there’s a man leaning out of a third-floor window. He said, “I like the new column,” and I was like, “All right!”9 p.m. We watched “Monday Night Football,” with the Kansas City Chiefs and the Baltimore Ravens. I made popcorn, real popcorn. No microwave popcorn, oh no.Tuesday10:30 a.m. I did “J & J,” with Juwan Howard on. It’s a dream come true to look back at our evolution from young men to adults, just appreciating the journey and the obstacles we’ve overcome together and separately.12:30 p.m. I had lunch with my wife at home. I made us lobster — I am a lobster-tail eating fool. I do a little oven/grill hybrid. I’m a diva about leftovers. I won’t have them after 24 hours. After being poor, I earned that right. I grew up only having leftovers and sugar water.2 p.m. I drilled down on my New York Post responsibilities. Because this is the first week I have the podcast, I really need to put some work in, booking some talent. I got Cedric the Entertainer booked and Angela Yee from the Breakfast Club.3:30 p.m. This is my rest and recovery period every day. Today, I went to get a pedicure. My feet were so bad, it was like snowflakes were falling off the bottom. I had to give an extra tip. I like to sit in the massage chair, pay for the foot massage, return a couple texts. No polish.9 p.m. I watched the presidential debate. I am really into this stuff, much more than the average person. Let me tell you something — wow. My major takeaway, as a taxpaying citizen and a knowledgeable voter, is that our commander-in-chief failed to denounce white supremacy.Wednesday6 a.m. Game day. I made calls, did a little exercise and took a steam, sprayed some Vicks VapoRub, did a little meditating, thinking and praying.9:35 a.m. I did a spot for “Get Up,” to preview tonight’s “Countdown” and Game 1 of the N.B.A. finals.2:30 p.m. I get my hair cut on days I have “Countdown,” and today I did it in a little barbershop area in my man cave at home. Andy Authentic has been my barber for six years. He’s not my stylist. He’s my barber, my surgeon.4 p.m. I headed to the city. I don’t need to be at the studio until 6 p.m., but I don’t like to be rushing — I like to sit and take notes and write down my bullet points.7:30 p.m. Preshow meeting with the “Countdown” team.8:30 p.m. The show. I was not nervous. Enthusiastic, like a kid at Christmastime. I can’t wait for the game. I idolize the current NBA players for what they’re doing right now — the ultimate dual sacrifice to act as champions for social justice and to complete a regular season and playoffs amid a pandemic. I so appreciate Adam Silver (the N.B.A. commissioner), Michele Roberts (the executive director of the N.B.A.’s players’ union) and Chris Paul (the president of the union).They’ve got “Black Lives Matter” written on the court. That means something. What the N.B.A. is showing me is that incremental progress is happening.9 p.m. We watch the game in what we call a war room, just off the studio. We sit on couches and comfortable chairs, and we all give our unfiltered analysis. Then producers come in to find out what we want to talk about at halftime. For me, the Lakers seemed to be in an altogether different weight class than the Heat. Then, in the second half, it’s rinse and repeat.Thursday1:30 a.m. The Lakers beat the Heat 116-98. The game didn’t end till after midnight, and I got home about an hour later. Red wine; got to decompress from the day. I got the steam shower going. I called my producer for “Jalen & Jacoby” and we talked for a half-hour. Then I steamed, prayed, meditated and stretched before bed.5:15 a.m. My wife woke up for work, and it’s hard to stay asleep when the person who is in charge of the house doesn’t tiptoe. I cured into the fetal position and slept for another 43 minutes.9 a.m. I was in the studio for my “Get Up” spot, but then there was breaking news about the Titans-Steelers football game getting postponed this weekend because of Covid-19. This may be important to the N.F.L., but it’s more important to me because I play in a big fantasy football league. The Warriors’ Draymond Green is in the league. Maverick Carter, LeBron’s business partner, is in it. I needed to reach out to the commissioner. That’s really important. I need to know what happens when games get canceled. He said he’s going to circle back to me.11 a.m. I did my podcast interview with Angela. As popular as she is, Angela is really underrated. Hip-hop is not an easy world for women, not simple for women to succeed. There’s lot of sexism.12:30 p.m. On the phone with DJ Premier. I asked him if I could get permission to use “Come Clean,” which he produced, for the theme music on the podcast. He said yes, and I got to chat with him for about 30 minutes.7 p.m. Another podcast interview, this one with Cedric. See, I am rolling them out! I am about providing quality content to the consumer!8:20 p.m. I had to watch Thursday Night Football even though I knew it was going to be a terrible game, because the New York Jets are terrible (they were 0-3) and Broncos are terrible (they were also 0-3). It’s my job, so I watched, but this game did not merit popcorn. I ate my Detroit-made Better Made BBQ potato chips. More

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    Doc Rivers Is Out as Los Angeles Clippers Coach

    After a disappointing playoff run for the Los Angeles Clippers, Doc Rivers is no longer the head coach of the team, he said Monday.“Thank you Clipper Nation for allowing me to be your coach and all your support in helping making this a winning franchise,” Rivers said in a statement posted on Twitter. “When I took this job, my goals were to make this a winning basketball program, a free agent destination, and bring a championship to this organization.“While I was able to accomplish most of my goals, I won’t be able to see them all through.”A statement from the team referred to parting with Rivers as “a mutual decision.” Steve Ballmer, the Clippers’ owner, said he was “immeasurably grateful” to Rivers.“Doc has been a terrific coach for the Clippers, an incredible ambassador, and a pillar of strength during tumultuous times,” Ballmer said. “He won a heck of a lot of games and laid a foundation for this franchise.”The Clippers, who have never made it to the conference finals in the playoffs, entered the season with arguably their best roster ever, stretching back to the 1970-71 season when they were known as the Buffalo Braves. Last summer, they acquired Kawhi Leonard and Paul George, giving the team a fearsome duo to go toe-to-toe with the other starry Los Angeles pair, LeBron James and Anthony Davis of the Lakers.But the Clippers seemed to have difficulty gelling all season. Even so, they were the second seed in the Western Conference and were on the doorstep of the conference finals, up 3-1 on the Denver Nuggets. But for the second consecutive series, the Nuggets reeled off three straight wins to advance to the next round, shocking the Clippers.Rivers joined the Clippers in 2013, five years after winning a championship with the Boston Celtics. In his first year, Rivers led the Clippers to 57 wins and a first-round playoff win. This would be his most successful season.The next year, Rivers was promoted to president of basketball operations — giving him the rare authority over personnel decisions and on-court play. But in 2017, Rivers lost the front office job after the Clippers continued to falter in the playoffs, even with the All-Stars Blake Griffin, Chris Paul and DeAndre Jordan in their primes.Rivers has been an N.B.A. coach for two decades and compiled a regular-season record of 943-681. In 2000, his first year as coach, he won the Coach of the Year Award with the Orlando Magic. With the Clippers, Rivers went 356-208, a .631 winning percentage. He led the franchise to its best stretch in its history: six playoff trips in seven seasons, and three postseason series wins. But Rivers also has a dubious distinction: He is the only N.B.A. coach to ever lose three seven-game series after leading, 3-1.He cemented a reputation as a players’ coach after the 2008 championship with Boston, when he melded three All-Stars — Paul Pierce, Kevin Garnett, Ray Allen — who hadn’t found success leading their own teams separately. He also won plaudits for guiding the Clippers after Donald Sterling, the former team owner, was recorded making racist statements and was forced to sell the team to Ballmer. Rivers also played point guard in the N.B.A. from 1983 to 1996 and made an All-Star appearance in the 1987-88 season.The Clippers job will be highly sought after. It is likely that the candidates will include current team assistants Tyronn Lue and Sam Cassell. Lue won a championship as coach of the James-led Cavaliers in 2016. Cassell played for the Clippers for almost three seasons starting in 2005, and has been an N.B.A. assistant for more than a decade. Just this month, Cassell received a vote of confidence from Rivers himself.“Sam Cassell should be a head coach, period,” Rivers said. More

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    Miami Heat Advance to the N.B.A. Finals

    The Miami Heat are on their way to the N.B.A. finals, continuing one of the more improbable postseason runs in recent years. They beat the Boston Celtics on Sunday, 125-113, to win the Eastern Conference finals in six games.In the deciding game, the Heat were led by Bam Adebayo, who scored 32 points, snatched 14 rebounds and dished five assists. Jimmy Butler added 22 points and eight assists, and Andre Iguodala provided a spark off the bench, scoring 15 points on 5 of 5 from the field.Miami, the fifth seed in the East, will now get the chance to try to become one of the lowest-seeded teams in N.B.A. history to win the championship. In 1981, the Houston Rockets entered the playoffs with a 40-42 record, which made them the sixth seed, back when only six teams from each conference made the playoffs. They made the finals and lost to the Celtics in six games.More than a decade later, in 1995, the Rockets won the championship after entering the playoffs with a 47-35 record, again making them the sixth seed. Four years later, the Knicks made the finals in a strike-shortened season as the eighth seed. The 1995 Rockets are the only team lower than the No. 4 seed to win a championship.Miami not only made the finals but also did so with a dominating playoff run. The Heat swept the Indiana Pacers in the first round, then easily dispatched the top-seeded Milwaukee Bucks, who had the best record in the N.B.A., in five games. And Miami beat the Celtics in the conference finals in six. All three teams that the Heat defeated had better regular-season records than Miami. Both of Miami’s losses in the playoffs were by less than 10 points. One was in overtime.That this Heat team made the finals was quite unexpected, even with the addition of Butler, a five-time All-Star, last summer. But Butler’s strong play and the surprising contributions of several young players on the team — Adebayo, Tyler Herro, Duncan Robinson and Kendrick Nunn — buoyed the Heat, even without the star power of other teams in the league. There were also the midseason acquisitions of the veterans Jae Crowder and Iguodala, who will now play in his sixth straight finals. Iguodala was named most valuable player of the 2014-15 finals, when he won a championship alongside Stephen Curry with the Golden State Warriors.Herro, a 20-year-old rookie, has been an especially strong playoff performer for Miami. He routinely frustrated the Celtics during the conference finals, most notably with a 37-point performance in Game 4 off the bench. On Sunday, he scored 19 points.That this roster has gone this far is also a feather in the cap of Pat Riley, the team president, who was tasked with rebuilding the Heat after LeBron James left in 2014 and Dwyane Wade, the longtime franchise cornerstone, retired in 2019. More