Is Brown the same broadcaster he was 40 years ago? Of course not. But he’s also not a gimmick. He belongs in his chair.
“I continue to learn something from Hubie every game,” said Pasch. “Specifically for the Bucks-Knicks, before the game in our preparation discussions and early on in the broadcast, Hubie highlighted the physicality of the Knicks and how critical that was to finally beat Milwaukee. He kept pointing out the points in the paint differential, fast break points, and other hustle stats to show how that physicality and desire was playing out in a favorable way for New York. He noticed
Isaiah Hartenstein’s rebounding position, tips on offensive rebounds to keep plays alive, deflections on defense, and how important his role was since the Knicks were playing without
Mitchell Robinson and
Jericho Sims. It’s also the little things that Hubie notices and punctuates to help the viewer understand not just the ‘what’ but the ‘why’ in a broadcast. That helps me as a play-by-play announcer, because I start to see those things as well, and can incorporate those into my call of the game.
“He does two things during commercial breaks that obviously the audience isn’t privy to. First, he regularly asks me if I am getting enough time to call the game, how things sound, and if we are working in tandem. Hubie is an incredible teammate. We spend a decent amount of time together off the air and normally have dinner the night before the game. He treats me like I am part of his family, and that comes through in our communication on game day. The second thing Hubie does is point out important stats on the box score that stand out to him. It helps me as his broadcast partner because it gives me a sense of what is important to him, where to lead him, or to reemphasize later in the broadcast.”
Brown has said in previous interviews that if he had a life motto it is this:
You are always a half step from the street. It came from his father, Charlie, who worked as a foreman at the federal shipyard in Kearny, New Jersey. I asked him after all these years and all his successes, if that motto still drives him.
“I always say that it is imprinted on my brain,” Brown said. “The Kearny shipyards, they made the destroyers and battleships that went over to Europe. My dad was the foreman, and his crew would take those ships and drop them off on the different bases up and down the Eastern Seaboard because those ships were going over to Europe during the Second World War. About two years after the war ended, they closed the shipyards. So my dad was unemployed. He went to work for my mom’s sister’s husband at the Singer sewing-machine plant in Elizabeth, New Jersey. He was a machinist. He could fix anything.
“Then the Kearny shipyards reopened. He had 19 years in already. He goes back, and then five to six months later, they closed the shipyard. Jobs were tough. And this man with incredible pride walked the streets for eight months and couldn’t find a job. He became the janitor of my high school, Saint Mary’s High School in Elizabeth, New Jersey. I was in the seventh grade when he told me: ‘Chief, I want you to remember this the rest of your life. No matter how good life is going for you, just remember that you’re a half step from the street.'”
That philosophy has also guided Brown with his health. He stopped watching full West Coast games a couple of years ago because they ended too late and he was cheating himself on his sleep. He played tennis for many years and also took up swimming later in his life.
“I would say to myself while swimming, ‘I’m going to do eight laps right now,’ and I’d be thinking about a topic I had to work on during each lap,” Brown said. “Then I would get out of the pool and I’d have a pad there where I would write down all these things. Playing tennis was good, but now I have a lower back problem between my third and fourth vertebrae that they can’t heal right now, so I can’t play tennis. The tennis was great because of the competition and then learning how to play with people that are much better than you. But swimming is good for you for the stamina and everything else, as well as making sure you don’t cheat on the doctors.”
“Other than some of the physical challenges of being 90, the man hasn’t slowed down,” said Ken Dennis, who directs NBA games for ESPN/ABC and has worked with Brown for 15 years. “He flies in a day early, hits the hotel, grabs dinner early and is back to his room to watch TNT or whoever has games on that night. He builds his board and notes for the game. Honestly, other than a slightly slower walking pace, I haven’t seen a lot of change in the years I’ve known him. He’s always asking me how he did on a show we just finished. He’ll say, ‘Be honest now!’ He loves feedback.
“He also asks about our people. My crew has become his crew. Probably the most fun thing for me to see and hear is all the coaches, players, fans, etc., that see him. When he’s sitting at the table courtside doing his prep, players warming up on the floor come over to say hello, wish him well, or even to get a thought from him on their play. You see the respect and the reverence.”
Brown has worked about 15 games each season over the last four years for ESPN/ABC and says that’s perfect for him. His enthusiasm and work is such that if his health remains, there’s no reason he can’t keep doing this for a couple of years.
“I basically do two games a month, and it works out great,” Brown says. “It keeps me alive, vital, and on top of what’s going on and current. To me, the schedule is perfect. I can’t thank the people at ABC and ESPN enough for the fact that they continue to extend me year after year without my agent pestering them for an extension
(laughs).”