January 2022 Book Reviews
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January 2022 Book Reviews

Three-Ring Circus

By Jeff Pearlman

Houghton Mifflin Harcourt

As the manuscript was completed for “Three-Ring Circus” in early 2020, author Jeff Pearlman found himself in what some would consider a quandary.

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A true pro -- Terry Porter helps out in a big way on a book-signing night at Moda Center
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A true pro -- Terry Porter helps out in a big way on a book-signing night at Moda Center

Terry Porter and I go back a long way.

Terry was an All-Star point guard when I first covered the Trail Blazers for The Oregonian. He was kind enough to make an appearance at a Sportswriters Camp for aspiring journalists that Dwight Jaynes and I ran for seven years in the late 1980s and early ‘90s. I was privileged to represent the Professional Basketball Writers Association in presenting him with the NBA’s J. Walter Kennedy Citizenship Award for the 1992-93 season.

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For Chad Forcier: 25 years in the NBA, and now two rings
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For Chad Forcier: 25 years in the NBA, and now two rings

Most coaches never get to experience the thrill of an NBA championship.

Chad Forcier has done it twice — once with the San Antonio Spurs in 2014, this year with the Milwaukee Bucks.

“I was so fortunate to have gone through it once with the Spurs,” says Forcier, a long-ago assistant coach at both Oregon State and the University of Portland. “To have a second shot at it with the Bucks …  I’m not sure that ‘living a dream’ adequately describes it. I’m keenly aware of how many players and coaches never get to taste that. I feel very blessed.”

Forcier was on the bench alongside head coach Mike Budenholzer as Milwaukee took the Phoenix Suns in six games to secure the franchise’s first NBA title in a half-century. The city was agog over the prospects. An estimated 65,000 people jammed into the Deer District surrounding Fiserv Forum to watch Tuesday night’s Game 6 on a big screen outside the arena and then celebrate afterward.

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Herb Brown, Mark Warkentien Endorse Blazers’ selection of Billups as head coach
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Herb Brown, Mark Warkentien Endorse Blazers’ selection of Billups as head coach

Herb Brown was an assistant coach with the Detroit Pistons for only one season — but what a season it was.

The older brother of then-Detroit head coach Larry Brown was on hand for the Pistons’ ride to the NBA championship in 2003-04. One of his favorite players to work with on that team was the new head coach of the Trail Blazers, Chauncey Billups.

“I love him,” says Herb, now retired and living in Traveler’s Rest, S.C. “He was terrific when I was with the Pistons. He’s a major reason why we were successful. He was a great leader. He took coaching. He understood coaching. He was truly professional.”

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A fond farewell to Herb Brown, the octogenarian Oregonian who has coached the world
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A fond farewell to Herb Brown, the octogenarian Oregonian who has coached the world

Put Herb Brown in among the famous Oregonians who flies under the radar in the world of sports.

The older brother (by 4 1/2 years) of Naismith Basketball Hall of Famer Larry Brown is an accomplished casaba coach in his own right.

Brown, who turns 85 in March, is most well-known for his time spent as head coach of the Detroit Pistons from 1975-77.

But Brown’s resume is replete with stops throughout the world. The native New Yorker has had assistant coaching jobs with eight franchises, including the Trail Blazers. He was a member of Maurice Cheeks’ Portland staff from 2001-03.

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On Dwane Casey’s message, the NBA’s re-opening
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On Dwane Casey’s message, the NBA’s re-opening

Weighing in on two issues of the day:

I’ve known and had a good relationship with Dwane Casey for almost 30 years, since he was a member of the coaching staff (along with Terry Stotts) of George Karl with the Seattle SuperSonics. I have a great deal of respect for Casey, now head coach of the Detroit Pistons, and the type of man he is.

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