ESPN ‘s–t on’ Jeff Van Gundy by laying him off at inopportune time, brother Stan says

2 minutes, 10 seconds Read

Despite not coaching since 2007, Jeff Van Gundy was constantly in the rumor mill for plenty of open positions – all while he was a color commentator for ESPN.

Well, ESPN quietly laid off the former Knicks and Rockets head coach before this NBA season started, and his brother Stan, who is also a head coach turned analyst on TNT, says they did his brother dirty.

“He was hurt by it, I mean he worked for them for 17 years. And it wasn’t even just the fact that they made the move, I mean they s–t on him,” Stan said on “South Beach Sessions,” via “Awful Announcing.”

CLICK HERE FOR MORE SPORTS COVERAGE ON FOXNEWS.COM

The older Van Gundy said Jeff lost his job conveniently after the top coaching and front office positions this past offseason were all filled.

“The timing was awful. They waited until basically the NBA market in terms of coaching jobs, assistant jobs, front office jobs was already gone by to make the move,” Stan claims. “And then they delayed and delayed and delayed on a buyout that would free him to work for [other] people. I mean, after 17 years of being in arguably … the best game broadcast booth in the business in basketball, and being the kind of person he is, ESPN s–t on him.”

CAITLIN CLARK DISMISSES ‘NARRATIVES’ OF ‘ATTENTION’ SHE’S RECEIVED AMID FEVER’S STRUGGLES: ‘I DON’T READ THAT’

At the time, play-by-play announcer Mike Breen said it was “hard to come to grips with” the fact that ESPN cut ties with both Van Gundy and Mark Jackson.

“It’s sad, because we really thought we had something special, and that’s going to be the thought going forward is that we were able to do it a lot longer than anybody ever did,” Breen said at the time, calling them both “dream partners.

“It’s something we’ll all treasure, but we just wish it was a little bit longer. “You don’t expect it, because it was such a great team. And to have it completely broken up was a surprise. . . .

“The other part of it is the personal part, and that’s tougher. Now, we’re going to be friends until the day we die.”

ESPN’s main NBA broadcast team now consists of Breen, Doris Burke, and J.J. Redick, who replaced Doc Rivers after he surprisingly took the Milwaukee Bucks job following his extremely short stint in the booth.

Follow Fox News Digital’s sports coverage on X, and subscribe to the Fox News Sports Huddle newsletter.

Article Source: Sports From Fox News Read More 

Similar Posts

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *