- Joined
- Nov 1, 2014
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By Noam Scheiber
New York Times
April 28, 2018
PHILADELPHIA — …But Mr. Antetokounmpo, known around the league as the “Greek Freak,” had other thoughts on his mind. Sitting courtside …the Freak noticed an athletic woman in workout clothes a few yards away.
“Oh, that’s Doris,” he blurted, with all the self-control of a celebrity gawker. “Hey, Doris!”
“Doris” would be Doris Burke, the longtime ESPN basketball personality, who, 27 years into her career, last September became the first woman to land a regular job as an N.B.A. analyst on national television — cracking what many consider one of the highest, hardest glass ceilings in broadcasting.
Members of the basketball intelligentsia routinely describe her as one of the game’s top analysts. When asked on a podcast about a recent Burke-called game, Kevin Durant, the most valuable player of last year’s N.B.A. finals, interrupted the interviewer to proclaim, “Doris is the greatest.” The Dallas Mavericks’ coach, Rick Carlisle, said she comes across as having played and coached at a high level, “yet has the gift for making the complex simple.”
I really miss Doris and Dave calling the UConn games. I know there are others here who do not, but I enjoyed them as announcers and their appreciation and recognition of Geno and the teams that he crafted. I never really understood why some were so critical of her.
Here is the [LINK] to the full, and enjoyable, NY Times story for any who may be interested.
And don’t even start with the comporting!
New York Times
April 28, 2018
PHILADELPHIA — …But Mr. Antetokounmpo, known around the league as the “Greek Freak,” had other thoughts on his mind. Sitting courtside …the Freak noticed an athletic woman in workout clothes a few yards away.
“Oh, that’s Doris,” he blurted, with all the self-control of a celebrity gawker. “Hey, Doris!”
“Doris” would be Doris Burke, the longtime ESPN basketball personality, who, 27 years into her career, last September became the first woman to land a regular job as an N.B.A. analyst on national television — cracking what many consider one of the highest, hardest glass ceilings in broadcasting.
Members of the basketball intelligentsia routinely describe her as one of the game’s top analysts. When asked on a podcast about a recent Burke-called game, Kevin Durant, the most valuable player of last year’s N.B.A. finals, interrupted the interviewer to proclaim, “Doris is the greatest.” The Dallas Mavericks’ coach, Rick Carlisle, said she comes across as having played and coached at a high level, “yet has the gift for making the complex simple.”
I really miss Doris and Dave calling the UConn games. I know there are others here who do not, but I enjoyed them as announcers and their appreciation and recognition of Geno and the teams that he crafted. I never really understood why some were so critical of her.
Here is the [LINK] to the full, and enjoyable, NY Times story for any who may be interested.
And don’t even start with the comporting!