ESPN will be without one of its top analysts for a pivotal Game 4 between the New York Knicks and Philadelphia 76ers on Sunday afternoon.
Prior to tip-off, ESPN lead NBA play-by-play announcer Mike Breen opened the telecast with just one person, rather than the usual two, standing next to him courtside. Breen was joined by Tim Legler, one half of ESPN’s top NBA analyst duo, while Richard Jefferson was nowhere to be found.
Breen addressed the situation shortly after appearing on camera, joking that Jefferson had been downgraded to “out” due to an illness.
“Along with Tim Legler, Mike Breen on hand. Our colleague, Richard Jefferson, earlier today was listed as questionable with an illness. Well, unfortunately he’s been downgraded to out,” Breen said. “He is really feeling under the weather. And in honor of Richard tonight, we’ll have multiple on-cameras throughout the course of our telecast to pay tribute to our beloved partner.”
“And I’ll be sure to have a beer nearby, as I know Richard would love that,” Legler joked.
Of course, it is ESPN’s first year trotting out the trio of Breen, Legler, and Jefferson as its top booth after Legler replaced former lead analyst Doris Burke on the No. 1 team this season. The group is scheduled to call the NBA Finals together for the first time next month.
Considering the Knicks are up 3-0 over the 76ers for the series, it’s not the worst game in the world for Jefferson to miss. Although the Knicks can advance to the Eastern Conference Finals on Sunday, if it doesn’t happen now it’ll almost certainly happen later on in the series. And it’s almost always preferable to have sick announcers sit out, as it can be a struggle to listen to a hoarse broadcaster over the course of an entire game.
About Drew Lerner
Drew Lerner is a staff writer for Awful Announcing and an aspiring cable subscriber. He previously covered sports media for Sports Media Watch. Future beat writer for the Oasis reunion tour.
Recent Posts
Tom Brady will make first New England return as Fox broadcaster in 2026
Brady will call the Packers-Patriots game for Fox in Week 9.
Chargers tackle Dianna Russini-Mike Vrabel scandal in NFL schedule-release video
The Los Angeles Chargers "went there," as ESPN put it.
NFL Network’s Steve Wyche remembers mentor, friend, and HBCU broadcasting pioneer Charlie Neal
Charlie Neal "was a high-caliber human being who touched a lot of lives."
Howard Katz: Dennis Miller tried to stay on ‘Monday Night Football’ with Al Michaels and John Madden
"It's gotta be Madden and Michaels, and I can't do a three-man booth."
Mike Greenberg: CFP expansion could lead to end of college football ‘as we know it’
"...good teams, championship-worthy teams getting left out of the Playoff is a good thing, not a bad thing."
Steve Kerr worked Taylor Swift lyrics into his press conferences during an entire season
"His son Matthew later edited them into a video for their family group chat, so that Kerr appeared to have recited the whole song."