New York Post

No stopping ageless Hubie

At 85, he’s set for ’18 debut

- Andrew Marchand amarchand@nypost.com

L AST June, Hubie Brown severed the tendon in one of his quadriceps before Game 4 of the NBA Finals. While rehabbing the injury, he needed a walker and a cane.

In September, he turned 85. This month, he signed a new, two-year contract.

“It is not a job,” Brown said. “It is enjoyable.”

After nearly four months of rehab, Brown is nearly as good as new, walking without assistance and even driving again.

On Friday, the ESPN color commentato­r will make his 2018 debut during Celtics-Raptors. In all, he will do 34 broadcasts, including the NBA Finals on radio.

There is no place he would rather be. Anyone who has heard Brown on the air — and anyone who knows him well — knows the Hall of Famer is a basketball marvel.

From young to old, from the famous to the not so famous, Brown has touched so many, talking his language: basketball.

When Kobe Bryant retired, he made it a point to find Brown for a long embrace, bonded by the shared love of being on that 94-foot floor.

“He’s the all-time best,” said NBC’s Mike Tirico, who teams with Brown at ABC/ESPN. “He’s a marvel. Everyone who has worked with Hubie holds him in the highest regard.”

Brown has built a memorable broadcasti­ng career, even if he hasn’t been as commercial­ly out front as someone like fellow Hall of Famer Dick Vitale. Vitale — at 79, just a diaper dandy compared to Brown — has a more “look at me” style. As an analyst, Dickie V is like a flashy scorer who can go for 40 or shoot you out of the game.

Brown is more like a guy who consistent­ly goes for 15 points with eight boards and eight assists while playing solid defense in a winning effort. It is not as noticeable but just as enjoyable.

For true lovers of the NBA, hearing Brown say “Now” or “We know that” is the cue we are about to learn something we do not know about “our league,” another pet phrase — which he points out he has the right to say since he started in the ABA/NBA in 1973. They are subtle trademarks of his broadcasts.

Now, at 85, Brown’s voice is slightly thinner than it once was, but his enthusiasm and knowledge remain at the top of the charts. When asked about the storylines for this season, he started going team by team for a good five minutes. (Short version: He thinks the Knicks made a good hire with David Fizdale because he can communicat­e.)

Brown is, at heart, a teacher. In 1968, he was a counselor at a Five-Star Camp, and one of his campers was a teenager named John Martin.

“His whole lecture was how to properly run the fast break,” Martin said. “It was mind-boggling. I was blown away at just the knowledge and the demonstrat­ion of the nuances.”

Martin would go on to become Brown’s executive producer on ESPN Radio’s NBA coverage.

In 1986, Brown was the coach of the Knicks. That is the same year his Friday broadcasti­ng partner, Ryan Ruocco, was born.

“Hubie Brown is the single best storytelle­r I have ever met in my life by far,” Ruocco said. “It is not even close.”

Said Martin: “It wouldn’t shock me if he got another two-year deal after this one,” Martin said.

➤ Quick Clicks: ESPN+ has added another big name in Peyton Manning to do a “Detail” show, like Kobe Bryant did on basketball. Games are one-time viewing, so ESPN+, as much as it can, is trying to create Netflixlik­e evergreen content. There is likely an audience for Manning breaking down film. How big is another question.

Plus is trying to find as many subscriber­s as it can so it eventually can be the dominant player in overthe-top sports viewing with its most important feature still being games.

➤ Clicker Consulting: Mike Francesa said he would have no problem releasing the number of subscriber­s for his “Mike’s On” app, but he is not allowed to do that. As always, Clicker Consulting is here to do its public service: Mike, you are allowed to release subscriber numbers. No law against it.

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