Basketball
Related: About this forumAnybody remember Downtown Freddie Brown from the Seatle Supersonics...
back in the 70s? ESPN had a segment on about Steph Curry breaking the Warriors scoring record of Wilt Chamberlain and which had the most influence on the gameWilt because of his prodigious scoring/rebounding etc. and Steph because of his 3-point shooting. The consensus was kind of split between the two.
I remember marveling at Freddie Brown's long-distance sniping back in the day before 3-point shooting was really appreciated as a 50% scoring benefit over the 2-point shot. He was the fore-runner of Steph Curry.
https://video.search.yahoo.com/yhs/search?fr=yhs-trp-001&ei=UTF-8&hsimp=yhs-001&hspart=trp&p=downtown+freddy+brown&type=Y61_F1_148993_102720#id=1&vid=eab3a4c4585efff66f88a9ea2cde771e&action=click
NoRethugFriends
(2,997 posts)brush
(57,517 posts)it was as if from downtown.
Response to brush (Reply #2)
Chin music This message was self-deleted by its author.
gohuskies
(1,186 posts)I recall following the Supersonics during their heyday under Bill Russell and Lenny Wilkens. Freddy was deadly especially when the NBA went to the 3-pt shot. I recall that the nickname Downtown came from Bob Blackburn who was 'The Voice' for the Sonics since they joined the league. What a trio of guards they had in their championship years, Freddy, Dennis Johnson (DJ), and Gus Williams (the Wizard) were alongside Jack Sikma and Lonnie Shelton. We need the NBA to right the wrong of allowing the Sonics to leave town. I curse David Stern forever for abandoning Seattle just to punish the region for not building a new sports arena less than a decade after a major renovation. Stern was a snake.
brush
(57,517 posts)Especially with all the high tech money in the area.
Yavin4
(36,386 posts)Not only did they lose their team. They could have had Durant, Harden, and Westbrook in their primes as well.
rurallib
(63,200 posts)when an incredibly talented group went undefeated in the Big Ten - 1969 - 1970 season. 14-0 record, averaged 102 points/ game in the Big Ten that year. Freddie Brown lighting it up from downtown Iowa City.
But Freddie wasn't the big shooter in the Big Ten that year. That would be Purdue's Rick Mount who hit 61 in a losing effort to Iowa that year.
We sure remember Brown around here.
Maxheader
(4,396 posts)About downtowns midcourt beautys...