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Mike Brown was the Warriors’ perfect interim leader (again)

Mike Brown was the Warriors' perfect interim leader (again)

The crowd was sighing in relief, the players were milling around the court after the Warriors’ rough-and-tumble Game 4 victory, and Mike Brown and Draymond Green headed straight for each other, then shared a long, strong hug that communicated a multitude of emotions.

A big man’s embrace. A moment when two people who have meant so much to the Warriors seemed to lean into and blend into each other for a bit, sharing things only they could know.

So much happened Monday before the Warriors ever played the Grizzlies in this crucial game at Chase Center. So much pain and transition and surprise and adapting on the fly. So much that had nothing to do with each other. And so much that had everything to do with each other and the community of this team.

Early in the morning, news broke that Draymond’s former Michigan State teammate, Adreian Payne, had been shot and killed in Florida. Later, Brown was officially hired as the Sacramento Kings’ head coach. Then, a few hours before tipoff, Steve Kerr tested positive for COVID-19, which meant he couldn’t coach the game (and probably Game 5) and Brown suddenly was the guy, as he’d been for 11 games during the 2017 postseason when Kerr was suffering from the effects of a botched back surgery.

So much going on.

“I love Draymond, you know, and when he hurts, we all hurt,” Brown said after the game. “So that was tough on me personally. Then to find out Steve was out, too, it was an up-and-down or emotional day for me, too.”

But the Warriors had to get through this game. It was not a small game. The 101-98 victory, as ugly as it looked, gave them a 3-1 lead as they head to Memphis for Wednesday’s Game 5 and a shot to end this grueling series. The Warriors very much did not want to lose this game. So they had to deal with everything as it all came down Monday, which was pretty much all at once.

They had the perfect guy to handle it, though. Which the Warriors knew, because Brown has handled this before.

“You know, we’ve done this drill before,” Brown said after the game.

And once Kerr called to tell him he wasn’t feeling well and then later that he’d tested positive, Brown did the perfect Warriors thing: He leaned on the dynastic figures of this franchise. Led by letting them lead, too. Leaned on them while they leaned on him.

“Andre (Iguodala), I know he’s not playing, but just his voice, his presence, he’s always saying the right thing,” Brown said. “It uplifts all of us. And for me, it uplifted me. I told him, I told Draymond, I said: ‘I need you guys tonight. I need you guys. I’m going to lean on you guys.’ And those guys stayed steady the whole game, Andre on the bench obviously and Draymond out on the floor, and we found a way. You can do that when you have Steph Curry and (Jordan Poole) out on the floor.”

Maybe the clearest indication of the currents that flowed through the players and the staff came when Brown declined to speak about the Kings job because he wanted to remain focused on the Warriors’ situation and didn’t want to talk about the Kings until his full attention was on his next role. And then, about 20 minutes later, Draymond patiently stood in the interview room waiting for Curry’s presser to end, then politely said he couldn’t talk at length right now.

“So my emotions are kind of all over the place now,” Draymond said. “I’m going to go home and just sit on my podcast and talk because I can pause that and cry if I need to cry. I don’t like to cry in front of people. What I will say is (my wife) Hazel and I are going to donate $100,000 to a fund in Adreian’s name.

“I call on my Spartan family, coach (Tom) Izzo, Magic (Johnson), Jaren Jackson, Miles Bridges, Mat Ishbia, all of my Spartan family to come in, and let’s do something in honor of Adreian. If that’s naming something on a campus after him, if that is some scholarships for some kids from Dayton, whatever that is, I call on my Spartan family to band together and do something in Adreian’s name. So I’m going to go home and talk about Adreian, and I’ll talk a little bit about this game.

“But I can do it at my own speed and at my own space. I apologize. I will give you guys the greatest press conference after Wednesday’s game, but I just don’t have it in me tonight, I truly apologize.”

It would be a cop out to say the run of events leading up to the game caused the Warriors’ incredibly sluggish first three quarters Monday. They also knew Ja Morant was unlikely to play because of his injured knee, which could’ve led to a Warriors letdown. And also, the Warriors just couldn’t shoot for a long time in this game.

They trailed after the first quarter. They could barely score in the second quarter and trailed at halftime, too. Curry, Klay Thompson and Poole were all struggling. Everybody on the Warriors was struggling. They trailed 69-62 going into the fourth thanks to Desmond Bane’s 32-foot buzzer-beater.

But the Warriors have been together for too long and have held together for too long to despair in the face of any of that.

“I had a feeling we were going to win the game when Bane hit the tough shot to end the third, we just willed it to four, and I just knew we could,” Klay said. “We were going to win the game. I just had a feeling. It was ugly, but at this time of year, all that matters is that win.”

Curry got hot in the fourth quarter. Klay made a huge jumper from the corner. The Warriors defense surged. The Grizzlies offense, without Morant, hit the wall. Draymond brushed off his foul trouble and stopped Jaren Jackson Jr. at a few crucial moments.

Brown ran the game calmly. He didn’t call a million timeouts. He didn’t veer from his and Kerr’s rotation plan. He didn’t try weird things to show the Kings and the world how gutsy and creative he can be. He just ran the team. And when it was over, he accepted congratulations from the rest of the coaching staff, patted a few players as they headed to the locker room and beelined for Draymond.

“Yeah, it was an emotional day,” Klay said. “Prayers up to Adreian and his family, and Draymond, I know they played together. Just a terrible loss of life, and his legacy will live on. It was just a sad day.

“Really happy for Mike B., though. He’s going to do great things for Sacramento. His head-coaching record for Warriors playoff games, I think, is undefeated. We did miss Steve a lot, just his voice, his presence. But we’ve been here before in 2017 when Mike took over and we rolled off a lot of wins. I reflected on that a lot. Just an up-and-down day as far as emotions were going.”

The Warriors are going to miss Brown. They know that. He joined the staff for the 2016-17 season, just in time for the arrival of Kevin Durant and to fill in for Kerr during those 2017 playoff games, on the way to a championship.

“Coach (Kerr) talked about it, I think this morning, about what (Brown has) meant to our team and to that coaching staff,” Curry said. “And just maybe the way they approach it all year in terms of everybody having a voice for us and being able to hear that throughout the year, it makes situations like tonight a little bit easier of a transition. He had a lot of good words tonight.

“I don’t know in the history if you could name the head coach of two teams in 24 hours. He’s continuing to set many trends.”

Of course, being the Warriors in a moment of victory, it had to have humor, too. During his TNT postgame interview, Curry joked that when things were going poorly, it felt like the whole team had been traded to the Kings. (He tried to backtrack a bit later, which was almost as amusing as the one-liner.)

“Yeah, we got a lot of jokesters on the team,” Brown said with a smile when asked about the Curry crack, “and I’m OK with it.”

You get used to that kind of thing when you’re around the Warriors. You get used to major swings of emotion, surprises, drama, passion and a lot of victories. And at the end, sometimes, you just hug somebody who needs it, and you realize you need it, too.

(Photo Mike Brown and Draymond Green: Joe Murphy / NBAE via Getty Images)

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Mike Brown was the Warriors’ perfect interim leader (again)

Mike Brown was the Warriors' perfect interim leader (again)

The crowd was sighing in relief, the players were milling around the court after the Warriors’ rough-and-tumble Game 4 victory, and Mike Brown and Draymond Green headed straight for each other, then shared a long, strong hug that communicated a multitude of emotions.

A big man’s embrace. A moment when two people who have meant so much to the Warriors seemed to lean into and blend into each other for a bit, sharing things only they could know.

So much happened Monday before the Warriors ever played the Grizzlies in this crucial game at Chase Center. So much pain and transition and surprise and adapting on the fly. So much that had nothing to do with each other. And so much that had everything to do with each other and the community of this team.

Early in the morning, news broke that Draymond’s former Michigan State teammate, Adreian Payne, had been shot and killed in Florida. Later, Brown was officially hired as the Sacramento Kings’ head coach. Then, a few hours before tipoff, Steve Kerr tested positive for COVID-19, which meant he couldn’t coach the game (and probably Game 5) and that Brown suddenly was the guy, as he’d been for 11 games during the 2017 postseason when Kerr was suffering from the effects of a botched back surgery.

So much going on.

“I love Draymond, you know, and when he hurts, we all hurt,” Brown said after the game. “So that was tough on me personally. Then to find out Steve was out, too, it was an up-and-down or emotional day for me, too.”

But the Warriors had to get through this game. It was not a small game. The 101-98 victory, as ugly as it looked, gave them a 3-1 lead as they head to Memphis for Wednesday’s Game 5 and a shot to end this grueling series. The Warriors very much did not want to lose this game. So they had to deal with everything as it all came down Monday, which was pretty much all at once.

They had the perfect guy to handle it, though. Which the Warriors knew, because Brown has handled this before.

“You know, we’ve done this drill before,” Brown said after the game.

And once Kerr called to tell him that he wasn’t feeling good and then later that he’d tested positive, Brown did the perfect Warriors thing: He leaned on the dynastic figures of this franchise. Led by letting them lead, too. Leaned on them while they leaned on him.

“Andre (Iguodala), I know he’s not playing, but just his voice, his presence, he’s always saying the right thing,” Brown said. “It uplifts all of us. And for me, it uplifted me. I told him, I told Draymond, I said, ‘I need you guys tonight. I need you guys. I’m going to lean on you guys.’ And those guys stayed steady the whole game, Andre on the bench obviously and Draymond out on the floor, and we found a way. You can do that when you have Steph Curry and (Jordan Poole) out on the floor.”

Maybe the clearest indication of the currents that flowed through the players and the staff came when Brown declined to speak about the Kings job because he wanted to remain focused on the Warriors’ situation and didn’t want to talk about the Kings until his full attention was on his next role. And then, about 20 minutes later, Draymond patiently stood in the interview room waiting for Curry’s presser to end, then politely said he couldn’t talk at length right now.

“So my emotions are kind of all over the place now,” Draymond said. “I’m going to go home and just sit on my podcast and talk because I can pause that and cry if I need to cry. I don’t like to cry in front of people. What I will say is (wife) Hazel and I are going to donate $100,000 to a fund in Adreian’s name.

“I call on my Spartan family, coach (Tom) Izzo, Magic (Johnson), Jaren Jackson, Miles Bridges, Mat Ishbia, all of my Spartan family to come in and let’s do something in honor of Adreian. If that’s naming something on a campus after him, if that is some scholarships for some kids from Dayton, whatever that is, I call on my Spartan family to band together and do something in Adreian’s name. So I’m going to go home and talk about Adreian, and I’ll talk a little bit about this game.

“But I can do it at my own speed and at my own space. I apologize. I will give you guys the greatest press conference after Wednesday’s game, but I just don’t have it in me tonight, I truly apologize.”

It would be a copout to say that the Warriors’ incredibly sluggish first three quarters Monday were caused by the run of events leading up to the game. They also knew that Ja Morant was unlikely to play because of his injured knee, which could’ve led to a Warriors letdown. And also, the Warriors just couldn’t shoot for a long time in this game.

They trailed after the first quarter. They could barely score in the second quarter and trailed at halftime, too. Curry, Klay Thompson and Poole were all struggling. Everybody on the Warriors was struggling. They trailed 69-62 going into the fourth thanks to Desmond Bane’s 32-foot buzzer-beater.

But the Warriors have been together for too long and have held together for too long to despair in the face of any of that.

“I had a feeling we were going to win the game when Bane hit the tough shot to end the third, we just willed it to four, and I just knew we could,” Klay said. “We were going to win the game. I just had a feeling. It was ugly, but at this time of year, all that matters is that win.”

Curry got hot in the fourth quarter. Klay made a huge jumper from the corner. The Warriors defense surged. The Grizzlies offense, without Morant, hit the wall. Draymond brushed off his foul trouble and stopped Jaren Jackson Jr. at a few crucial moments.

Brown ran the game calmly. He didn’t call a million timeouts. He didn’t veer from his and Kerr’s rotation plan. He didn’t try weird things to show the Kings and the world how gutsy and creative he can be. He just ran the team. And when it was over, he accepted congratulations from the rest of the coaching staff, patted a few players as they headed to the locker room and beelined for Draymond.

“Yeah, it was an emotional day,” Klay said. “Prayers up to Adreian and his family, and Draymond, I know they played together. Just a terrible loss of life, and his legacy will live on. It was just a sad day.

“Really happy for Mike B., though. He’s going to do great things for Sacramento. His head-coaching record for Warriors playoff games, I think, is undefeated. We did miss Steve a lot, just his voice, his presence. But we’ve been here before in 2017 when Mike took over and we rolled off a lot of wins. I reflected on that a lot. Just an up-and-down day as far as emotions were going.”

The Warriors are going to miss Brown. They know that. He joined the staff for the 2016-17 season, just in time for the arrival of Kevin Durant and to fill in for Kerr during those 2017 playoff games, on the way to a championship.

“Coach (Kerr) talked about it, I think this morning, about what (Brown has) meant to our team and to that coaching staff,” Curry said. “And just maybe the way they approach it all year in terms of everybody having a voice for us and being able to hear that throughout the year, it makes situations like tonight a little bit easier of a transition. He had a lot of good words tonight.

“I don’t know in the history if you could name the head coach of two teams in 24 hours. He’s continuing to set many trends.”

Of course, being the Warriors in a moment of victory, it had to have humor, too. During his TNT postgame interview, Curry joked that when things were going poorly, it felt like the whole team had been traded to the Kings. (He tried to backtrack a bit later, which was almost as amusing as the one-liner.)

“Yeah, we got a lot of jokesters on the team,” Brown said with a smile when asked about the Curry crack, “and I’m OK with it.”

You get used to that kind of thing when you’re around the Warriors. You get used to major swings of emotion, surprises, drama, passion and a lot of victories. And at the end, sometimes, you just hug somebody who needs it, and you realize you need it, too.

(Photo Mike Brown and Draymond Green: Joe Murphy/NBAE via Getty Images)

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A timeline of events culminating in Sen. Mike Lee’s texts to Mark Meadows trying to overturn the 2020 election.

A timeline of events culminating in Sen. Mike Lee’s texts to Mark Meadows trying to overturn the 2020 election.

In a text sent on Nov. 7, the day that many media outlets declared the election for current Democratic President Joe Biden, Lee asked Meadows to deliver the following message to Trump.

“We the undersigned offer our unequivocal support for you to exhaust every legal and constitutional remedy at your disposal to restore Americans faith in our elections,” he wrote.

What followed were months of correspondence where Lee offered advice on means to overturn the election and asked for guidance on what he should be saying, according to the reporting by CNN.

Lee and Trump have an uneven history dating back to before the latter was elected president in 2016. Here is a breakdown of the events preceding and surrounding Lee’s texts with Meadows.

  • July 2016: Lee attempts, and fails, to stop Trump from becoming the Republican Party’s presidential nominee while gathered in Cleveland with Utah’s GOP delegates at the Republican National Convention.

  • October 2016: In a since-deleted Facebook video, Lee calls for Trump to step down as a presidential candidate after a 2005 “Access Hollywood” tape surfaced in which Trump makes lewd comments about women. In his video, Lee says, “You, sir, are the distraction. Your conduct, sir, is the distraction.”

  • November 2016: Trump wins the 2016 presidential election, defeating Democratic nominee Hillary Clinton. Lee reveals that he voted for independent candidate Evan McMullin, saying, “I had signaled in the past concerns that I had with my party’s nominee. I’ve made no secret about that and I don’t feel any desire to rehearse those now.… I saw in Evan McMullin an opportunity to register a protest vote.”

  • In the months following Trump’s victory, Lee begins to warm to Trump. He later says he can’t identify exactly when his feelings toward the president began to shift but that they agree more often than not.

  • June 2018: U.S. Supreme Court Justice Anthony Kennedy announces his retirement. Lee and his brother, Utah Supreme Court Justice Thomas Lee, are included on a short-list for candidates. Current Justice Brett Kavanaugh is selected instead.

  • November 2019: Lee announces he will co-chair Trump’s reelection campaign in Utah. At the time of the announcement, Lee said, “Look, some of you in this room, some of you in our state were wise enough to see where this was heading a few years ago. You were quick and astute enough to see the gift that President Trump and Vice President Pence would be to the United States of America. Some of us took a little bit more time.”

  • Sept. 9, 2020: U.S. Supreme Court Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg dies. Trump retains both Lee and his brother on his list of potential nominees. Current Justice Amy Coney Barrett eventually receives the nod.

  • Sept. 23, 2020: Trump refuses to commit to a peaceful transfer of power if he loses the 2020 election. In response, freshman Utah Sen. Mitt Romney tweets, “Any suggestion that a president might not respect this Constitutional guarantee is both unthinkable and unacceptable.” Lee’s spokesperson, Conn Carroll, says, “Sen. Lee is entirely confident that both President Trump and Joe Biden will honor the results of this November’s election.”

  • Oct. 7-8, 2020: Lee tweets “We’re not a democracy.” He follows up the controversial message with another tweet a day later, writing, “Democracy isn’t the objective; liberty, peace, and prospefity (sic) are. We want the human condition to flourish. Rank democracy can thwart that.”

  • Oct. 28, 2020: At an Arizona campaign rally, Lee compares Trump to Book of Mormon hero Captain Moroni, saying, “To my Mormon friends, my Latter-day Saint friends, think of him as Captain Moroni. He seeks not power, but to pull it down.” He later walked back his comments, somewhat, calling them “perhaps awkward” in a Facebook post.

  • Nov. 4, 2020: Lee urges voters to remain calm while votes are counted, saying in a written statement, “Once again, we have an extremely close presidential election on our hands. It’s best for everyone to step back from the spin and allow the vote counters to do their job. The most important thing is that we have a fair count that the American people can trust.”

  • Nov. 7, 2020: The Associated Press calls the election for Biden. Lee sends a message of support to Meadows, along with several texts concerning pro-Trump lawyer Sidney Powell — who is currently facing disciplinary action in multiple states — in one text writing, “Sydney (sic) Powell is saying that she needs to get in to see the president, but she’s being kept away from him. Apparently she has a strategy to keep things alive and put several states back in play. Can you help her get in?” Nov. 7 is the beginning of CNN’s reporting on Lee’s correspondence with Meadows.

  • Nov. 9, 2020: Even as a pair of his fellow Utah lawmakers acknowledge Biden as president-elect, Lee refuses to admit Trump’s defeat, releasing a written statement, saying, “I look forward to working with whichever candidate emerges as the winner at the end of this process.” In a text to Meadows, Lee reaffirms his support for Trump and mentions a meeting with other Republican senators at which Sidney Powell was the guest speaker. He writes, “You have in us a group of ready and loyal advocates who will go to bat for him, but I fear this could prove short-lived unless you hire the right legal team and set them loose immediately.” In a different message, Lee says he’s found Powell to be a “straight shooter.”

  • Nov. 10, 2020: Lee asks Meadows about how many “vbm” (likely referring to vote-by-mail ballots) were tossed out in Pennsylvania and Wisconsin for not meeting state requirements. “I can’t find the stats anywhere,” he wrote. “But in the primaries it was above the current margin of victory with much lower turnout. If they played games with that Trump has a really strong case.”

  • Nov. 19, 2020: Lee texts Meadows worried about Powell’s remarks at a news conference hosted by Trump’s legal team. In one text, he calls some of the accusations Powell made “very, very serious.” He also gives counsel to Meadows, writing, “Unless Powell can immediately substantiate what she said today, the president should probably disassociate himself and refute any claims that can’t be substantiated.”

  • Nov. 20 and 22, 2020: Lee sends texts asking for advice on what to say. “Please give me something to work with,” he writes on Nov. 20. “I just need to know what I should be saying.”

  • Nov. 23, 2020: Lee repeatedly defends Trump’s refusal to concede the election on conservative social network platform Parler, writing in one post, “You want unity now, progressives? Great. If you do, then — regardless of what you think of President Trump or the legal theories being pursued by his lawyers — at least acknowledge that he has every right to verify the fairness and accuracy of the election. Such efforts are not at odds with the electoral process; they are themselves part of the process.” Lee also sends a text to Meadows, outlining his belief that an audit of ballots in Pennsylvania, Wisconsin, Georgia and Michigan could help prove “something is not right” in those states. “But to do this,” he wrote, “you’d have to act very soon.”

  • Dec. 8, 2020: Lee sends another suggestion to Meadows: “If a very small handful of states were to have their legislatures appoint alternative slates of delegates, there could be a path,” he writes, proving he knew about machinations to have then-Vice President Mike Pence discard Electoral College votes nearly a month before he claimed. Meadows responds, “I am working on that as of yesterday”

  • Dec. 16, 2020: Lee tells Meadows that if he wants any senators to object to certifying electoral votes, he would have to provide them with talking points. “I think we’re now passed the point where we can expect anyone will do it without some direction and a strong evidentiary argument,” he wrote in one text.

  • Jan. 3, 2021: Lee sends a slew of texts to Meadows, voicing concerns about the way the campaign is going. One of the texts reads, in part, “I’d love to be proven wrong about my concerns. But I really think this could all backfire badly unless we have legislatures submitting trump slates (based on a conclusion that this was the proper result under state law). … We simply have no authority to reject a state’s certified electoral votes in the absence of a dueling slates, with the Trump slate coming from a state legislative determination.”

  • Jan. 4, 2021: This is the final day of texts that CNN released between Lee and Meadows. Lee is upset at the way Trump rebuked him at a Georgia rally. Lee writes, “I’ve been calling state legislators for hours today, and am going to spend hours doing the same tomorrow. I’m trying to figure out a path that I can persuasively defend, and this won’t make it any easier, especially if others now think I’m doing this because he went after me. This just makes it a lot more complicated. And it was complicated already. We need something from state legislatures to make this legitimate and to have any hope of winning.”

  • Jan. 6, 2021: A mob storms the U.S. Capitol. During the assault, Trump mistakenly calls Lee. Lee votes against objections to certifying the election in Arizona and Pennsylvania. “Our job is a very simple one,” he said. “Our job is to convene to open the ballots and to count them. That’s it.”

  • March 10, 2021: Lee attacks HR1, a massive voting rights bill, saying, “I disagree with every single word in HR1 … Everything about this bill is rotten to the core. It was written and held by the devil himself.”

  • April 1, 2022: Trump endorses Lee for reelection.

  • Tribune editor Jeff Parrott and reporter Bryan Schott contributed to this report.

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