Former NBA player, Coach of Year Doug Moe dies
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Doug Moe has died, the Denver Nuggets announced on Tuesday. The 1988 NBA Coach of the Year was 87.
The new four-part Prime Video docuseries, executive produced by Chicago rapper Common and ABA players Julius “Dr. J” Erving and George Karl, is a look back at the league’s history and forward to what the NBA has become: one of the most popular sports in the world.
The modern NBA – both as a competitive sports league and as an entertainment company – owes a lot of its existence to the one-time rebel league.
A three-time All-Star in the early days of the ABA who went on to a Hall of Fame career as a coach with three NBA teams died.
A new Prime Video docuseries, out Feb. 12, delves into the history of the league that first incorporated the three point shot.
The former player and coach delves into the rise and fall of the basketball league in a new documentary.
The project, narrated by rapper Common and co-produced by former NBA coach George Karl, revisits the rise and influence of the ABA, the upstart league that merged with the NBA 50 years ago.
Hired in 1976 following the ABA-NBA merger, Moe replaced Bob Bass and immediately installed a system that prioritized pace over set plays. His strategy, often called "The Passing Game," relied on a simple but rigid rule: no player should hold the ball for more than two seconds.
The son of former team owner Angelo Drossos attended the Spurs' 4,000th NBA game decades after serving as a ball boy in the team's first ABA outing in 1973.
Lamar was a three-time collegiate All-American between 1969–1973, was named First team All-America in 1972 and 1973 and was the No. 1 overall pick in the 1973 American Basketball Association Draft.