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Walter "Clyde" Frazier Jr. (born March 29, 1945) is an American former professional basketball player of the National Basketball Association (NBA). As their floor general and top perimeter defender, he led the New York Knicks to the franchise's only two championships (1970 and 1973), and was inducted into the Naismith Memorial Basketball Hall of Fame in 1987.
It was not until the 1987–88 season that every Knicks' game was broadcast locally on radio in New York; for many years prior to that, only home games and (after the late 1940s) a handful of away games were heard. Regular-season away games heard on radio after the early 1960s were generally not broadcast locally on television.
CenterCourt – debuted in 2006, is an all-basketball podcast hosted by Gus Johnson and featuring John Andariese and Walt "Clyde" Frazier. Johnson recaps NBA news and offers fantasy advice, while Frazier answers fan emails in a segment called "Dishin and Swishin" and Andariese tells basketball stories in the segment "Tall Tales".
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The awards show broadcast will return to Los Angeles' Crypto.com Arena on Feb. 2 and will broadcast live on CBS and stream live and on-demand on Paramount+ at 5-8:30 p.m. PST.
Walter Pratt – CBC 1970–1978; Bruce Rainnie – CBC 2003–present, CBC 2003–2014; Mickey Redmond – CBC 1980–1987, CBC 1980–1987, Detroit Red Wings 1985–present (channel 50, Bally Sports Detroit) Drew Remenda – San Jose Sharks 2006–2007, 2007–2014 (Fox Sports Net Bay Area, NBC Sports California) CBC 2006–2007
[22] [23] With that, the Nets had employed all three Albert brothers during the franchise's history; Al started his broadcast career with the Nets during their ABA days, while Steve called Nets games during the late 1970s and 1980s. Beginning with the 2008–09 season, he was also paired with his TNT broadcast colleague Mike Fratello on the YES ...
The games were produced by Turner Sports, the sports division of the Turner Broadcasting System subsidiary of Time Warner, TBS's corporate parent. TBS obtained rights to air NBA games [ 3 ] beginning with the 1984-85 season [ 4 ] (replacing the ESPN and USA Network as the NBA's national cable partners) in which TBS shared the NBA television ...