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In his record ninth NBA head coaching job, Brown immediately demanded changes and Jordan and Higgins responded with a number of trades that completely rebuilt the team. Behind Gerald Wallace and Stephen Jackson, the Bobcats went 44-38 last season and secured the franchise's first playoff berth.
But after getting swept by Orlando in the first round, the moody Brown started having reservations about returning. He lamented about being away from his wife and young children in suburban Philadelphia. He stressed that he would only coach for Jordan, and eventually agreed to come back.
However, the offseason included point guard Raymond Felton's departure to New York in free agency and the trade of center Tyson Chandler to Dallas in what amounted to a salary dump to get under the luxury tax threshold.
"I talked to him before the preseason and I could tell he was worried because he lost Chandler and Raymond but that was it," said Knicks President Donnie Walsh, Brown's boss when they were together in Indiana.
"I watched him and he was making up for it and I thought he was doing a great job of coaching during a stretch there. Then the last week or so I don't know what happened."
Despite Jordan's proclamation before the season that, "at the minimum, we should make the playoffs," the Bobcats have struggled all season under a barrage of turnovers and a stagnant offense. Brown was getting increasingly critical of his team and himself in recent weeks.
"I never thought I'd have to be in a position where I'd have to beg guys to play hard," Brown said before Tuesday's game. "I just feel bad if anybody who really enjoys the game would watch our team play. They'd look at me and say, 'That coach is not doing his job.' That's the thing I feel most bad about."
Brown was similarly despondent after Charlotte missed its first 11 shots of the fourth quarter to go with five turnovers in his final game against the Thunder, turning a one-point lead into another one-sided loss.
Brown worked with mostly the second unit in Wednesday's practice before he met with Jordan, who bought the team outright earlier this year.
"Losing three of our last six games by 30 points or more, that's a bad sign for us on the short term," Higgins said. "Our goals now are to remain competitive and to continue to try to improve our roster."
[Associated Press;
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