Bowen out as Clippers’ analyst after critique of Leonard

Bowen out as Clippers’ analyst after critique of Leonard

After lambasting Kawhi Leonard, Bruce Bowen was dropped as a television game analyst for the Los Angeles Clippers.

Bruce Bowen was part of three NBA title-winning teams with the San Antonio Spurs. (Reuters pic)
LOS ANGELES:
Bruce Bowen won’t be back as a Los Angeles Clippers television game analyst next season after recently making critical comments about potential 2019 free agent Kawhi Leonard, ESPN reported on Monday.

Bowen’s contract was with Fox Sports West, but the Clippers have a high level of input over who is part of the television crew.

Bowen tore into Leonard in a June radio interview for the way the forward handled his situation with the San Antonio Spurs last season.

The Clippers hope to make a run at luring Leonard to the organisation next summer should Leonard become a free agent. Leonard is from Riverside, about an hour east of Los Angeles.

Leonard was recently traded to the Toronto Raptors after his falling out with the Spurs after seven seasons. He played in only nine games for San Antonio last season due to a quadriceps injury, and his quiet nature fuelled heavy speculation over his motives.

Bowen, a former member of the Spurs, didn’t hold back with his thoughts during an interview on Sirius XM Radio on June 21.

“I think there’s nothing but excuses going on,” Bowen told Sirius XM Radio. “First, it was, ‘Well I was misdiagnosed.’ Look here: You got US$18 million (RM73.7 million) this year, and you think that they’re trying to rush you? You didn’t play for the most part a full season this year. And you’re the go-to guy, you’re the franchise, and you want to say that they didn’t have your best interest at heart? Are you kidding me?”

“I think he’s getting bad advice. I think what you’re starting to see now is an individual given a certain amount of advice, and it’s not the right advice. Here it is: You were protected in San Antonio. You were able to come up during a time where you still could lean on Tim (Duncan), Tony (Parker), and Manu (Ginóbili).”

Bowen was part of three NBA title-winning teams with the Spurs and his #12 is retired by the franchise. He played the final eight seasons of his 13-year NBA career with San Antonio.

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