Doug Gottlieb
Doug Gottlieb | |
---|---|
Born |
Douglas Michael Gottlieb January 15, 1976 Milwaukee, Wisconsin |
Occupation | Basketball Analyst |
Years active | 2002–present |
Spouse(s) | Angie (m. August 2000) |
Children | 3 |
Douglas Michael Gottlieb (born January 15, 1976, in Milwaukee, Wisconsin) is a former NCAA collegiate and professional (USBL) basketball player, as well as a basketball analyst. He now works for CBS Sports after a long tenure with ESPN.
College basketball career
After signing a national letter of intent with Notre Dame, Gottlieb was their starting point guard during the 1995–1996 college basketball season, starting all but the first four games and leading the team with 154 assists as well as steals and minutes played. However, Gottlieb's stint at Notre Dame would be short. During Gottlieb's freshman year, he was charged with stealing credit cards from a roommate and two others and fraudulently charging over $900 to those cards; Gottlieb has since stated that, after paying back the $900, he was allowed to say he was leaving Notre Dame, in lieu of being expelled.[1] He then transferred to Golden West College where he concentrated on academics and received an Associate of Arts in business.[2][3] Despite offers from Cincinnati, Alabama and others to transfer and sit out a season on their campus, Gottlieb chose to sit out his transfer year at Golden West College. GWC was coached by his former Tustin Coach Tom McCluskey, and Gottlieb took on the role of redshirt player/coach. He practiced with the team and traveled to road games as the assistant coach. In addition, Gottlieb was a volunteer assistant at his high school under Andy Ground. In one game at Santa Ana Valley, Ground was ejected and Gottlieb coached the team to an overtime loss. Gottlieb was perceived to be waiting on Baron Davis to choose a school, as UCLA and Georgia Tech both expressed that Gottlieb was their second choice to Davis. After Davis chose UCLA, a school in which Gottlieb's family had season tickets to for 20 years and his brother and sister were alums (sister was captain of the cheer squad), Gottlieb looked elsewhere to play college ball. His final schools were Marquette, Georgia Tech, Alabama, Oklahoma State, Utah, Oregon and Tennessee.
In 1998, Gottlieb accepted an offer from Oklahoma State coach Eddie Sutton (under whom Gottlieb's father had once been assistant coach) to attend the university. He immediately took over as point guard for an Oklahoma State team that had gone 17–15 in consecutive years and led the Cowboys to the NCAA tournament. After the season, Gottlieb was an All-Big 12 Honorable Mention and was named the 1998–99 Big 12 Newcomer of the Year. During his second year in Stillwater, Gottlieb was again named All-Big 12 honorable mention and led the nation in assists (8.8 per game), only the second Cowboy to lead the nation in a statistical category. He also started setting Oklahoma State assist records, breaking the school career mark with 500 (after only two seasons) and broke the school record of 22 career double-figure assist games. In a game against Florida Atlantic, Gottlieb set a school record and tied the Big 12 mark with 18 assists, and in the Big 12 tournament, he set the record for assists in a game (14) as well as in tournament play (38). The 1999–2000 season would culminate with another trip to the NCAA tournament. As senior, Gottlieb finished second in the nation in assists with 8.5 per game.[4] Gottlieb's senior season would end with a third consecutive trip to the NCAA tournament and the team would make it all the way to the Elite Eight.[5]
He currently holds all of Oklahoma State's assist records and ranks tenth all-time in NCAA career assists with 947.[6] Gottlieb graduated from Oklahoma State in 2000 with a bachelor's degree in marketing. In addition to being named All Big 12 Team (Honorable Mention or 3rd Team) every year at Oklahoma State, Gottlieb was named the 1999 Big 12 Scholar Athlete Community Service Athlete of the Year. Gottlieb spent time with a local elementary school every week of his time in Stillwater and used his tickets for underprivileged children.
Professional basketball career
After graduating from college, Gottlieb went undrafted in the NBA draft but was made the No 1 pick of the Oklahoma Storm in the 2000 United States Basketball League Draft.[4] Gottlieb's season with the Storm would be successful as he led the USBL in assists and helped the Storm to a 2nd-place finish in the team's inaugural season (losing to the Dodge City Legend in the USBL Championship Game). Gottlieb then took his basketball career overseas, which included a stop in Israel after signing with Maccabi Ra'anana. Gottlieb played professionally internationally, in France, Russia and Israel.
The Idaho Stampede of the Continental Basketball Association signed him on Nov. 28, 2000, prior to training camp and then released him on Dec. 13, 2000, two days before their opening game.[7] On Dec. 28, he signed with the Salina Rattlers of the (now defunct) International Basketball Association and played in six games (four starts) before the team released him due to Gottlieb's intent to play overseas. In February 2001, he joined Ural Great Perm of the Russian Basketball Federation and helped the team win the league championship.[8] Following Ural's season, Gottlieb traveled to Israel and won a Gold Medal as the MVP for the United States team at the Maccabiah Games. In the title game, the US team defeated Israel 82–71.[9] He then played for the Los Angeles Lakers in the NBA Summer League and then was invited to return to the Oklahoma Storm. However, he and new coach Kareem Abdul-Jabbar did not see eye-to-eye and he was released before the season began. Following his release, Gottlieb played the 2001–2002 with the Israeli team Maccabi Ra'anana.
Broadcast career
In 2002, Gottlieb co-hosted a midday sports-talk show on an Oklahoma City radio station WWLS 640-AM known locally as "The Sports Animal". Gottlieb took the job in OKC only after securing a job to call college basketball games on ESPN and ESPN Regional. In addition Gottlieb called Oklahoma State games for the Cowboy Basketball Network. At the end of the 2002-2003 season, Gottlieb returned to France to play for Claremont Ferrand. Upon returning stateside he worked out with the Minnesota Timberwolves Summer League Team and Co Hosted the NBA Draft on ESPN Radio. The draft provided him a new opportunity to be heard by the ESPN radiobrass who immediately began the process of trying to hire him.
Gottlieb was hired by ESPN Radio in September 2003 as co-host of ESPN Radio's GameNight.
Gamenight was ESPN Radio's longest running show. His Co-Host was Chuck Wilson, one of the original voices of ESPN Radio. Gottlieb would fill in for the Dan Patrick Show, The Herd with Colin Cowherd and began hosting The NBA Today on Sundays on ESPN Radio.
Meanwhile Gottlieb also continued to call college basketball games on ESPN's family of Networks. He made a name for himself as a commentator and a studio analyst for ESPN News during the NCAA tournament.
His break through on television was when he was asked to launch ESPNU from Charlotte. The fledgling network was a company priority and based upon his age, his relationship with Mike Hall, the host and the launch being March 3rd, the heart of college basketball season, Gottlieb leap at the chance and stayed in Charlotte for a month.
The next basketball season, Gottlieb became a mainstay on Sportscenter and as an analyst on ESPN and ESPN2 games. He caused a stir when he questioned the logic in the Big Ten's officiating crews. His segment "Point of Contention" was just that, a contentious look at previously untouchable college coaches and issues.
On radio, would then move to host The Pulse weekday evenings from 8 to 10 Eastern before moving to afternoon drive (4 P.M. to 7 P.M. ET). He also served as a college basketball analyst for ESPN, ESPN2 and ESPNEWS, and wrote for espn.com. Gottlieb was also a frequent guest on other ESPN television shows, including SportsCenter and also on College Basketball Gameday Final.[10] He occasionally appeared on the shows SportsNation and Mike and Mike in the Morning as a guest host.
Gottlieb and Syracuse basketball coach Jim Boeheim have traded barbs since 2005 because of Gottlieb's criticism of what he regards as Syracuse's soft nonconference schedule and Boeheim's comments regarding Gottlieb's difficulties at Notre Dame. Boeheim has discussed their feud publicly.[11] Along with then-University of Tennessee coach Bruce Pearl, Gottlieb helped coach the United States team at the 2009 Maccabiah Games.
On July 31, 2012, Gottlieb announced that he was leaving ESPN to join CBS. He hosts an afternoon show on CBS Sports Radio. He serves as a studio and game analyst for CBS Sports’ coverage of regular-season college basketball and joint coverage with Turner Sports of the NCAA basketball tournament.[12] Gottlieb co-hosted a nightly television show on CBS Sports Network called "Leadoff". His co-host was Allie Leforce, the former Miss Teen USA, who has become CBS' lead sideline reporter for college football. In addition to Leadoff, the "Doug Gottlieb Show" was moved to the new CBS Sports Radio Network. Gottlieb's unique opinions and conversational interviewing style essentially cut and pasted his well respected show from ESPN Radio to CBS Sports Radio.
In 2013 Gottlieb started participating in the CBS Sports Minute on CBS Radio stations throughout the country.
n 2014 CBS decided to move the "Doug Gottlieb Show" to a TV simulcast format. Essentially canceling Leadoff, Gottlieb's radio show and his longtime producer Adam Klug moved to New York City, where the show is on both radio and television at 3 eastern daily.
Honors
On June 26, 2011, he was inducted into the Southern California Jewish Sports Hall of Fame.[13] Gottlieb is a member of the Oklahoma State Board of Governors. In January of 2016, Doug Gottlieb became a national spokesman for the American Cancer Society.
Personal life
Gottlieb met his wife Angie, a native of Drumright, Oklahoma and fellow Oklahoma State alum, while attending Oklahoma State and has been married since August 2000.[8] The couple have three children.[14] In November of 2014, Bob Gottlieb, Doug's father, died of cancer. Gottlieb shared his father's death on Facebook and tens of basketball teams, high school and college, wore orange in Bob's honor. His brother Gregg is the longest tenured assistant in the Pac 12 and is currently on staff at Oregon State. His sister Wendy, formerly of the Oakland Raiders, performs philanthropy in Northern California.
See also
- List of NCAA Division I men's basketball career assists leaders
- List of NCAA Division I men's basketball season assists leaders
References
- ↑ Dwyre, Bill (2011-12-26). "ESPN's Doug Gottlieb brings a rare quality to sports-talk radio: context". Los Angeles Times.
- ↑ Foster, Chris (September 13, 1996). "Gottlieb Charged in Credit Card Theft". Los Angeles Times. Retrieved 2011-12-21.
- ↑ Cherner, Reid (February 2008). "ESPN personality Doug Gottlieb: Wired for candor". USA Today. Retrieved 2009-02-06.
- 1 2
- ↑ Nulph, Scott. "Doug Gottlieb helped Oklahoma State reach the Elite 8 in 2000. Today he discusses basketball as ESPN's resident Cowboy » OSU Sports » Stillwater NewsPress". Stwnewspress.com. Retrieved 2013-04-19.
- ↑ "CNNSI.com – Doug Gottlieb – -". Retrieved 2009-02-07.
- ↑ CNN http://sportsillustrated.cnn.com/transactions/2000/12/13/index.html. Missing or empty
|title=
(help) - 1 2 Henderson, Martin (2001-02-12). "Oklahoma St. Tragedy Hits Gottlieb Hard". Los Angeles Times.
- ↑ "2001 US Maccabiah Basketball Team". August 2001. Retrieved 2007-03-10.
- ↑ "Who is Doug Gottlieb?". ESPN. 2006. Retrieved 2007-03-10.
- ↑ "Max Power's Sports Stash: Boeheim vs. Gottlieb". 2007-02-28. Retrieved 2012-03-06.
- ↑ "Doug Gottlieb jumps from ESPN to CBS Sports Network". NewOK. 2012. Retrieved 2012-08-01.
- ↑ "Sports Shorts". Jewish Sports Review. July–August 2011.
- ↑ "Gottlieb to talk it up at awards | Tulsa World". 209.184.242.1. 2010-06-14. Retrieved 2013-04-19.
External links
- Doug Gottlieb ESPN Bio
- Statistics at Oklahoma State
- Doug Gottlieb jumps from ESPN to CBS Sports Network
|
|