De'Aaron Fox, Mike Brown to face off in NBA Finals season after Kings departures originally appeared on NBC Sports Bay Area
A few years ago, the Kings and their fans had hoped Mike Brown‘s arrival in Sacramento to join forces with star point guard De’Aaron Fox would lead to an eventual NBA Finals trip.
Despite an incredible 2022-23 NBA season that saw the Kings earn the Western Conference’s No. 3 seed with 48 wins and end a 16-season playoff drought, those dreams of making the Finals with the duo were dashed last season.
Brown was fired on Dec. 27, 2024, after the Kings began the season 13-18. Six weeks later, Fox was traded to the San Antonio Spurs in a three-team deal that netted the Kings All-Star guard Zach LaVine.
One year later, in a cruel twist, Fox and Brown indeed are going to the NBA Finals … as opponents.
Brown, hired as the Knicks’ coach last summer, has guided New York to its first Finals appearance since 1999.
Fox and the Spurs sealed the marquee Finals matchup by stunning the defending NBA champion Oklahoma City Thunder in Game 7 on Saturday night at Paycom Center.
San Antonio’s 111-103 victory was a spirited effort that saw seven Spurs players score in double figures, with Fox adding 15 points, five assists and three steals to help punch his team’s ticket to the NBA’s biggest stage.
The Knicks won 53 games this season, and as the Eastern Conference’s No. 3 seed, beat the Atlanta Hawks in the first round, swept the Philadelphia 76ers in the conference semifinals and swept the Cleveland Cavaliers in the conference finals.
In the first round against the Hawks, the Knicks were down two games to one, putting Brown’s job in jeopardy. But he righted the ship and has New York on an 11-game winning streak entering the NBA Finals.
Fox, on the other hand, was an All-Star for the second time this season, averaging 18.6 points and 6.2 assists in 72 games.
The 28-year-old has battled an ankle injury this postseason that has limited him to 15 playoff games, but surrounded by superstar Victor Wembanyama and blossoming star guard Stephon Castle and Dylan Harper, Fox has the supporting cast to keep things going while he sat out.
A turbulent couple of months last season have given way to brighter days for Fox and Brown.
Fox and Brown speak fondly of their time in Sacramento, but their departures might have been just what they needed to maximize their potential.
Now, one of the two will raise the Larry O’Brien Trophy in a few weeks.
Kings fans surely will be happy for whoever becomes a champion in the near future, but they will always wonder about what could have been if things had worked out for Fox and Brown in Sacramento.