Browsing: Steve

Stone Cold Steve Austin might not be done with Broken Skull Sessions just yet. After hinting at the return of his hit interview series during a recent fan interaction, a new report suggests the show could soon be back — though nothing is officially confirmed.

According to Fightful Select, thereâ€s been talk behind the scenes about the series making a comeback through WWEâ€s digital channels. While the news isnâ€t locked in, the report noted:

“In regards to Steve Austinâ€s podcast coming back, weâ€re told it is more than likely happening on a WWE digital platform.â€

Austin recently stirred things up on Instagram when a fan asked if the series was coming back. His response? A casual “couple of weeks†— just enough to light a fire under longtime fans of the show.

Steve Austin’s Broken Skull Sessions Could Be Returning

Broken Skull Sessions originally ran from 2019 to 2022 and featured Austin in long-form sit-down interviews with some of wrestlingâ€s biggest names. The show quietly vanished without explanation, leaving many wondering if it was shelved for good.

Since then, Austin has remained a consistent presence around WWE, even returning to the ring for one night only against Kevin Owens at WrestleMania 38. That performance reignited interest in both his wrestling future and his podcast series.

Now, with speculation picking up and digital platforms playing a bigger role in WWEâ€s content strategy, it wouldnâ€t be a shock to see the Broken Skull Sessions return in some form — but fans shouldnâ€t get ahead of themselves just yet.

Would you rather see Stone Cold bring back Broken Skull Sessions or return for one last match? Drop your answer in the comments and let us know what youâ€d want from the Rattlesnake next.

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“Stone Cold†Steve Austin has hinted at the return of his podcast.

Itâ€s been almost four years since the Texas Rattlesnake dropped a new episode of the Broken Skull Sessions. The last episode of the famed series aired in August 2022 and featured Charlotte Flair in conversation with the two-time WWE Hall of Famer. Prior to that, he also hosted an audio series, The Steve Austin Show, but he hasnâ€t released a new episode of that show since 2018.

That said, Austin recently shared a promising update about the podcastâ€s future. He posted a couple of throwback photos on Instagram, prompting a fan to ask about a potential return of his podcast.

“When are we getting a new podcast episode Steve?!?â€

“Gimme a couple weeks,†Austin replied.

The Broken Skull Sessions was one of the most-watched wrestling podcasts on the WWE Network and Peacock. However, for undisclosed reasons, it wasnâ€t included in Netflixâ€s lineup when the streaming giant acquired WWEâ€s international broadcast rights. Still, the official WWE Vault channel has been consistently uploading episodes from the series.

The current lineup of WWE podcasts in partnership with Fanatics includes Whatâ€s Your Story with Stephanie McMahon, What Do You Wanna Talk About? with Cody Rhodes, The RAW Recap Show hosted by Megan Morant and Sam Roberts, Six Feet Under with The Undertaker and Michelle McCool, and Logan Paulâ€s IMPAULSIVE.

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Also read: The Rock Highlights How Much Steve Austin Helped Him In WWE

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STEVE KERR BOARDED a red-eye flight back to the Bay Area on Dec. 25, 2016, and confronted what he now calls the biggest regret of his 11 years coaching Stephen Curry.

Business had ruined the Golden State Warriors’ holiday. They had blown a 14-point fourth-quarter lead to the same Cleveland Cavaliers who had ripped their hearts out in Game 7 of the NBA Finals six months prior.

In the heated aftermath, Kerr voiced his frustration about the Warriors’ lack of ball security, specifically calling out his star point guard. Kerr said Curry “could be a little smarter.” It became a dominant postgame talking point. Kerr cracked open his computer, saw the headline and cringed.

“What am I doing?” Kerr remembered thinking in the darkness. “I immediately knew.”

Both the soundbite and the context behind it stung Curry. His behind-the-back turnover late in Game 7 had become a summer punchline — the trophy photoshopped over the basketball to signify him throwing the championship away.

This comment reopened a wound at a time when the Warriors, now the sport’s villains after signing Kevin Durant, were a public punching bag. It fueled the fire. Curry had friends and family text him with essentially the same message: “Why would he say that?”

“I do remember that episode,” Curry said nearly nine years later. “The forbidden sin of coaching — when you out players in the media.”

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The plane landed and Kerr sent Curry a text. He asked if he could stop by Curry’s house the next day, and Curry gave him the green light. Kerr showed up. He acknowledged he screwed up. Then they discussed the need for Curry to value the ball more while also upping his scoring aggression.

“Typical Steph fashion,” Kerr said. “You just sat down and discussed things. He’s such a grown-up. He has such trust in my intentions.”

They went 56-10 from that point and steamrolled to a second NBA title together.

“The fact that he acted right away to come have a conversation [is what mattered],” Curry said. “We’re all just trying to win. As long as you can meet on that, that energy, you should be able to work through pretty much whatever.”

Kerr and Curry are entering their 12th NBA season together, three more than Phil Jackson and Michael Jordan and two more than Red Auerbach and Bill Russell.

They’ve been to six Finals, won four titles, accomplished Olympic gold, suffered through a 15-50 pandemic season, rebuilt themselves into a contender, watched the two-timeline plan sputter, seen franchise pillars such as Durant, Klay Thompson and Andre Iguodala depart and still believe they — along with Draymond Green — have another successful chapter to write.

“There’s a reason [Tom] Brady and [Bill] Belichick worked,” Kerr said. “There’s a reason Phil and Michael worked. It has to click. There has to be a mutual respect and there has to be a fierce, competitive desire. Passion for the job. Passion for winning. When all is said and done, it might be the most proud thing that exists. The most proud dynamic of my career will be a collaboration with Steph.”

Curry has two more seasons on his current contract. Kerr, who is not seeking an in-season extension, only has one year left. The question is presented to Curry: Could he play for another coach?

“I played for Coach [Mike Krzyzewski] twice at the world championships,” Curry said. “Mark Jackson. Keith Smart.”

Curry took the question literally. Could he? Yes.

“The game would translate,” he said.

But would he?

“I don’t want to,” Curry said. “We deserve that, I feel. Things change in this league. We can only control so much. But I think we’re in a very unique situation that we deserve the opportunity [to ride it out].”In 11 seasons together, Steve Kerr and Steph Curry have appeared in six NBA Finals, winning four titles with the Golden State Warriors. Marcio Jose Sanchez/AP Photo

KERR FIRST CROSSED paths with Curry when he was the general manager of the Phoenix Suns. He scouted a Davidson game in November 2007 against UCLA in Anaheim, California, when Curry was a sophomore. In the tunnel afterward, he ran into Curry’s parents. He knew Curry’s father, Dell, from their playing days. Curry’s mother, Sonya, asked Kerr whether he thought Steph could eventually claw into the NBA.

“I mean, think about that now,” Kerr said with a laugh.

Curry declared after his junior season. The Suns had the 14th pick in the 2009 draft. Kerr tried to attach Amar’e Stoudemire in a trade-up scenario to get Curry with the seventh pick. He viewed him as the perfect Steve Nash heir. The deal was close, but the Warriors ultimately backed out and drafted Curry.

“I don’t think I would’ve stayed in the job [even if I acquired him],” Kerr said. “I didn’t like the job of general manager. But the next GM would’ve been really happy.”

Five years later, Kerr was once again presented with the opportunity to work with Curry.

After a 51-win season in which a 24-year-old Curry made his first All-Star team, controlling owner Joe Lacob made the controversial decision to fire Mark Jackson in May 2014.

Jackson was Curry’s preferred head coach. The move risked alienating the franchise’s rising star. In the lead-up, Curry voiced resistance. In the aftermath, he voiced displeasure, setting the stage for what could’ve been an awkward transition to Kerr, hired just eight days after Jackson’s firing.

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“Those are two separate conversations,” Curry said. “It wasn’t necessarily like I’m holding like this grudge or resentment or making Steve’s job hard because I didn’t want Mark fired. That was more of a me and Bob [Myers] conversation. Everybody knew how I felt. But once the decision’s made, like what am I gonna do — sit around moping and feeling like the future’s not bright?”

Curry is reminded that some NBA stars might do exactly that.

“Well, the way he came in made it easy,” Curry said.

Kerr asked Myers for every player’s phone number. He knew how “attached” they were to Jackson and wanted to open the communication lines to discuss.

“The only guy I was worried about was Klay because Klay wasn’t calling me back,” Kerr said. “So I called Bob, and I’m like, ‘Bob, I think maybe Klay’s pissed about this coaching change.’ Bob starts laughing. He goes, ‘Oh, don’t worry. Klay doesn’t call anybody back. He may not even know.'”

Curry answered Kerr’s initial phone call while on a golf trip in Cabo. They planned to meet once he got back to the Bay Area. They had lunch together in Berkeley — Kerr, his wife Margot, Curry, his wife Ayesha, and their daughter Riley.

But that wasn’t the forum to discuss business. The ice-breaking, important conversation came a week later at Pebble Beach. They met for a two-on-two golf match — Kerr and Lacob against Steph and Dell. The underdog pairing won.

“I even birdied two of the first four holes!” Kerr laughed. “I was feeling it.”

Curry shakes his head at the result.

“They beat us,” Curry said. “Joe played solid.”

The Warriors were in trade discussions with the Minnesota Timberwolves for Kevin Love at the time. Minnesota wanted Thompson. The Warriors were internally debating it. Curry said they spent “maybe a hole or two” on the topic. Kerr, the newest voice in the room, was “very pro-Klay,” as Curry remembers it.

But the between shots conversation shifted to Jackson, the firing, the transition and the offensive schematics Kerr believed could take Curry and the Warriors to the next level.

“That’s when I really went into my spiel,” Kerr said. “My whole thing was: ‘I’m here to help you build on the foundation that Mark has already built.’ I told him they were the fourth-ranked defense. Mark changed the culture and got them serious about two-way basketball. He established that. I said, ‘I’m not here to do anything other than help you build on the foundation that’s already there.’ And it was genuine. Mark’s a friend of mine and I was genuinely impressed with the job he had done.”

Kerr came away from the golf course that day in more ways than one.

“It helped that he is a former player,” Curry said. “It helped that you heard him talk on TV for years. It helped that I knew he was a GM even though that job didn’t go great. It helped that he wasn’t trying to blow everything up.”

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Kerr waiting until after season to address deal

Kerr waiting until after season to address deal.

AFTER A SCORCHING streak of shooting in the aftermath of the Jimmy Butler trade in February, Curry hit a mini rough patch. The Warriors lost a March 17 home game to the Denver Nuggets in which Curry missed 15 of his 21 shots and turned it over seven times. Kerr told reporters afterward that Curry needed a “mental break” because of his accumulating fatigue.

“Not all players in this league can handle that being put out to the public,” Kerr said.

Three nights later, after a rest night, Curry had three turnovers and hurt his tailbone in a narrow home win over the Toronto Raptors. While Curry was aching in the postgame locker room — set to miss the next two games — Kerr lit into him in front of the team to remind everyone that their success after Butler’s arrival was due to their better ball security.

“Most people think Steph can do what he wants,” Green said. “No. He’s on Steph’s ass all the time. Defense, turnovers. He coaches Steph really, really, really hard. I don’t think people realize that.”

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In a November 2023 game, Curry flung a particularly questionable fourth-quarter pass in Minnesota, landing out of bounds near Kerr. The coach stomped around in disgust on the sidelines like Bobby Knight.

“The next day I pulled him aside,” Kerr said, relaying his message to Curry. “‘Hey, I was watching the tape and I saw my reaction, I shouldn’t have done that.'”

Curry’s response: “Hell no. That was a terrible decision. You got to coach me.”

“He actually probably gets on me more now than ever,” Curry said. “The one conversation we’ve had is to coach me like you would coach everybody because that’ll help strengthen your voice in the locker room, create that trust.”

Kerr is more often in a reflective state at this stage of his life. Curry, laser-focused on maximizing the back end of his legendary career, shields himself from it.

“The deeper we get into this thing, it’s the weirdest concept to kind of put in perspective,” Curry said. “I know there will be plenty of times where we’ll be able to crack open a glass of wine and like shoot the s— the accolades and experiences and just laugh. But it’s just hard to kind of get there right now.”

But he still has moments of reflection and mementos that he has stashed in what he calls his “keepsake box” at home. Among them: two letters. The first is from his brother, Seth, a valuable one to him because Seth “doesn’t talk that much.”

The second letter is from Kerr, written and hand-delivered at practice in the days after that postgame soundbite on Christmas 2016.

“He’s the only coach I’ve known to write handwritten letters,” Curry said. “It’s when s—‘s really going on. It’s not for everybody because people show love and appreciation in different ways. But I do appreciate it because it gives you somebody’s true thoughts and perspectives. It’s a lost art.”

Kerr and Curry took home a gold medal in the Paris Olympics last summer. Kerr was head coach of Team USA from 2022 until this year, when he was replaced by Miami Heat coach Erik Spoelstra. Kyle Terada/USA TODAY Sports

KERR LOVES TO tell the story about his San Antonio dinners with Gregg Popovich. Every time the wine is poured, Kerr says, Popovich raises his glass and toasts Tim Duncan. The first time he saw it, Kerr asked Popovich why.

“Without Tim, none of this happened,” Popovich told him.

Kerr’s offensive philosophy and system helped unlock Curry to become an all-time great. He shares some slice of credit in lifting the Warriors and Curry to dynasty heights. But, as Kerr said, the “sun” in their “solar system” is Curry because of the skill, the work, the culture-setting attitude and the ability to be coached.

“The rest of us have done a good job,” Kerr said. “I think I’ve done a good job. I think Joe’s done a great job as an owner. I think Bob and Mike [Dunleavy] have been good. Draymond’s been good. Everybody. But you take Steph out of this, none of this has happened. And I think we should never forget that. I know I don’t for sure.”

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Kerr has been voicing his appreciation to Curry more often in recent years. After Curry had his signature flurry to win the gold medal for Team USA at the Paris Olympics, Netflix cameras caught Kerr telling Curry: “I’m so f—ing lucky to be a part of your life. Holy s—. You are amazing. The finest human being I’ve ever met in my life, and I mean that.”

Curry doesn’t agree with every Kerr decision. He said they most often battle over minute totals, substitution patterns and the decision to rest him. There have certainly been times when he’s wanted more pick-and-roll usage over the years.

But the easiest way to understand Curry’s support of Kerr is Kerr’s longevity. Curry said management has never approached him about Kerr’s coaching security. It knows better.

“I would just assume there’s an understanding,” Curry said.

“Steve is Steph’s guy,” Green said. “So even if there was ever a thought [to let Kerr go], it don’t work. You speak to the Tim and Pop thing. That’s his guy. You see MJ, like, ‘If Phil ain’t here, I ain’t here.’ It’s along those same lines. There’s no Steph without Steve.”

Kerr made headlines recently when he said he wouldn’t seek a contract extension beyond this season. It puts his future in question. But Kerr made it clear it is just a wait-and-see approach and told ESPN he would not actively choose to leave Curry and the Warriors for another NBA coaching job. It’s more of a stick around or step away choice.

“Management and ownership would have to want it to continue,” Kerr said. “I would have to want it to continue. Steph would have to. I’m not finishing my contract and saying, ‘Alright, I think I’ll go leave for such and such job around the league somewhere. That’s not happening.”

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Stone Cold Steve Austin at a comic convention

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Today’s WWE roster is filled with an abundance of talent, but there are still only a select few who have cultivated a strong emotional connection with the audience. Asked on “Busted Open Radio” to comment on an apparent lack of such an attachment for Seth Rollins, Bully Ray explained why wrestlers like CM Punk have had more success.

“Punk is the consummate rebel,” Bully said. “Punk is as close to ‘Stone Cold’ Steve Austin today as we can get.”

Similarly, Bully stated that Cody Rhodes won the respect of the audience through his perseverance, ironically on display throughout his feud with Rollins. As for Roman Reigns, he has the benefit of being viewed as a God-like figure by WWE fans, with their emotional attachment growing after Reigns announced he was battling cancer in 2018. Rollins has been at or near the top of the WWE card for just as long as his former Shield partner, but Reigns has tended to be booked as the stronger of the two.

Bully described Rollins as a “nine but not a 10,” stating that he’s missing some unknown factor that would forever endear him to the wrestling audience. As a result, the WWE Hall of Famer feels that Rollins is just a step below some of his current peers at the top of the company’s card.

The Punk and Austin comparison isn’t a brand new idea, and many fans have clamored for a match between the two for well over a decade. It seemed like an impossibility for a long time, but with Punk back in WWE and Austin reportedly open to wrestling another match, it’s no longer such a far-fetched idea.

If you use any of the quotes in this article, please credit “Busted Open Radio” and provide a h/t to Wrestling Inc. for the transcription.

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Bound For Glory kicked off with an exciting title change.

TNA Wrestlingâ€s Bound For Glory event went down on Sunday, October 12, 2025, at the Tsongas Center in Lowell, Massachusetts. The opening match of the night was also a hard-hitting encounter.

Bound For Glory opened with the TNA International Championship match, as Frankie Kazarian defended his title against Steve Maclin.

Steve Maclin, who has a history of serving in the armed forced, came out through the military as the national anthem played. That was a special way for him to make his way to the ring.

This match marked Frankie Kazarianâ€s 9th match at Bound For Glory in his career. He just won the International Title from Steve Maclin, and there was no shortage of intensity as the two got started.

This match spilled outside the ring, and there were plenty of stiff shots as each man tested the other. Eventually, Kazarian ended up getting in Steve Maclinâ€s motherâ€s face, and she gave him double middle fingers for his trouble.

They returned to the ring, where they tried to best each other. Kazarian was caught trying to use the ropes to pin, and he was scolded by the referee before they continued. Then Maclin caught Kaz in a Boston Crab until he was forced to let go after a rope break.

Frankie Kazarian hit Christopher Danielâ€s Angels†Wings for a near fall. Maclin missed a headbutt from the top rope, and then Kazarian hit a slingshot cutter for a very close near fall. In the end, Maclin nailed the Crosshairs and the KIA to win the match and the TNA International Title.

Whatâ€s your take on how the International Title match turned out? Do you think TNA made the right call? Let us know what you think in the comments section!

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Crystal Palace chairman Steve Parish says talks have taken place with Oliver Glasner about extending the contract of the Eagles manager as the two parties look to “align their interests”.

Glasner will be out of contract at the end of the season and there is uncertainty about the 51-year-old’s future at the club.

Sources have told BBC Sport the Austrian was offered a new contract earlier this summer, but he has yet to put pen to paper on an extension.

“We’ve had some early conversations,” Parish told Talksport. “We would love to keep Oliver, we’re building something. I think for Oliver it’s about the conditions being right.”

Glasner took over as Palace boss in February 2024 and won the FA Cup with them last season for the club’s first major trophy.

Their victory meant they qualified for the Europa League, but they were demoted to the Conference League for breaching multi-club ownership rules.

Glasner also led Palace to victory against Liverpool in the Community Shield in August and has steered them to sixth in the Premier League following a promising start to the season – four points off top spot.

“It’s about everything being in a way that he enjoys his work and he finds the conditions favourable to achieve,” added Parish.

“Oliver wants to win things, he makes no secret of that. That’s what he’s in football for.

“So if we can align those interests then hopefully we can make something happen.”

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Texas football enjoyed an emphatic 23-6 win over arch rival (and No. 6 ranked) Oklahoma 23-6 on Saturday afternoon.

Any victory for Texas in the Red River Rivalry should be a cherished one, but this was a huge win for the program after the Longhorns fell 29-21 last week to Florida, who was 1-3 going into the game.

To their credit, Texas shut out any outside noise, worked hard and got the job done, and head coach Steve Sarkisian was thrilled with the process and result.

Sarkisian talked about the team’s resiliency and response more broadly in his opening statement after the victory.

Texas began the season as the No. 1 team in the Associated Press preseason poll. However, that lasted only one week after Ohio State shut down the Texas offense en route to a 14-7 victory.

The Longhorns then rolled off three straight wins by a combined score of 120-17 over San Jose State, UTEP and Sam Houston.

The UTEP game did cause some concern, as Texas’ passing game didn’t really get going, with quarterback Arch Manning connecting on just 11-of-25 passes for 114 yards, a touchdown and an interception.

Still, Texas was on a three-game win streak going into its first SEC game. However, Florida took control of that game early and never really relented, with the team out-gaining Texas 457-341 and possessing the ball for 34 minutes.

That loss knocked Texas out of the AP poll entirely, so it’s clear folks were negative on the Longhorns, especially after their high expectations.

To their credit, though, the Longhorns bounced back strong on Saturday in all three phases. The defense stepped up, intercepting starting quarterback John Mateer three times and holding the Sooners to just 48 rushing yards.

Meanwhile, Texas’ offense played clean, efficient and turnover-free football. Manning went 21-of-27 for 166 yards and a touchdown, and running back Quintrevion Wisner rushed for 94 yards on 22 carries.

And then the special teams excelled courtesy of Ryan Niblett, who returned a punt 75 yards for a touchdown to help give Texas a 20-6 lead early in the fourth quarter.

Texas will look to keep the positive momentum rolling on Saturday when the team visits Kentucky.

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The Warriors are focused on the present, but general manager Mike Dunleavy can’t ignore the uncertainty looming with Steve Kerr’s future as coach.

Dunleavy joined 95.7 The Game’s “Steiny & Guru” on Friday and discussed where things stand with Kerr as he enters the final year of a two-year contract he signed in February 2024.

“Yeah, I mean, I guess technically there is [uncertainty],” Dunleavy said. “This isn’t really a regular situation with a head coach where he’s in the last year of his deal. We know what it is with Steve. He’s been here a long time. He’s been an amazing part of this franchise, and as far as I’m concerned, can stay as long as he wants.

“We’re going to give him the grace of the season to go through it, or at least some of it, to see and feel where he’s at mentally and physically.”

With two years left on Steph Curry’s contract, two left on Draymond Green’s with a player option in the final year and Jimmy Butler also signed through the 2026-27 NBA season, it only feels right that Kerr would end his Warriors tenure with the guys he started it with.

When asked about it last week, Kerr told reporters he didn’t want to address it at that point because he wants to see how he feels in six months, adding that he’s “very comfortable” just going into the season with one year left on his deal.

“I get how maybe it doesn’t line up,” Dunleavy said, “but it’s hard to see Steve moving on, or to see Steph finish his career without Steve on the sidelines. I think it’ll all work out, but we’re not going to jump into anything. We’re going to go on Steve’s terms.

“And right now, he just wants to take it and see how the season goes. And no problem on our end.”

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Miami Heat head coach Erik Spoelstra is expected to be named head coach of USA Basketballâ€s menâ€s team for the next cycle, including the 2028 Los Angeles Olympics.

He has the backing of the last guy to have the job, Warriors coach Steve Kerr.

“I mean, Spo is incredible. Heâ€s a phenomenal coach,†Kerr said after a Warriors practice Friday. “And, just watching him the last two summers and getting to know him up close, rather than just from afar, where Iâ€ve admired him for so long, I got a first-hand glimpse at what a great coach he is.â€

Spoelstra was one of the assistant coaches on Kerrâ€s staff for the Paris Olympics, where Team USA won its fifth consecutive gold medal. That staff was also together for the World Cup in the Philippines the year before. Kerr said being an assistant coach for Team USA matters before moving over to the big chair.

“I think the assistant coaching is almost a prerequisite for coaching USA,†Kerr said. “Itâ€s really a different job, and now he has that experience, just like I did with [Gregg Popovich], in the World Cup in â€19 and the Olympics in â€21.

“Spo is a perfect choice. Heâ€s gonna be great.â€

Spoelstra is the longest-tenured coach in the NBA, entering his 18th season, and has led the Heat to six NBA Finals appearances, winning two (2012 and 2013). In a sign of how respected he is around the league, a poll of NBA GMs voted him the “best coach in the NBA†as well as the best manager and motivator of players.

Spoelstraâ€s contract with USA Basketball is not finalized and has to be approved by the organizationâ€s board of directors, but that is all expected to be wrapped up before the end of the month.

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After recovering from a different first hour or so to come back and beat Greece 3-1 on Thursday, Scotland will make changes for what will be a different kind of test.

Lewis Ferguson and Ryan Christie are suspended and Aaron Hickey injured, meaning Billy Gilmour, Lyndon Dykes and Tony Ralston could be in line to start.

Clarke expects Belarus to sit deep at Hampden and make it difficult for Scotland, but said the onus was on his side.

“In my time here, we’ve done well against the so-called lesser teams and it’s very important you get the points off them,” he said.

“They’ll come here and be organised, they’ll be difficult to break down and until you break them down, it’ll be a long night.

“It’s up to us to approach the game properly, which we will. It’s up to us to create enough chances to get the crowd excited, which we hopefully will.”

Clarke also insisted he was not thinking beyond Sunday’s match, with a trip to Greece and a home match against the Danes following next month.

“All I ever try to emphasise is that if you want to qualify, these are the games you have to win,” he said. “If you drop points to the teams ranked below you, it makes qualification difficult.

“No room for complacency. At no point am I looking too far ahead.

“I’ve been in the game a long time and if you look too far ahead, sometimes you trip up – a little bit like [assistant coach] Steven Naismith did in training today when he joined in.”

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