In a hallway at Cleveland's Quicken Loans Arena, plastered on a wall near the media room, is the likeness of the man who orchestrated the best regular season in Cavaliers history. Yellow block letters read, "MIKE BROWN," with his credentials — 2009 NBA Eastern Conference All-Star Team head coach, "Being in that building, it just brings back a lot of memories," Brown, now the lead assistant coach for Golden State, said of his visit last month to his old home arena. A master of substitution patterns and defensive schemes, Brown will send a wave of double-teams at James. "We divide our scouting reports up between our assistant coaches, and we put Mike on Cleveland on purpose," Warriors head coach Steve Kerr said. In June 2005, after building a reputation as a dogged worker in assistant-coaching stops with Washington (1997-99), San Antonio (2000-03) and Indiana (2003-05), the then-35-year-old Brown became the league's second-youngest head coach with Cleveland. A 20-year-old All-Star at the time, James had been poised to reach the Cavaliers' first postseason in seven seasons months earlier before losses mounted amid an ownership change and the firing of head coach Paul Silas. "I...