"I probably could have played somewhere else," he said. "I had a couple of bottom-feeders who wanted me to come in and bring some experience and locker-room leadership. But I decided to go out on my terms. It worked out and I'm finding my way through what I'm doing now."
Is coaching in his future?
"I'll stick with broadcasting for now and I'll keep coaching as a safety net if this thing doesn't work out, but broadcasting is something that I want to do.
"It's been fun, it really has. It's been challenging and it hasn't been easy, but I'm getting to see everything that goes on behind the scenes. I've watched the game from the [control] truck outside the arena at times and seen the switchboard and all the graphics and camera angles and what they're looking for. I had on the headsets with the producers. It's been a nice, eclectic look at everything. Just a lot of fun."
Battling through
Doug Collins was struggling to get through Sunday night's game. He spent all day Saturday and most of Sunday in bed due to a respiratory infection.
He did manage to gleefully watch the Duke-North Carolina game on Saturday night from his hotel room. Of course, the game was won by Duke, where son Chris is an associate head coach.
Vucevic killing it
Last week former Sixer Nikola Vucevic pulled down 21 rebounds against the Heat in a game that almost ended Miami's lengthy winning streak. Vucevic grabbed 29 boards earlier in the season against Miami.
Add the Sixers to the growing list of teams Vucevic is killing on the glass. Sunday, in Orlando's 99-91 win, he hauled down 17, just two fewer than he had when the Magic defeated the Sixers late last month in Philly.
Of course, Vucevic was involved in the four-team trade that brought Andrew Bynum to the Sixers.
"Nick is playing great," Doug Collins said. "He's third in the league in double-doubles. One thing about Nick is he's very consistent and that's what you want in a player, basically knowing every night what you're going to get from him. I'm really proud of him. He's worked hard. If you charted him in college, every year he got better and he's going to continue to do that as an NBA player. The big thing is just staying healthy. He was playing great for us last season until he hurt his knee and I think it spooked him and it took him a little while to bounce back from that. He's very, very skilled and a good teammate."
On Twitter: @BobCooney76 Blog: philly.com/Sixerville