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What: “Real Sports With Bryant Gumbel”

Where: HBO, today, 6 a.m. and 5:30 p.m.; Wednesday, 2 p.m.

This month’s edition of “Real Sports,” which first was shown Monday night and has a number of replays through April 2, features Bob Knight in one segment. The Indiana basketball coach is also part of a second story.

HBO had to do some last-minute updating on the Knight feature after a CNN/SI report last week cited some of his bizarre and juvenile behavior. HBO wasn’t planning to be too tough on Knight. Among those interviewed by reporter Frank Deford for the piece were Knight’s wife Karen and son Pat. Deford had to go back to Knight and ask about the accusations in the CNN/SI report. Knight denies all.

The other Knight segment is about former Indiana star Luke Recker. After leaving Indiana and transferring to Arizona, Recker was in a serious car accident last July--hit head-on by a drunk driver. He was seriously injured and his girlfriend was rendered a quadriplegic. A lot of people called Recker--even Charles Barkley. But not Knight.

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Recker is now at Iowa, hoping to play for Steve Alford, who also played for Knight.

The lead story is about a 19-year-old high school basketball player in San Antonio, Tony Limon, who was sentenced to five years in prison for elbowing an opponent. Limon was already on probation for burglary. Limon alleges his coach instructed him to “take out” the opponent. Wait until you meet this coach. He makes Knight look like a prince.

Reporter Bernard Goldberg does a nice job of presenting all sides of this story. He talks to the victim, Dwayne Holmes, and his family, and the perpetrator, Limon, and his mother. Limon’s mother, Olivia, when asked her reaction when the sentence was handed down, says, “I believe that was the worst day of my life. To have my son taken away from me. . . . He had never been away from me--ever. I still can’t believe it. At this point, I’m still kind of hoping it’s a nightmare and I’ll wake up and have my son at home.”

Limon says his coach, Gary Durbon, praised him as Holmes lay on the court with a broken nose and concussion. “He was saying, ‘At least Tony stuck up for himself. It’s about time someone shed some blood.’ ” Limon says.

The final story is about billiards. More specifically, women’s billiards and one of the sport’s star attractions, Jeanette Lee, a.k.a. “the Black Widow.” Lee, who is Korean, was an introverted child growing up in Brooklyn. A visit to a dark Manhattan pool hall when she was 18 changed her life.

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