
The Richard Jefferson Comedy Tour won’t be making its way across America anytime soon.
The ESPN analyst turned a discussion about broadcast teammate Jay Williams’ 2002 draft night experience and the motorcycle accident that changed his life into a cringe-fest segment with two jokes that absolutely bombed.
After Kevin Neghandi asked Williams about why he received such a loud ovation after being drafted in New York by the Bulls with the No. 2 pick, with Williams joking that most folks who attended Duke lived in New York and New Jersey, Jefferson made things uncomfortable.
“Well, they also didn’t see the future coming, so they were cheering kind of pre-empt — sorry, I apologize,” Jefferson said while indirectly referencing Williams’ career-altering motorcycle accident in 2003 .
“Wow,” Williams responded flatly.
Williams lasted just one season in the NBA due to the multiple injuries he suffered in a horrific motorcycle accident in 2003, with the Bulls cutting him due to the injuries and him violating his contract.
He referred to the accident as “the day I almost died” — per CBS — in his autobiography, “Life is not an Accident: A Memoir of Reinvention.”
Smith, a veteran from “Inside the NBA,” tried to steer the conversation back into normalcy.
He complimented how Williams had been an “unbelievable talent” whose career trajectory would have been different if he “didn’t like motorcycles,” a remark that landed well with Williams.
Williams said, “Yes, that’s on record. I wrote a book about it.”
And that’s when Jefferson got himself in trouble again.
He first offered a Jim Halpert-esque moment by seemingly looking toward a side camera before attempting another joke.
“I guess everybody that goes to Duke isn’t that smart,” he said, which resulted in Smith putting his head down and going, “Ohh.”
Jefferson, realizing his routine wasn’t hitting the right chords, tried to defend himself.
“What? He wrote a book about it, I’m agreeing with him,” Jefferson said.
Smith then referenced the book line before realizing they should move on, saying, “But, anyway” to mercifully move on from the Jefferson comedy hour.
It shows how segments such as those contrast to when Jefferson is behind the mic with Mike Breen and Tim Legler for NBA Finals games, where there is better chemistry and fewer spontaneous moments.


