Basketball Hall of Famer Gail Goodrich serves as one of NBA TV's lead studio analysts. His duties include NBA TV’s game night shows and NBA TV Live, the network's daily NBA wrap-up show that includes a complete breakdown of the day's action, highlights from each game and interviews with key players and coaches.

A Los Angeles native, Goodrich’s storied career gained national attention at UCLA where he helped lead the Bruins to consecutive NCAA Championships in 1964 and 1965, the first two of head coach John Wooden’s record 10 titles. A two-time All-America and the Helms Foundation’s “Co-Player of the Year” (along with Princeton’s Bill Bradley), he was a first-round draft pick of the Los Angeles Lakers in 1965, playing three seasons for the team before being acquired in the expansion draft by the Phoenix Suns in 1968. As a member of the Suns from 1968-70, Goodrich was voted to the 1969 NBA All-Star Game.

Goodrich was traded back to the Lakers in 1970 where he became part of one of the most dominant teams in NBA history. During the 1971-72 season, Goodrich, alongside Jerry West in the backcourt and Wilt Chamberlain in the frontcourt, helped to lead the Lakers to a 69-13 record, including a record 33 consecutive game win-streak, and the NBA title. The team’s leading scorer for four consecutive seasons (1971-72 to 1974-75), he led the 1971-72 championship team with a 25.9 scoring average.

A five-time NBA All-Star (1969, 1972-75), Goodrich served as captain of the Lakers from 1974-76 before he joined Pete Maravich and the New Orleans Jazz in 1976, finishing his 14-year career in 1979. Inducted into the Naismith Memorial Basketball Hall of Fame in 1996, Goodrich scored 19,181 points during his NBA career. Goodrich’s number 25 jersey was retired by both the Lakers (1996) and the Bruins (2004).