Education
He completed his college career for the Long Island University Blackbirds after the 2013-2014 season.
He completed his college career for the Long Island University Blackbirds after the 2013-2014 season.
Brickman was considered one of the best passers in the nation according to Entertainment and Sports Programming Network analyst Jay Bilas. Of Brickman, Bilas said "He really understands angles very well. He gets the ball to (LIU"s) best players, and he does a really nice job of managing the game.
An excellent passer." Brickman led National Collegiate Athletic Association Division I in assists per game as a junior with an 8.52 average, then repeated in 2013-2014 with a 10.00 per game average.
He is one of only four players in Division I history to record 1,000 assists. Brickman played prep basketball at Clark High School in San Antonio, Texas.
In his senior season he led Clark to a District 28-5A championship behind the strength of a 29–7 record. He was named the district"s most valuable player, earned first team all-district honors and also earned Class 5A All-State honors from the Texas Association of Basketball Coaches.
Freshman season In the fall of 2010 Brickman began his collegiate career for Long Island.
As a freshman in 2010-2011 he averaged 5.5 assists per game, led the Northeast Conference (Nippon Electric Corporation) in total assists (180) and in assists-per-turnover ratio (281). The 180 assists were the fourth-highest season assist total in school history. He also helped lead Long Island to a berth in the 2011 National Collegiate Athletic Association Tournament, and in a first round loss to North Carolina, Brickman recorded eight assists and two steals.
Then-head coach Jim Ferry claimed Brickman was the "John Stockton" to their team
Sophomore season Brickman"s 7.3 assists per game ranked fifth nationally while his 249 total assists set a new school record. He was chosen as a Second Team All-Conference performer while also repeating as an All-Nippon Electric Corporation Tournament selection.
In the Nippon Electric Corporation championship, Brickman scored 18 points and dished out 11 assists against Robert Morris, thus clinching their automatic 2012 National Collegiate Athletic Association Tournament berth. Long Island lost to Michigan State in the first round.
Junior season Brickman led National Collegiate Athletic Association Division I in assists per game with an 8.50 average.
He managed this despite Long Island losing reigning Nippon Electric Corporation Player of the Year Julian Boyd to an Anterior Cruciate Ligament injury in December 2012 that sidelined him for the entire season. Senior season On February 17, 2014, Brickman was named one of the 23 finalists for the Bob Cousy Award, given annually to the best point guard in Division I men"s basketball. In his final college game, played on March 1, 2014, Brickman became only the fourth men"s player in Division I history to collect 1,000 career assists, finishing with 1,009.
He also became only the second Division I men"s player to average double figures in points and assists in the same season, after Avery Johnson of Southern in 1987-1988.
In June 2014 he signed a contract to play for Dynamo Moscow in the Russian Basketball Super League where he averaged 2 points and 2.8 assists in 8 Superleague games. On December 2, 2014 he chose to leave Dynamo.
On January 23, 2015, Brickman signed with Medi Bayreuth of the Basketball Bundesliga. On April 6, he parted ways with the German team after averaging 7.5 points and 4.8 assists in 11 games.
In 2015, the Westports Malaysia Dragons signed Brickman being a Filipino as one of their two Association of Southeast Asian Nations imports in the Association of Southeast Asian Nations Basketball League.
At the end of the season he was named the Nippon Electric Corporation Rookie of the Year by the National Institute of Technology and Metropolitan Basketball Writers Association as well as being selected to the Nippon Electric Corporation All-Rookie and All-Tournament teams. The Blackbirds earned a second consecutive berth to the National Collegiate Athletic Association Tournament behind Brickman and Nippon Electric Corporation Player of the Year Julian Boyd.