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Originally Posted by Flyest In The Hood
LeBron is better than Scottie Pippen and Larry Legend though, in my humble opinion...
Originally Posted by Flyest In The Hood
LeBron is better than Scottie Pippen and Larry Legend though, in my humble opinion...
When i was a youngin and didn't know the whole biz of bball shoes yet. my friend's brother had these just chillin inside the box. I caught a sight of them and wasOriginally Posted by JumpmanFromDaBay
Originally Posted by calibeebee
Originally Posted by dland24
One of the best to ever do it. And he gave us these:
although those are the goat pippens, i was always partial to these
Pippen 1s >
When i was a youngin and didn't know the whole biz of bball shoes yet. my friend's brother had these just chillin inside the box. I caught a sight of them and wasOriginally Posted by JumpmanFromDaBay
Originally Posted by calibeebee
Originally Posted by dland24
One of the best to ever do it. And he gave us these:
although those are the goat pippens, i was always partial to these
Pippen 1s >
Originally Posted by dland24
One of the best to ever do it. And he gave us these:
Originally Posted by dland24
One of the best to ever do it. And he gave us these:
He did praise Derrick, but also said Derrick couldn’t guard him at the age of 86.
He did praise Derrick, but also said Derrick couldn’t guard him at the age of 86.
Originally Posted by rck2sactown
Originally Posted by RiceBaLLer2
Charles thinks we’re great friends. I hate that fat @$++.
Originally Posted by rck2sactown
Originally Posted by RiceBaLLer2
Charles thinks we’re great friends. I hate that fat @$++.
Originally Posted by DoubleJs07
Originally Posted by RawSheed
can someone explain the kukoc-pippen on the bench situation again.His defining moment happened during the 1994 playoffs, when Pippen refused to re-enter Game 3 against New York after Jackson called the final play for Toni Kukoc. Instead of laying into Pippen after the game, Jackson trusted his players to handle the immediate aftermath. It ended up being done by Bill Cartwright, who screamed at Scottie with tears rolling down his face, incredulous that one of the league's most unselfish players would undermine that dogfight of a season -- when the Bulls somehow remained contenders with Jordan playing baseball -- by acting so selfishly.
Jackson waited for the room to calm down, judged the moment for what it was, chalked it up as an aberration and moved on. More than a few coaches would have abandoned Pippen, claimed that he lost the team, pushed for him to be traded that summer. Jackson knew that Pippen's mistake came from a complicated place, a Molotov cocktail of insecurity, ego and frustration about his unfair salary. When Jordan left, everyone pushed Scottie to be the leader -- including Jackson -- but the Bulls didn't pay him like other franchise players, and now they were giving away his "You the man!" moment? Jackson wanted to understand why Pippen handled it so poorly, figured it out, determined it wouldn't happen again (hopefully), and defended him going forward. Coaching isn't just about calling plays, riding the officials and figuring out strategies. Really, it's management more than anything else. You manage people. Jackson managed people better than anyone.
Originally Posted by andreasbabz
I wonder how many of those who think LeBron is better than Pippen actually saw Pippen play or are just guessing.
Originally Posted by DoubleJs07
Originally Posted by RawSheed
can someone explain the kukoc-pippen on the bench situation again.His defining moment happened during the 1994 playoffs, when Pippen refused to re-enter Game 3 against New York after Jackson called the final play for Toni Kukoc. Instead of laying into Pippen after the game, Jackson trusted his players to handle the immediate aftermath. It ended up being done by Bill Cartwright, who screamed at Scottie with tears rolling down his face, incredulous that one of the league's most unselfish players would undermine that dogfight of a season -- when the Bulls somehow remained contenders with Jordan playing baseball -- by acting so selfishly.
Jackson waited for the room to calm down, judged the moment for what it was, chalked it up as an aberration and moved on. More than a few coaches would have abandoned Pippen, claimed that he lost the team, pushed for him to be traded that summer. Jackson knew that Pippen's mistake came from a complicated place, a Molotov cocktail of insecurity, ego and frustration about his unfair salary. When Jordan left, everyone pushed Scottie to be the leader -- including Jackson -- but the Bulls didn't pay him like other franchise players, and now they were giving away his "You the man!" moment? Jackson wanted to understand why Pippen handled it so poorly, figured it out, determined it wouldn't happen again (hopefully), and defended him going forward. Coaching isn't just about calling plays, riding the officials and figuring out strategies. Really, it's management more than anything else. You manage people. Jackson managed people better than anyone.
Originally Posted by andreasbabz
I wonder how many of those who think LeBron is better than Pippen actually saw Pippen play or are just guessing.
Originally Posted by chitown4eva
Jordan backed off of him and told him: “shoot it you +%$#%!@ ******.
Originally Posted by chitown4eva
Jordan backed off of him and told him: “shoot it you +%$#%!@ ******.