- May 19, 2004
- 17,246
- 73
Monta is killing it tonight
, hopefully we can pull something off at the end here.
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Originally Posted by dland24
Originally Posted by westcoastsfinest
lets go warriors!
(Quoted for proof)
Not sure if they touched or not, but Reggie's hands were at his friggin side and pierce just leaned in and flailed. %%%%+%+ BS. And Agreed on the Lee call. Lee has been getting screwed in terms of calls all year long. Must be the uniform.Originally Posted by acidicality
Reggie didn't even touch Pierce on that and one, and David Lee should have had an and one, but maybe that's just part of having home court. That Curry turnover at the end hurt, and not being able to get the rebound after KG missed that shot. Great game though...
yeah, i heard the same thing.Originally Posted by LazyJ10
What's this I'm hearing about Lacob saying only season ticket holders are "true" Warrior fans??
[/h1][h1]Warriors owner Lacob's comment stirs up 'real fans'[/h1]
Rusty Simmons, Chronicle Staff Writer
Sunday, March 6, 2011
(03-06) 04:00 PST PHILADELPHIA --
Warriors co-owner Joe Lacob spoke Saturday in Boston at the MIT Sloan Sports Analytics Conference, stirring up a tempest among Warriors fans who heard about one of his comments, but impressing some of the journalists who actually attended the event.
At the conference, according to a recording obtained by The Chronicle, someone asked a muffled question about bloggers.
Lacob answered, "They are not real fans, because they don't have season tickets."
After a follow-up question, Lacob said, "Unlike every real fan, they don't have season tickets."
All that reached Twitter and the blogs was the idea that season-ticket holders were the only "real fans." Participants in fan forums and commenters on blogs took the comment to say that anyone without the time or money to be a season-ticket holder wasn't a true fan, and they responded with vitriolic remarks about Lacob.
Warriorsworld.net readers almost immediately asked for the e-mail address of Lacob, to which he always responds. What followed was a series of fake e-mail addresses, many of which were not fit for a family newspaper. A search for "Lacob" on Twitter turned up scores of angry tweets.
The Warriors had no comment on what Lacob said or how some fans reacted.
At the conference, Lacob, sitting alongside Wyc Grousbeck (a Boston Celtics owner), Jeff Moorad (a San Diego Padres owner) and Bill Simmons (an ESPN columnist), said a lot of other things when discussing his reasons for becoming an owner and the division between business and passion in sports. A straw poll of journalists who covered the conference, but don't regularly cover the Warriors, found that Lacob came off well, despite the "real fan" slip.
Of his other remarks, perhaps the most notable was that he could get out of the Oracle Arena lease in six years and would consider getting into a new arena. He also said trades are hard to make, a change of tune from a November comment that "you should be able to turn around a team fast."
joke of an ownerOriginally Posted by LiveMyReality
[h1][/h1][h1]Warriors owner Lacob's comment stirs up 'real fans'[/h1]
Rusty Simmons, Chronicle Staff Writer
Sunday, March 6, 2011
(03-06) 04:00 PST PHILADELPHIA --
Warriors co-owner Joe Lacob spoke Saturday in Boston at the MIT Sloan Sports Analytics Conference, stirring up a tempest among Warriors fans who heard about one of his comments, but impressing some of the journalists who actually attended the event.
At the conference, according to a recording obtained by The Chronicle, someone asked a muffled question about bloggers.
Lacob answered, "They are not real fans, because they don't have season tickets."
After a follow-up question, Lacob said, "Unlike every real fan, they don't have season tickets."
All that reached Twitter and the blogs was the idea that season-ticket holders were the only "real fans." Participants in fan forums and commenters on blogs took the comment to say that anyone without the time or money to be a season-ticket holder wasn't a true fan, and they responded with vitriolic remarks about Lacob.
Warriorsworld.net readers almost immediately asked for the e-mail address of Lacob, to which he always responds. What followed was a series of fake e-mail addresses, many of which were not fit for a family newspaper. A search for "Lacob" on Twitter turned up scores of angry tweets.
The Warriors had no comment on what Lacob said or how some fans reacted.
At the conference, Lacob, sitting alongside Wyc Grousbeck (a Boston Celtics owner), Jeff Moorad (a San Diego Padres owner) and Bill Simmons (an ESPN columnist), said a lot of other things when discussing his reasons for becoming an owner and the division between business and passion in sports. A straw poll of journalists who covered the conference, but don't regularly cover the Warriors, found that Lacob came off well, despite the "real fan" slip.
Of his other remarks, perhaps the most notable was that he could get out of the Oracle Arena lease in six years and would consider getting into a new arena. He also said trades are hard to make, a change of tune from a November comment that "you should be able to turn around a team fast."