- 3,368
- 11
- Joined
- Jul 3, 2010
lol
Follow along with the video below to see how to install our site as a web app on your home screen.
Note: this_feature_currently_requires_accessing_site_using_safari
AyoOriginally Posted by MR J 858
Ron Ron's d tonight
Yeah I kind of agree. Whenever you play the Suns defense gets thrown out the window and Bynum was out.Originally Posted by dapurplengold213
grind out win. back to back games of pretty bad team defense.. lets hope it gets better...
ron rons defense has been on point though
See you next season.Originally Posted by mjshoefanatic
gg laker faithful
You guys also need to figure out who you guys want starting at Center Jordan or Kaman.Originally Posted by mjshoefanatic
^yuuuuup if anything we'll be hunting for a veteran SF i.e. Prince/Granger/Battier/Chandler to add to our nucleus of Griffin/Gordon/Mo/Kaman. Gomes has been an epic fail all season.
Kaman is better coming off the bench if we even decide to keep him. He's so turnover prone and makes way too many bonehead decisions in the post. If I were DTS I'd extend DJ and use kaveman as trade bait to acquire that veteran SF we so desperately need.Originally Posted by MR J 858
You guys also need to figure out who you guys want starting at Center Jordan or Kaman.Originally Posted by mjshoefanatic
^yuuuuup if anything we'll be hunting for a veteran SF i.e. Prince/Granger/Battier/Chandler to add to our nucleus of Griffin/Gordon/Mo/Kaman. Gomes has been an epic fail all season.
But at the same time I wouldn't be surprised if cheap !%@ Donald T. Sterling decides to trade Kaman to shed his contract. That's just how your owner rolls he thinks & runs his team more with a business mindset instead of building a winning team.
Also isn't DJ up for a contract extension.
Ron has been consistent with the laughsOriginally Posted by Bean Pie Slanga
lol
[h1]Game-changing decision[/h1]
NEWARK, N.J. – John Calipari brought Kobe Bryant to New Jersey three times that spring to work out.
This was 1996. Cal was the new coach of the New Jersey Nets, fresh out of the college ranks at Massachusetts. Bryant was a high schooler from suburban Philadelphia, the first modern player who was academically qualified for college to say he was jumping straight to the NBA anyway.
The Nets had the eighth pick overall, too high, many said, for an unproven 18-year-old. With each drill Cal ran Bryant through at the Fairleigh Dickinson University gym, he grew convinced otherwise.
“If you watched the workouts, you’d say either this kid has been taught to fool us in the workouts or he’s ridiculous,