The Official 2014-15 NBA Thread

Options
11001011031051061906

Comments

  • S2J
    S2J Members Posts: 28,458 ✭✭✭✭✭
    edited October 2014
    Options
    RAPH wrote: »
    Los216 wrote: »
    MR.CJ wrote: »
    The best PG in the nba

    Chill out. We won't be able to call that until the All Star break. We gotta see how Rose bounces back, and if Kyrie can take the next step and pick up where he left off with team USA. Don't forget about Westbrook either. With no KD we need to see if he can elevate that team and be the man. Curry has a new coach and CP3 has a lot to prove this year.

    When you think about it all of the top PG's have a lot to prove this season. I'm biased so I'm gonna say Kyrie will be the best by seasons end but there are two many factors with all of them that we need to see play out. Rose does look good right now though.

    http://gfycat.com/PassionateAncientGalapagossealion#?format=gif

    This gif is why irving won't be considered the best pg by seasons or at any point in his career.Loves body language speaks volumes

    PassionateAncientGalapagossealion.gif

    Word, that tunnel vision is mad annoying.

    It's always better to pass up a good shot for a great shot... and that wasn't even necessarily a good shot, just a tough shot that he happened to make... but a low percentage one...

    hahhahaahh Uh oh. yo its mad early to already be doin the 'See, this ngga dont even pass' ? .

    Yo thats telling on both parts, maybe even worse @ Kevin Love's reaction. Foreshadowing
  • Shizlansky
    Shizlansky Members Posts: 35,095 ✭✭✭✭✭
    Options
    That was two different plays?
  • nycest_1
    nycest_1 Members Posts: 2,731 ✭✭✭✭✭
    Options
    Beta wrote: »
    S2J wrote: »
    R.D. wrote: »
    S2J wrote: »
    Oh and i'd definitely put Kwahi ahead of Lebron as best perimter defender, only bc Kwahi has less responsibilities on offense so he can exert more energy

    ? there's 20 players they could have put ahead of LeBron

    Ngga... name THREE

    And before u throw out bull ? name another player who at some point, at least on occaision, has locked up Paul george, Derrick rose, Paul Pierce, and Kevin Durant

    The GMs know wtf they talkin about. Lebrons biggest defensive weakness is his offensive responsibilty. He cant guard at 100% all game, so yea in b4 but but but Kwahi got 30 on him!

    Jimmy Butler,Kahwi Leonard,Tony Allen,Iman Shumpert are all better perimeter defenders than lebron

    Butler has yoked everybody on that list except obviously rose and durant.Allen and shump have yoked durant and rose

    Cosign all except shumpert

    for real, i suggest ya'll go see how many ? got their new career highs at the garden with shumpert guarding them
  • Beta
    Beta Members Posts: 65,596 ✭✭✭✭✭
    Options
    It's a shame that Phoenix's best chance to make the playoffs was last year.
  • iron man1
    iron man1 Members Posts: 29,989 ✭✭✭✭✭
    Options
    Jeanie Buss on first take I know it's firstake no one cares lol.
  • BlackAX410
    BlackAX410 Members Posts: 35,415 ✭✭✭✭✭
    Options
    Lmao ? made no attempt to get back into da play, but on a side note ima give dat bill Simmons show on ESPN a chance im sure itll be different then da internet show tho prolly cleaner
  • RiGGA
    RiGGA Members Posts: 3,219 ✭✭✭✭✭
    Options
    Homie just said ? it & left it up to P.O.P. to hold it down
  • Tommy bilfiger
    Tommy bilfiger Members Posts: 22,675 ✭✭✭✭✭
    Options
    The Point gawd was in a zone last night
  • RAPH
    RAPH Members Posts: 3,169 ✭✭✭✭✭
    Options

    Shaquille-ONeal-Cant-Stop-Laughing-As-He-Watches-Funny-Online-Videos.gif
  • RAPH
    RAPH Members Posts: 3,169 ✭✭✭✭✭
    Options
    BlackAX410 wrote: »
    Jeanie buss was on first take looking like a wax statue

    She was salty as ? when they said they weren't a championship contender talmbout" how can u say that in October" like shorty look at dat trash roster lmao

    lmbo!
  • lord nemesis
    lord nemesis Members Posts: 11,946 ✭✭✭✭✭
    Options
    All I could do is smh when I read that crybaby ? she said about people not wanting to play with Bean
  • Kame
    Kame Members Posts: 24,246 ✭✭✭✭✭
    edited October 2014
    Options
    Kevin Love on the trade in his own words, sounds like he's ready to sacrifice stats a little to win
    How I Spent My Summer Vacation

    You know who had a really crazy summer? Andrew Wiggins. Of all the basketball players I’ve watched over the past few months, Wiggins surprised me the most. I can imagine how he was feeling. From the excitement of being the No. 1 draft pick to the uncertainty of where he was headed, he was poised and impressive.

    I know what it’s like to have your heart jump every time your phone buzzes. I know what it’s like to talk to your agent multiple times a day. I know what it’s like to read about your future from “sources” on Twitter.

    I was on the other side of it. It was exhausting.

    I spent most of my summer either working out or trying to escape the craziness through Netflix binge watching. I tore through more than 40 of the IMDB Top 250. That’s not even counting the TV marathons. I did every single episode of Seinfeld (holds up), Curb Your Enthusiasm (the best), Mad Men and Game of Thrones (twice). I can win any argument with you about why GOT is the best show currently on TV.

    Things were especially tough because for a month before the trade was finalized, Wiggins and I were caught in NBA purgatory. Is this happening, is this not happening? With everything up in the air, I felt like I couldn’t say a proper goodbye to Minnesota. And once the trade finally went through, everything happened quickly.


    So I’d like to take a moment to thank the fans of Minnesota for six great years. I still remember sitting in Madison Square Garden when I was first drafted in 2008, thinking that if I could go anywhere it would be to the Timberwolves to work with one of my childhood idols, Kevin McHale. There are so many people in Minnesota who helped to shape my game and mold me into the player I am today. I’ll always be fond of going to Manny’s Steakhouse, and the support I got from the entire Minnesota community — even in tough times — is something I’ll remember forever. (Seriously, thanks for not burning my jersey, you guys.)

    I grew up a lot – personally and professionally – during my time with the Wolves. I’ll be the first to tell you that I didn’t always handle things perfectly. We are all unfinished products. It’s not easy to handle the disappointment of losing when you’re in your early twenties. There were times when I wasn’t easy to be around in the locker room. It’s hard to be a leader when you don’t have the model — and when you don’t have a blueprint for what winning in the NBA looks like.

    But I make no excuses. I posted my best personal numbers last season, and we still didn’t make the playoffs. Some of the backlash was pretty hard to take — I learned that there is apparently such a thing as an “empty stat” (I’ll try to remember the importance of that the next time I am boxing out for a rebound against Tim Duncan).

    In the end, I was given the opportunity to move on, and I took it. My decision was about wanting to win. When I think back to being a kid shooting on an eight-foot hoop in my Shawn Kemp jersey, I never dreamed about putting up a triple-double or signing a max contract. I dreamed about holding up a championship trophy. In order to get to that place, I knew that I needed to move on.

    I’d be lying if I said I wasn’t wondering what to expect when I got on our team plane to Rio De Janeiro last week. We were headed down to Brazil for a preseason tour, and it was the first time all my new teammates on the Cavaliers got to be together without all the cameras that descend on training camp.

    I was walking down the aisles of the plane, seeing NBA champions all around — Shawn Marion, James Jones, Mike Miller, Brendan Haywood, LeBron James. I was seeing all the international guys like Anderson Varejão from Brazil and Matthew Dellavedova from Australia.

    As I moved to my seat, guys were making inside jokes with one another and shouting across the plane. The atmosphere was totally different than what I was used to. And at that moment, a familiar feeling came over me that anybody can relate to when he’s getting his bearings:

    It felt like the first day of school.

    So I did what I should’ve done on my own first day of school. I went and sat down next to the smartest kid in class, James Jones. He’s a guy who has played in 100-plus playoff games and has done the gritty, thankless jobs that don’t make SportsCenter. Just as we started talking, Mike Miller posted up in the seat behind us. He’s a guy who I think shot 44 percent from three to help the Heat win the 2013 title, and did it like it was no big deal. He even hit a huge three in the Finals without his left shoe.

    Having the opportunity to talk basketball with teammates who’ve won four NBA titles among them is invaluable. James and Mike talked about the sacrifice needed to win in the playoffs, not just about sacrificing shot attempts or stats, but the stuff off the court that you might not think about, including having to shut out your friends and family at times. I thought about myself at 21, 22 years old. Hearing these guys talk about what it takes, I realized that maybe I wasn’t totally in the mindset for that level of sacrifice back then.

    Once we got in the air, I expected guys to throw on the Beats and pull out iPads. That’s what I was used to. This was a 12-hour flight, and I was counting on at least seven hours of shuteye. That never happened. Drinks were poured. Guys took turns telling stories. After a whirlwind summer, it was the first real chance to let our guard down without being judged in the public eye. And the really special thing, the thing that can be rare in the NBA, was that everybody was included. Where you came from, where you went to school, what kind of neighborhood you were from — none of that mattered on this flight.

    LeBron had a clear message to make. We all read the headlines. We all know what we’re going to be capable of offensively, especially in transition with the athletes we have. But we’re also very aware that we don’t have a true rim protector on the defensive end. His message was pretty clear — we’ll live and die as a unit.

    “We need to work until we get to a point on defense where we can close our eyes and know where the guy behind us is going to be,” LeBron said. “You have to be able to look at the man next to you as your brother; trust that he’s going to do his job. We have to become a family.”

    Everything on the plane to Rio was natural, and I felt like I could be a part of something special. It was a culture that I’m not accustomed to. After I was traded this summer, I kept hearing about how our challenge was going to be figuring out how to share the ball among LeBron, Kyrie and myself. Reporters kept asking me how I felt about it:

    Are you the second wheel? Are you the third wheel? What about your stats?

    To them I say: I don’t care. I’ve never played in a playoff game. I came to Cleveland because I want to win. I’ll grab a broom and sweep the floors if it gets me an NBA title.

    http://www.theplayerstribune.com/kevin-love-how-i-spent-my-summer-vacation/
  • Beta
    Beta Members Posts: 65,596 ✭✭✭✭✭
    Options
    Wait....curb your enthusiasm is on Netflix? Oh it's over...
  • HustleThaDon
    HustleThaDon Members Posts: 28,566 ✭✭✭✭✭
    Options
    Game of thrones is the only watchable thing he named.
  • R.D.
    R.D. Members Posts: 20,156 ✭✭✭✭✭
    Options
    I'm not reading all them words from a cracka
  • infamous114
    infamous114 Members, Moderators Posts: 52,202 Regulator
    Options
    Mad Men is dope. I can understand why people wouldn't like it though.
  • Beta
    Beta Members Posts: 65,596 ✭✭✭✭✭
    Options
    HustleTX wrote: »
    Game of thrones is the only watchable thing he named.

    What? You don't ? with curb? You missing out that's one of the funniest shows I ever watched
  • Kame
    Kame Members Posts: 24,246 ✭✭✭✭✭
    edited October 2014
    Options
    I only ? with Curb and GOT on that list
  • Kame
    Kame Members Posts: 24,246 ✭✭✭✭✭
    Options
    Dude said James Jones is "the smartest kid in class"

    Some of these locker room guys are so highly regarded and we'll never know why.
  • O.G.
    O.G. Members Posts: 7,555 ✭✭✭✭✭
    edited October 2014
    Options
    I ? with Curb,Seinfeld,Mike & Molly & Big Bang Theory and I am 1000% ? .