MVPs werden doch eh nur die Spieler, die mit ihren Teams über 55 Siege oder so ähnlich erreicht haben, oder?
Klar weil es noch andere Kandidaten gibt wie Lebron, Melo, Howard, Kobe und co.
Aber bei den Rookies?
Flynn muss sich die Spielzeit mit Sessions teilen.
Curry spielt bei den Warriors und Nelson.
Evans mit Kevin Martin.
Jenning dagegen hat in Milwaukee schon alle Karten in den Händen, Redd ist verletzt und die 3 anderen Top Scorer heissen Warrick, Ilyasova und Bogut.
Das ist kein geschriebenes Gesetz, aber es wird einem Spieler sehr schwer fallen, MVP zu werden, wenn es vergleichbare Konkurrenten aus erfolgreicheren Mannschaften gibt, sogar wenn er diese um mehrere ppg etc. übertrifft.
Ich glaube, die Aussage war eher als Seitenhieb gegenüber den Raps gedacht und Boedefeld wollte damit einfach nur sagen, dass die Jungs aus Toronto eh keine 55 Siege auf die Reihe bringen.
Klar weil es noch andere Kandidaten gibt wie Lebron, Melo, Howard, Kobe und co.
Aber bei den Rookies?
Flynn muss sich die Spielzeit mit Sessions teilen.
Curry spielt bei den Warriors und Nelson.
Evans mit Kevin Martin.
Jenning dagegen hat in Milwaukee schon alle Karten in den Händen, Redd ist verletzt und die 3 anderen Top Scorer heissen Warrick, Ilyasova und Bogut.
"I'm not trying to figure out how to contribute to no team," Iverson said. "I contribute to a team by just playing. That's it. I don't have to figure it out. Obviously, they signed me for a reason. They've been watching me play this game for 13 years, and they know what I do on the basketball court, so I don't have to figure out how I'm going to play or anything like that. I just go out and play basketball."
New York Times schrieb:While the two icons were busy helping make the league what it is today, Bird wouldn't have been caught dead shaking Johnson's hand. And, vice versa.
Today, of course, players are publicly reprimanded and fined if they don't shake hands after a playoff series. James found that out after the Cavalierss lost to Orlando in the East finals and he blew off the Magic.
There was nothing wrong with James leaving the court and not shaking hands with Dwight Howard and other Magic players. If that's the way he felt, fine.
But the only one whose opinion counts on this issue, David Stern, had a problem with it. He cited LeBron's lack of sportsmanship when he docked him $25,000. Stern had a bigger problem with that than James blowing off the media, a worse crime.
"I didn't shake hands when we lost to the Lakers," recalled Bird, now the Pacers' president. "I never shook hands. When the Lakers and Celtics played, we didn't shake hands.[...]"
But the only one whose opinion counts on this issue, David Stern, had a problem with it. He cited LeBron's lack of sportsmanship when he docked him $25,000. Stern had a bigger problem with that than James blowing off the media, a worse crime.
David Stern and the NBA fined LeBron James $25,000 for skipping the postgame news conference after Cleveland lost to Orlando in the Eastern Conference finals.[...]