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Hakanxx schrieb:was laberst du ya
ist dieses "ya" ein neuer total cooler slang oder was darf man darunter verstehen?
Hakanxx schrieb:was laberst du ya
classic schrieb:Eine merkwürdige Diskussion, die hier am Laufen ist.
Hedo? All Star? Keinesfalls. Dazu ist er wirklich zu unkonstant und seine Rolle im Team ist auch nicht für derartige Auszeichnungen ausgelegt. Ich muss zugeben, dass ich enttäuscht von ihm bin und eigentlich mehr erwartet hätte. Vielleicht kann man es darauf zurückführen, dass er im letzten Sommer seinen Militärdienst und anschließend die EM absolviert hat. Kann man auch als Ausrede gelten lassen, aber eigentlich bin ich auch davon überzeugt, dass er mehr kann.
rOsHi schrieb:Du hast es verstanden ! Ich denke auch er kann mehr und wenn er "dieses mehr" konstant macht dann hätte er eine Chance furs ASG aber das passiert nicht weil es ihm auch egal ist glaube ich ! Er ist mit seine Rolle zufrieden
Mister Birdman schrieb:@ Hakanxx
... die gleichen Stats wie AK ... gute Verteidigung ... :laugh2: :laugh2: :laugh2:
Hakanxx schrieb:ok nerv nicht ich hab meine Meinung gesagt und ich bleib dabei,
nur weil du mal zufällig ein NBA spiel gesehn hast, bist du noch lange kein NBA kenner.
die Antwort wird kommen du wirst Hedo nächstes jahr im All Star trikot sehen also warts ab.
ricard schrieb:@allstars
Wenn Hedo All Star wird , denn knall ich Chara per Bodycheck durch die Bande.
Rank Player Pos Team Dunks
1 Dwight Howard PF ORL 159
2 Shawn Marion SF PHO 155
3 Shaquille O'Neal C MIA 152
4 Carmelo Anthony SF DEN 137
5 Dwyane Wade SG MIA 119
Shaq wird D12 noch abfangen...wenn er gesund bleibt.
Dear Grant Hill,
You don't know me, although I did grow up cheering for your dad during his NFL days with the Dallas Cowboys. That probably isn't enough for you to listen to me now. But I have only the best of intentions when I say this:
Please retire.
Now.
As in immediately. As in never lace up a sneaker, dribble a basketball or take a jumper again. In fact, it would be best if you never wear shorts again. I'm sure you've got plenty of nice, stylish pants in your closet.
Frankly, I fear for your life. It's not so much that you're injury-prone; probably a more accurate description is "injury-jinxed." Ever since you arrived in Orlando, your health has been only slightly better than King Tut's in the last 3,000 years.
Your latest injury, a sports hernia that you had surgically repaired back in October, likely has knocked you out of another season, this time after only 21 games played. By my count, out of a possible 492 regular-season games in your six years in Orlando, you will have played only 135. That's a 27 percent attendance rate -- good if you've got Tony Soprano mob connections, but not so good for a franchise that's being held hostage by your medical reports.
Sure, you teased us by playing 67 games last season. And yes, when you suit up, you can still be productive. Just last week you tossed in 19 points against the Nuggets. And late last month you were arguably the best player on the court not named Kobe during a game against the Lakers.
But the problem is simply that you don't play enough -- certainly not enough to justify your enormous salary. The Magic, bless their hearts, have been working around you for years. They once considered you a cornerstone; now you're just an albatross, untradeable and unreliable.
Sure, you've got 16.9 million reasons to come back next year. Guess if I had the opportunity to pull down that kind of change, I'd be determined to return, too. After all, you've got to find some way to fund your art collection.
And maybe you've got one more miracle left in you. But the odds aren't in your favor. Instead, every time another DNP goes next to your name in the box score, it's a reminder that your NBA career has come up short. And outside of leading Orlando to the NBA title (and that's not gonna happen anytime soon), you won't be able to change the perception that most people believe you've overstayed your welcome.
So I humbly suggest that you move on to the next phase of your life, where you can use your brain, your personality, your all-around "good guy" skills to carve out a legacy that might far exceed anything you ever did on the basketball court.
March Madness is here, and that's the Grant Hill I like to remember, the one who helped lead Duke to two national titles in the early 1990s.
The other madness -- the one that keeps dragging that delicate body of yours back for more NBA abuse -- is the one that needs to stop right now.
Sincerely,
Mike McAllister
March 15, 2006
Magic forward vows to keep getting better
Inside the NBA
ORLANDO - Dwight Howard's teammates were on him again after practice Tuesday, challenging him to prove he still can touch the piece of tape on the side of the backboard some 30 inches above the rim.
The strip of tape was originally put there two years ago when Howard, then 18, was working out for the Orlando Magic prior to the 2004 NBA Draft. It's still there for all to marvel at, and every so often Howard has to prove his majestic wingspan and leaping ability.
After hemming and hawing a few seconds about being older now and weighing 25 pounds more, Howard sprung from the floor and actually touched a couple of inches above the tape.
"Myyyy good-ness," gushed Magic assistant coach Morlon Wiley, shaking his head.
Magic head coach Brian Hill also was impressed, but what followed were hardly words of glowing praise.
"Now, when a guy drives baseline, that's how I wanna see you jump and contest the shot," Hill said without even a hint of a smile.
"It's been tough because it's so new for me," Howard said. "It's something I have to get used to. All the guys who have been double-teamed, they didn't really know how to handle it the first year. Guys like Shaq, Tim Duncan and Kevin Garnett, they eventually figured it out, and that's what I'm going to do."
Hill said it's actually "refreshing" to hear Howard is unhappy he hasn't made more progress this season. Hill sees a player still hungry to learn.
"I think it's refreshing to have a player who looks at his play and evaluates what he's not doing or not doing enough of," Hill said. "Most of them would look at the stats and say, 'I'm leading the NBA in rebounding, I'm averaging 15 points a game and I'm doing pretty good for a second-year player.'
"For him to be critical of his own game and acknowledge there is still lots of room for improvement shows you that he's headed in the right direction."
... naja, ist es das nicht schon ... ein Schrecken ohne Ende, denn er plagt sich doch schon seit Ewigkeiten mit der Verletzung rum und "schadet" damit auch manchmal dem Team / der Franchise ...classic schrieb:Meiner Ansicht nach, sollte er es glaube ich tun. Lieber ein Ende mit Schrecken, als ein Schrecken ohne Ende.
ricard schrieb:Die 21 TO, 6 von Dwight, (er soll endlich mal den Ball hochhalten) sind nicht der Rede wert.
classic schrieb:Hier ein offener Brief eines SI-Redakteurs: