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Everything posted by kironepraktičar
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meni je okej da bude najimbecilnije .. zar to na neki način nije i esencija trash romantizma?
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opa! pa samo cepaj onda, ti si velmoza
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neće. @vladanT
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kolko si sendviča dobio od skipa i assholea
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46pts protiv amera u finalu pan americkih igara
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kakve veze imaju pippen i roberson?? steph curry je npr 2017e bio 73. po visini plate u nba
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oscar MOFO schmidt takođe @freethrow
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ili duranta maseratija!
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to je ono kada vam vezu ruku ili nogu?
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samo mi trebaju celtics fanovi ma tebratore, eno nekolicine postova na oldie but goodie, kontam nema puno aktivnosti ovih meseci pa nije teško naći (:
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Sportski komentatori, novinari i mediji
kironepraktičar replied to kalistenika u rutini's topic in Košarka
On this week’s New York Times best selling ‘sode, Drew and Shwin are joined by some guy named Dalton Graham to discuss the different attributes that makes players a “great scorer.” They dive into the differences between James Harden, LeBron James, Steph Curry, Kobe Bryant, Michael Jordan, and so much more. The conversation takes a number of twists and turns as the trio determine how important versatility, efficiency, and situational context matter when ranking the top NBA scorers. This episode is brought to you by “wash your hands and stay inside, dammit!” https://megaphone.link/VMP1735463735 -
pričamo ali ne na temi nba sezona 19/20
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verovatno je tako. s'tim što sam ja lično tada znao samo generalno o čemu se tu radi kada su u pitanju stavke izvan terena. nije bilo toliko toga da se čita i vidi a nisam ni sam baš vodio preterano računa na temu, nego, uključim tekmu i gledam. u tom smislu je meni čak i to zanimljivo
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odgledao i drugu. dobro je, ima neku voznju back n forth kroz dekade tj dogadjaje koje smatraju povezanim i bitnim, nije linearna prica i izgleda prilicno iskreno postavljeno. nije tu da bi se jordanu titrala yayca ili bilo kome drugom od glavnih likova
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odgledao prvu epizodu (:
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Where Does Scottie Pippen Rank Among the NBA’s All-Time Greats? https://www.theringer.com/nba/2020/4/19/21225904/scottie-pippen-bill-simmons-book-of-basketball-hall-of-fame-pyramid 2. Of anyone I’ve ever seen in person, Pippen was the best defender. We always hear how Bird and Magic played “free safety,” a nice way of saying that they always guarded the other team’s weakest offensive player, then used that advantage to roam around, sneak behind low-post guys and jump passing lanes. Extending that analogy, Scottie was a strong safety out of the Ronnie Lott mold, a consistently destructive presence who became nearly as enjoyable to watch defensively as Jordan was offensively. Nobody covered more ground or moved faster from point A to point B. It was like watching a cheetah in a wildlife special—one second Scottie would be minding his own business, the next second he would be pouncing. Everyone remembers Kerr’s jumper to win the ’97 Finals, but nobody remembers Pippen tipping Utah’s ensuing inbounds pass, then chasing it down and flipping it to Toni Kukoc to clinch the game. No other player except for Jordan, LeBron and maybe Kobe had the physical gifts and instincts to make that play. 3. Only Jordan was a better all-around player in the ’90s … and that was debatable. From ’91 to ’95, Pippen averaged a 20-8-6 with 2.4 steals, shot 50 percent and doubled as the league’s top defensive player. In the playoffs from ’91 to ’98, he averaged 17-23 points, 7-9 boards and 4-7 assists every spring and consistently defended the other team’s best scorer. During MJ’s “sabbatical,” Scottie (20.8 PPG, 8.7 RPG, 5.6 APG, 49% FG) dragged the Bulls to within one fecally pungent call of the Eastern finals and should have been our ’94 MVP runner-up behind Hakeem. The following year, he became one of four postmerger players (along with Cowens in ’78, Kevin Garnett in ’03 and LeBron in ’09) to lead his team in total points, rebounds, assists, steals and blocks in the same season. And he redefined the “point forward” concept during the ’90s, allowing the Bulls to play any combination of guards without suffering in the ballhandling/defense departments. Chuck Daly created a great term to describe Scottie: a “fill in the blanks” guy. If a teammate was getting killed defensively, Scottie had his back. If you needed rebounding, Scottie went down low and grabbed some boards. If you needed scoring, Scottie could create a shot or attack the rim. If you needed a turnover, Scottie had a better chance of getting it than anyone. If you needed ballhandling, he could do it. And if you needed to shut someone down, he did it. Like the Wolf in Pulp Fiction, Scottie specialized in cleaning up everyone else’s mess. When Magic was running amok in the ’91 Finals, Scottie put the clamps on him. When the Knicks were shoving an MJ-less Chicago team around in the ’94 playoffs, Scottie dunked on Ewing and stood over him defiantly. During the Charles Smith Game the year before, Pippen and Horace Grant were the ones stuffing Smith and saving the series. When the ’98 Pacers nearly snuffed out the MJ era, Jordan and Pippen crashed the boards in Game 7 and willed themselves to the line again and again, two smaller guys dominating the paint against a bigger team. They just wanted it more.
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imaš na oldie but goodie topiku ceo raspored, da ne pejstujem sad
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Sportski komentatori, novinari i mediji
kironepraktičar replied to kalistenika u rutini's topic in Košarka
ma da, watchable -
Sportski komentatori, novinari i mediji
kironepraktičar replied to kalistenika u rutini's topic in Košarka
zlatna malina? tjah, brda zlatnih malina je pokupio i showgirls pa ti vidi 🙃 -
Novakaine was an OG three-point specialist The Steve Novak discount double check belongs in a museum Now let’s all do the discount double check as we enjoy the highlights of Melo, JR and Novak from Novak’s career night, and reminisce about the good old days when we were allowed to gather in large groups.