knicks1248 wrote:tkf wrote:Silverfuel wrote:holfresh wrote:TheloniusMonk wrote:He was clearly annoyed with one of his teammates. When confronted he tells Mike "I'm talkin to him" pointing at a teammate. I see player confrontations all the time. Maybe he felt his teammate's head wasn't in the game. Not sure what anyone is trying to draw from this.
Come on, it's all Melo's fault..
This is so true. He should get injured like Allan Houston after signing a big contract and sit it out until retirement day. Then he will be remembered as one of the greats and get the GM job down the road.
or he could make one of the biggest shots in knicks history, help the knicks get to the finals in one of the most exciting finals runs in decades. Be a true professional, a great teamate, then get hurt, can't play, get a job in the front office and be remembered as a really good knick player..
unfortunately carmelo doesn't have the balls, leadership ability, or brains to accomplish any of those things,except getting hurt..
Allan Houst was no leader, never was, and never has been.
Don't bother tkf with facts about the great disappearing water man who gave us that one historic first round playoff moment. H2O exhibited such incredible brains watching and jumping up and down while the floater bounced around before dropping in. It also takes great leadership abilities to know exactly when to disappear in the second half of most games you play in.
Next up: tkf will explain to you, with advanced statistics and first hand knowledge, exactly why H20's and Melo's balls do not compare.
Once again, our vaunted king of Blind Raging Melohate needs to practice what he preaches about google:
In April 2001, Houston and teammate Charlie Ward were quoted in a New York Times magazine article making comments that were deemed anti-Semitic by the Anti-Defamation League and the Knicks. After Ward had called Jews stubborn and persecutors of Christians, Houston cited a biblical verse in support of Ward's comments.[1]Despite the on-court accolades, though, Houston's lasting legacy may be something that happened off the court: In 2001, Houston signed a maximum contract extension with the Knicks. Houston's yearly salary of over $20 million made him virtually untradeable and injury problems would burden the Knicks. Houston missed 32 games in 2003-04 due to a knee injury, and despite claims in the summer of 2004 that he would be ready to play the next season (he even refused to have surgery on his knee that summer), he played in only 20 games that season because his injury hadn't completely healed. The knee injury would eventually force Houston to announce his retirement, on October 17, 2005.
How much brains and balls did that take, tkf?