Author | Thread |
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NYK3
Posts: 23572 Alba Posts: 2 Joined: 7/30/2004 Member: #725 USA |
![]() Hoosiers is definitely my favorite
I wasn't born with enough middle fingers!!!
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simrud
Posts: 23392 Alba Posts: 0 Joined: 10/13/2003 Member: #474 USA |
![]() I liked Above The Rim
A glimmer of hope maybe?!?
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izybx
Posts: 22366 Alba Posts: 2 Joined: 10/16/2006 Member: #1178 USA |
![]() what none of you guys get down with Airbud?
Beat the Evil Empire. BEAT MIAMI
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TMS
Posts: 60684 Alba Posts: 617 Joined: 5/11/2004 Member: #674 USA |
![]() White Men Can't Jump
After 7 years & 40K+ posts, banned by martin for calling Nalod a 'moron'. Awesome.
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Solace
Posts: 30002 Alba Posts: 20 Joined: 10/30/2003 Member: #479 USA |
![]() What about Eddie?
![]() Wishing everyone well. I enjoyed posting here for a while, but as I matured I realized this forum isn't for me. We all evolve. Thanks for the memories everyone.
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playa2
Posts: 34922 Alba Posts: 15 Joined: 5/15/2003 Member: #407 |
![]() The goat was better than Kareem in highschool, dude was able to grab a quarter off of the top of the backboard.
![]() http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0117450/usercomments Earl Manigault was born in Charleston, South Carolina and raised in Harlem, New York. He grew up playing basketball and practiced constantly. He would attach weights to his ankles to make him stronger so he could jump higher. By the time he was in high school, Earl was known as "The Goat" because of his quiet demeanor. When asked what his name was, the person thought he said Earl Nanny Goat, so he called him "The Goat". He was mentored by Holcombe Rucker.[1] Manigault was famous for his street basketball abilities where he could double dunk (he would dunk it and catch it with the other hand while still in the air and dunk it again). He was alleged to be able to touch the top of the backboard to retrieve quarters and dollar bills. He was only 6'2" but the ankle weights he wore as a child helped him to build up tremendous jumping ability. He once reverse dunked 36 times in a row to win a $60 bet. It was rumored that Earl had a 52-inch vertical leap. But as to prove dunking wasn't the only thing he had going for him, he would practice hundreds of shots day after day, making him a deadly long-range shooter as well. Earl played with some of the best players of his day, such as Earl Monroe, Connie Hawkins and Kareem Abdul-Jabbar, who went as far as calling Earl the greatest player he had ever seen. When Kareem finished his career with the Los Angeles Lakers and had his number retired at the Los Angeles Forum, he was asked who was the greatest player he had played with or against. After a long silence, Kareem answered 'It would have to be Earl "The Goat" Manigault,' much to the amazement of everyone.[citation needed] Earl set the NYC junior high school record for scoring 57 points in a game in the late 1950s. While attending Benjamin Franklin High School, Earl's life took a fateful turn when he began associating with the wrong crowd. He started using drugs and skipping classes. He was the star of his high school team and seemed destined for greatness in the National Basketball Association. Earl was eventually kicked out of school after being caught smoking marijuana. He finished high school at a private academy in North Carolina. This is where he met the mother of his first child. Before attending high school in North Carolina, Earl did not know how to read.[citation needed] After high school, Earl was courted by at least 75 colleges offering scholarships. Earl chose Johnson C. Smith University. He only lasted one semester as his grades were not very good and because of that, he had to fight with the coach for playing time. Earl returned to Harlem and developed a heroin addiction. Earl served 16 months in 1969 and 1970 in prison for drug possession and another term of 2 years from 1977 to 1979 for a failed robbery attempt so he could buy heroin. After this prison term, Earl quit heroin and started the "Walk Away From Drugs" tournament for kids in Harlem. He worked at this tournament until his death from heart failure in 1998, aged 53. Many people believe he should be one of the few players to join the Basketball Hall of Fame after a wrong start in life. But what hurts his election even more is the fact that he was never able to play for a professional league in his life. He did try out for the ABA Utah Stars but was released.[2] He was such a legend in Rucker Park that it was renamed after him as "Goat" Rucker Park. [Edited by - playa2 on 15-06-2007 11:20]
JAMES DOLAN on Isiah : He's a good friend of mine and of the organization and I will continue to solicit his views. He will always have strong ties to me and the team.
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VDesai
Posts: 41953 Alba Posts: 44 Joined: 10/28/2003 Member: #477 USA |
![]() Coach Carter was decent
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TMS
Posts: 60684 Alba Posts: 617 Joined: 5/11/2004 Member: #674 USA |
![]() Hoop Dreams was good too
After 7 years & 40K+ posts, banned by martin for calling Nalod a 'moron'. Awesome.
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bigpimpin
Posts: 22176 Alba Posts: 3 Joined: 11/17/2004 Member: #801 USA |
![]() I loved Hoop Dreams.
One of the guys had good potential in that movie. "Anyone who sits around waiting to hit the lottery, whether basketball or real life, in order to better their position is a loser."
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MaTT4281
Posts: 34587 Alba Posts: 4 Joined: 1/16/2004 Member: #538 USA |
![]() White Men Can't Jump
...and of course the kid in me would kick my ass if I didn't say Space Jam. ![]() |
bigpimpin
Posts: 22176 Alba Posts: 3 Joined: 11/17/2004 Member: #801 USA |
![]() Playa, that was in the 1930s. They didn't even have wear shoes then.
"Anyone who sits around waiting to hit the lottery, whether basketball or real life, in order to better their position is a loser."
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playa2
Posts: 34922 Alba Posts: 15 Joined: 5/15/2003 Member: #407 |
![]() Obviously you didn't look at the 1st clip, it was 1959, dude played with Kareem abdul Jabbar in Highschool. Did Kareem play in the 30's ?
Best basketball movie ever I dare you to rent the movie
JAMES DOLAN on Isiah : He's a good friend of mine and of the organization and I will continue to solicit his views. He will always have strong ties to me and the team.
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bigpimpin
Posts: 22176 Alba Posts: 3 Joined: 11/17/2004 Member: #801 USA |
![]() Oh, I have seen it before. I was just kidding with you. I liked the movie but since I have never seen this guy play in the L, no sound judgement can be given. That was a movie. Not real life.
"Anyone who sits around waiting to hit the lottery, whether basketball or real life, in order to better their position is a loser."
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bitty41
Posts: 22316 Alba Posts: 5 Joined: 12/3/2006 Member: #1215 |
![]() Hoop Dreams and He Got Game. Ray Allen did an suprisingly good job in this movie. Of course Denzel was great like always. I hate Hoosiers and my coach in college loved putting that movie on when we went on road trips god I want to gag everytime that movie comes on.
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mattshaw78
Posts: 20901 Alba Posts: 52 Joined: 6/23/2005 Member: #915 |
![]() where does White Shadow fall on the rankings
BlueSeats "I like anyone who can make Lebron cry. Melo seems to do it a lot."
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playa2
Posts: 34922 Alba Posts: 15 Joined: 5/15/2003 Member: #407 |
![]() THE MOVIE ABOUT KENTUCKY AND WESTERN TEXAS - GLORY ROAD 1st ever all black D-1 college team playing for the NCAA Championship. They beat the favorite Kentucky featuring ( nba coach patthe rat riley)and legendary coach Adolp Rupp
[Edited by - playa2 on 18-06-2007 12:05]
JAMES DOLAN on Isiah : He's a good friend of mine and of the organization and I will continue to solicit his views. He will always have strong ties to me and the team.
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islesfan
Posts: 9999 Alba Posts: 37 Joined: 7/19/2004 Member: #712 |
![]() The Fish That Saved Pittsburgh, hands down the best basketball movie.
Dr J in his acting debut. If it didn’t work in Phoenix with Nash and Stoutamire... it’s just not a winning formula. It’s an entertaining formula, but not a winning one. - Derek Harper talking about D'Antoni's System
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