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I think melo is showing his true colors, and they're ugly
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orangeblobman
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Nauru
3/19/2011  2:26 AM
There is a lot of material I can choose from to back the subject line up with, but I won't go further than his reaction to tonight's loss to Detroit.

It is noted in a few news articles, which can be accessed from the ultimateknicks.com front page, that Melo walked past reporters after the game with a "no comment", a sign of ill temper at that moment.

A winner, a man who wins, or we can just call it a 'man', can be discerned and differentiated from a loser, or let's say a weak man, by the way he reacts to failure, to a loss.

It is childish and a sign of weakness to become silent, ignore questions, and run to the security of the team bus after such a terrible personal performance and even worse team loss.

A winning man would squarely address the questions presented to him after the game, explain, frankly, what he thinks went wrong and what he will do to correct the problem. A loser will retreat to his turtle shell and throw on a brat face and run to the team bus.

Hey, we saw him chiding hard working teammates on the floor after the Jeffries 0.3 loop. It leaves me wondering how he will act behind the scenes after this fiasco.

A leader, Melo is not. A winner, he is not. A man, no. The next Marbury, our next sunken decade? Yes.

WE AIN'T NOWHERE WITH THIS BUM CHOKER IN CARMELO. GIVE ME STARKS'S 2-21 ANY DAY OVER THIS LACKLUSTER CLUSTEREFF.
AUTOADVERT
matt
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3/19/2011  2:57 AM
Next Marbury?

*siren noise*

Oh, that's the Hyperbole Police coming to take you away, and lock you up in Exaggeration-traz. I think I made my point. Eloquent

Childs2Dudley
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3/19/2011  3:07 AM
Didn't you leave?
"Our attitude toward life determines life's attitude towards us." - Earl Nightingale
knickstorrents
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3/19/2011  3:25 AM
You can tell by how a player plays, his personality. To me, I always held out some hope that maybe Melo wasn't that bright. But now the sinking realization is, that he might just be delusional and selfish instead.
Rose is not the answer.
sealy
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3/19/2011  9:01 AM
I could definitely see why the OP thinks this way after watching Melo's childish antics the whole game. Just 2 examples: There was a 3 on 1 with Toney and Shawne and Toney gave it up to Shawne for the dunk and you could see he was mad there. Late in the game he was furious about not getting the ball in the post and on the subsequent D possession, lost focus and allowed a back door pass for a layup.

It was pretty pathetic.

But he isn't the only one who continues to get frustrated with Toney at the point. I watch every game and this has become pretty consistent w/ Amare, Melo and Fields. Yes I know he had 11 assists, but he never dribbles w/ his head up and even when he finds a passing lane he throws a horrendous ball. Not having a quality backup PG is killing the offense, especially with Chauncey still playing poorly. Anthony Carter should be playing. Granted Toney has been scoring in bunches lately, but it hasn't equated to many wins so it means nothing to me.

But I agree that Melo should stop being a little bitch and focus on the game more and less on his shot total. He is not Marbury though. This yr will be one and done and hopefully the FO can fill in some pieces (back up PG and a big) to help this team flow next yr, with or without Mike D.

loweyecue
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3/19/2011  10:38 AM
What is this now? Orangeblobphoenix?
TKF on Melo ::....he is a punk, a jerk, a self absorbed out of shape, self aggrandizing, unprofessional, volume chucking coach killing playoff loser!!
JrZyHuStLa
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3/19/2011  10:43 AM
Still sucks for you how he'll always be better than Danilo Gallinari.
crzymdups
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3/19/2011  10:48 AM
Melo is frustrated. Honestly I don't care that he won't speak to media after games - I'd rather that than him seem happy that he's playing like crap.

Whether he starts to play team ball more effectively here remains to be seen. I hope he can. The pouting on the court last night was unacceptable.

¿ △ ?
CashMoney
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3/19/2011  10:50 AM
The guy had a bade game. It happens.
Blue & Orange 4 Life!
Nalod
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3/19/2011  11:26 AM
Stars get held up to higher standards.

I think NY has been brutal to A-Rod until they banked a chip.

Some stars talk more than they do. Coming to NY is what he wanted but one should be careful.

He needs to take his talent and expand on it on the court and off of it. NY is tough but if you embrace it you can fit in.

Yeah, we hold him at a higher standard than "The Departed" yoots because he does.

The eyes of the basketball world are upon Melo.

SupremeCommander
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3/19/2011  12:06 PM
JrZyHuStLa wrote:Still sucks for you how he'll always be better than Danilo Gallinari.

+

+

=

orangeblobman's Friday night

DLeethal wrote: Lol Rick needs a safe space
nixluva
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3/19/2011  12:29 PM
I was very angry with TD last night. He was really guilty of missing his 2 stars on multiple occasions. I think they need to pull him aside and explain to him that even tho he has been on a hot streak, they NEED to get the ball in the right spots, at the right time to win games. I like the kid, but he's the most frustrating PG to watch when it comes to this team.

Then you have Billups who looks out of his mind lately. I can't put my finger on what is wrong with him. He just hasn't been playing like he usually does. He's making dumb decisions. Turning the ball over on awful passes. Just really odd. I can only assume that he's just going thru a phase. We really NEED him to get his head together, cuz we can't depend on TD to make this team work as it should.

Melo has to understand that this is a new situation. He needed to relax and try to find other ways to get involved, not sulk. I completely understand why he was upset, cuz TD was buggin out. There's no reason to look off one of your top 2 stars as many times as he did last night. Thing is he did it to Amar'e too. I don't know what he's thinking sometimes, but that was wrong. Still Melo has to be able to pull TD aside and talk to him about things like that. I don't think he felt comfortable doing that, but he needs to.

martin
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3/19/2011  1:08 PM
nixluva wrote:I was very angry with TD last night. He was really guilty of missing his 2 stars on multiple occasions. I think they need to pull him aside and explain to him that even tho he has been on a hot streak, they NEED to get the ball in the right spots, at the right time to win games. I like the kid, but he's the most frustrating PG to watch when it comes to this team.

I will start with: I didn't watch the game very closely last night. BUT.

Why were you angry? OK, we know that TD misses guys who are wide open from time-to-time. That's a given.

But besides that: Was he running the offense? Was he taking his shots within the offense? Amare seems to have gotten his shots, not sure if that was within offense or not. Melo was 2-12 in the game and it seems like all he was doing was demanding the ball in low post sets, which are NOT within the offense. And he was off all game, so why would you necessarily go back to him on that?

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markvmc
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3/19/2011  2:07 PM
Yeah, Nixluva, I wish you wouldn't always focus on the negative so much.
orangeblobman
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Nauru
3/19/2011  5:36 PM
You can't ignore a player's character when evaluating his usefulness to the team.

Big numbers and dunk shot talent are superficial qualities that appeal to children and mentally stagnated adults.

If you enjoy the hoops game and can see past the glitz and glamor of the NBA hype apparatus, the writing is on the wall, Melo is not a team baller and has a childish approach to life, to the hoops game.

A player's character, the way he lives his life, is manifested in the way he drops the buckets. Melo isn't all there, he doesn't understand what it takes to win the way a Tim Duncan understands, the way Kobe Bryant understands, the way Micheal Jordan understood. The Spurs, Lakers, and Bulls never came to the point of trading their superstar player away. The Nuggets breathed a collective sigh of relief after Melodrama left and are playing solid team ball.

It's hard to come to terms with the fact that the Knicks went balls deep for the star appeal, but come to terms we must. It's not about the hoops buckets here, it's about the season tickets, the dresses, the glitz and the spit shine, it's not about basketball in the Mecca because, well, it doesn't have to be. It's the only market in the country that will sell out every game for a decade for a team that averages 30 wins a year.

Can you blame Dolan? If it were about bucket dropping and wins, Melo would not be here. But it's about the hype and image, and we're in for 10 more years of a fancy image and no wins.

WE AIN'T NOWHERE WITH THIS BUM CHOKER IN CARMELO. GIVE ME STARKS'S 2-21 ANY DAY OVER THIS LACKLUSTER CLUSTEREFF.
SupremeCommander
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3/19/2011  5:43 PM
orangeblobman wrote:You can't ignore a player's character when evaluating his usefulness to the team.

Big numbers and dunk shot talent are superficial qualities that appeal to children and mentally stagnated adults.

If you enjoy the hoops game and can see past the glitz and glamor of the NBA hype apparatus, the writing is on the wall, Melo is not a team baller and has a childish approach to life, to the hoops game.

A player's character, the way he lives his life, is manifested in the way he drops the buckets. Melo isn't all there, he doesn't understand what it takes to win the way a Tim Duncan understands, the way Kobe Bryant understands, the way Micheal Jordan understood. The Spurs, Lakers, and Bulls never came to the point of trading their superstar player away. The Nuggets breathed a collective sigh of relief after Melodrama left and are playing solid team ball.

It's hard to come to terms with the fact that the Knicks went balls deep for the star appeal, but come to terms we must. It's not about the hoops buckets here, it's about the season tickets, the dresses, the glitz and the spit shine, it's not about basketball in the Mecca because, well, it doesn't have to be. It's the only market in the country that will sell out every game for a decade for a team that averages 30 wins a year.

Can you blame Dolan? If it were about bucket dropping and wins, Melo would not be here. But it's about the hype and image, and we're in for 10 more years of a fancy image and no wins.

what is basis that you are evaluating Melo's character? and "his childish approach to life, to the hoops game"?

DLeethal wrote: Lol Rick needs a safe space
orangeblobman
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Nauru
3/19/2011  5:45 PM    LAST EDITED: 3/19/2011  5:48 PM
SupremeCommander wrote:
orangeblobman wrote:You can't ignore a player's character when evaluating his usefulness to the team.

Big numbers and dunk shot talent are superficial qualities that appeal to children and mentally stagnated adults.

If you enjoy the hoops game and can see past the glitz and glamor of the NBA hype apparatus, the writing is on the wall, Melo is not a team baller and has a childish approach to life, to the hoops game.

A player's character, the way he lives his life, is manifested in the way he drops the buckets. Melo isn't all there, he doesn't understand what it takes to win the way a Tim Duncan understands, the way Kobe Bryant understands, the way Micheal Jordan understood. The Spurs, Lakers, and Bulls never came to the point of trading their superstar player away. The Nuggets breathed a collective sigh of relief after Melodrama left and are playing solid team ball.

It's hard to come to terms with the fact that the Knicks went balls deep for the star appeal, but come to terms we must. It's not about the hoops buckets here, it's about the season tickets, the dresses, the glitz and the spit shine, it's not about basketball in the Mecca because, well, it doesn't have to be. It's the only market in the country that will sell out every game for a decade for a team that averages 30 wins a year.

Can you blame Dolan? If it were about bucket dropping and wins, Melo would not be here. But it's about the hype and image, and we're in for 10 more years of a fancy image and no wins.

what is basis that you are evaluating Melo's character? and "his childish approach to life, to the hoops game"?

Mature men with fully developed personalities don't react the way Melo did after the Detroit game. You're fooling yourself if you're rationalizing his behavior. For a rookie, hey, I would say he's growing. But this is a player you're paying max cash and banking the future of your team on. If he's not there yet, I don't see when he will be.

His actions after the Jeffries 0.3 second loop, we can point to that, too. It's documented.

His reaction to George Karl's comments a few weeks ago.

Sadly, examples abound for our dear Melo.

WE AIN'T NOWHERE WITH THIS BUM CHOKER IN CARMELO. GIVE ME STARKS'S 2-21 ANY DAY OVER THIS LACKLUSTER CLUSTEREFF.
SupremeCommander
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3/19/2011  5:47 PM
orangeblobman wrote:
SupremeCommander wrote:
orangeblobman wrote:You can't ignore a player's character when evaluating his usefulness to the team.

Big numbers and dunk shot talent are superficial qualities that appeal to children and mentally stagnated adults.

If you enjoy the hoops game and can see past the glitz and glamor of the NBA hype apparatus, the writing is on the wall, Melo is not a team baller and has a childish approach to life, to the hoops game.

A player's character, the way he lives his life, is manifested in the way he drops the buckets. Melo isn't all there, he doesn't understand what it takes to win the way a Tim Duncan understands, the way Kobe Bryant understands, the way Micheal Jordan understood. The Spurs, Lakers, and Bulls never came to the point of trading their superstar player away. The Nuggets breathed a collective sigh of relief after Melodrama left and are playing solid team ball.

It's hard to come to terms with the fact that the Knicks went balls deep for the star appeal, but come to terms we must. It's not about the hoops buckets here, it's about the season tickets, the dresses, the glitz and the spit shine, it's not about basketball in the Mecca because, well, it doesn't have to be. It's the only market in the country that will sell out every game for a decade for a team that averages 30 wins a year.

Can you blame Dolan? If it were about bucket dropping and wins, Melo would not be here. But it's about the hype and image, and we're in for 10 more years of a fancy image and no wins.

what is basis that you are evaluating Melo's character? and "his childish approach to life, to the hoops game"?

Mature men with fully developed personalities don't react the way Melo did after the Detroit game. You're fooling yourself if you're rationalizing his behavior. For a rookie, hey, I would say he's growing. But this is a player you're paying max cash and banking the future of your team on. If he's not there yet, I don't see when he will be.

His actions after the Jeffries 0.3 second loop, we can point to that, too. It's documented.

Sadly, examples abound for our dear Melo.

I'm not rationalizing anything. I am trying to figure out if this has anything to do with tattoos, headbands, where he's from, and his genetic composition

DLeethal wrote: Lol Rick needs a safe space
orangeblobman
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Nauru
3/19/2011  5:50 PM    LAST EDITED: 3/19/2011  5:52 PM
SupremeCommander wrote:
orangeblobman wrote:
SupremeCommander wrote:
orangeblobman wrote:You can't ignore a player's character when evaluating his usefulness to the team.

Big numbers and dunk shot talent are superficial qualities that appeal to children and mentally stagnated adults.

If you enjoy the hoops game and can see past the glitz and glamor of the NBA hype apparatus, the writing is on the wall, Melo is not a team baller and has a childish approach to life, to the hoops game.

A player's character, the way he lives his life, is manifested in the way he drops the buckets. Melo isn't all there, he doesn't understand what it takes to win the way a Tim Duncan understands, the way Kobe Bryant understands, the way Micheal Jordan understood. The Spurs, Lakers, and Bulls never came to the point of trading their superstar player away. The Nuggets breathed a collective sigh of relief after Melodrama left and are playing solid team ball.

It's hard to come to terms with the fact that the Knicks went balls deep for the star appeal, but come to terms we must. It's not about the hoops buckets here, it's about the season tickets, the dresses, the glitz and the spit shine, it's not about basketball in the Mecca because, well, it doesn't have to be. It's the only market in the country that will sell out every game for a decade for a team that averages 30 wins a year.

Can you blame Dolan? If it were about bucket dropping and wins, Melo would not be here. But it's about the hype and image, and we're in for 10 more years of a fancy image and no wins.

what is basis that you are evaluating Melo's character? and "his childish approach to life, to the hoops game"?

Mature men with fully developed personalities don't react the way Melo did after the Detroit game. You're fooling yourself if you're rationalizing his behavior. For a rookie, hey, I would say he's growing. But this is a player you're paying max cash and banking the future of your team on. If he's not there yet, I don't see when he will be.

His actions after the Jeffries 0.3 second loop, we can point to that, too. It's documented.

Sadly, examples abound for our dear Melo.

I'm not rationalizing anything. I am trying to figure out if this has anything to do with tattoos, headbands, where he's from, and his genetic composition

Genetic composition? How could that have anything to do with anything? Genes are irrelevant, remember? All behavior is determined by environment. It's all a social construct. You should brush up on your dogma.

You're derailing the argument.

Examples of Melo's weak personality are all over the landscape.

His reaction to George Karl's frank observations a few weeks ago is another example.

WE AIN'T NOWHERE WITH THIS BUM CHOKER IN CARMELO. GIVE ME STARKS'S 2-21 ANY DAY OVER THIS LACKLUSTER CLUSTEREFF.
Nalod
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3/19/2011  5:57 PM
SupremeCommander wrote:
orangeblobman wrote:
SupremeCommander wrote:
orangeblobman wrote:You can't ignore a player's character when evaluating his usefulness to the team.

Big numbers and dunk shot talent are superficial qualities that appeal to children and mentally stagnated adults.

If you enjoy the hoops game and can see past the glitz and glamor of the NBA hype apparatus, the writing is on the wall, Melo is not a team baller and has a childish approach to life, to the hoops game.

A player's character, the way he lives his life, is manifested in the way he drops the buckets. Melo isn't all there, he doesn't understand what it takes to win the way a Tim Duncan understands, the way Kobe Bryant understands, the way Micheal Jordan understood. The Spurs, Lakers, and Bulls never came to the point of trading their superstar player away. The Nuggets breathed a collective sigh of relief after Melodrama left and are playing solid team ball.

It's hard to come to terms with the fact that the Knicks went balls deep for the star appeal, but come to terms we must. It's not about the hoops buckets here, it's about the season tickets, the dresses, the glitz and the spit shine, it's not about basketball in the Mecca because, well, it doesn't have to be. It's the only market in the country that will sell out every game for a decade for a team that averages 30 wins a year.

Can you blame Dolan? If it were about bucket dropping and wins, Melo would not be here. But it's about the hype and image, and we're in for 10 more years of a fancy image and no wins.

what is basis that you are evaluating Melo's character? and "his childish approach to life, to the hoops game"?

Mature men with fully developed personalities don't react the way Melo did after the Detroit game. You're fooling yourself if you're rationalizing his behavior. For a rookie, hey, I would say he's growing. But this is a player you're paying max cash and banking the future of your team on. If he's not there yet, I don't see when he will be.

His actions after the Jeffries 0.3 second loop, we can point to that, too. It's documented.

Sadly, examples abound for our dear Melo.

I'm not rationalizing anything. I am trying to figure out if this has anything to do with tattoos, headbands, where he's from, and his genetic composition

The OBM is a higher plane.

I think melo is showing his true colors, and they're ugly

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