Opening Day Baby!!!!!!
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04-04-2016, 05:10 PM
Post: #31
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RE: Opening Day Baby!!!!!!
(04-04-2016 03:31 PM)L Verge Wrote:(04-04-2016 12:22 PM)jonathan Wrote: Seeing Larry Bird play basketball as a kid in his backyard is….simply incredible. I can't even imagine what it must have been like to see him become what he became. But as a teenager there was no athlete I hated more than Larry Bird. I hated ALL of the Celtics, but Bird was the ringleader, so I hated him the most. But as the years rolled by, I had more and more respect for him, until I actually really liked him by the time the retired. Let's face it, he couldn't really jump, couldn't really run, but on a court full of supremely physically gifted athletes, he could have scored 50 points just about every single game if he wanted to. And rubbed their noses in it the entire time, as he is well known as one of the greatest trash talkers in history. As a sports fan, part of you HAS to respect that lol. Maravich died at 40. From Wikipedia…"On January 5, 1988, Maravich collapsed and died at age 40 of heart failure while playing in a pickup basketball game in the gym at a church in Pasadena, California, with a group that included James Dobson. Maravich had flown out from his home in Louisiana to tape a segment for Dobson's radio show that aired later that day. Dobson has said that Maravich's last words, less than a minute before he died, were "I feel great." An autopsy revealed the cause of death to be a rare congenital defect; he had been born with a missing left coronary artery, a vessel which supplies blood to the muscle fibers of the heart. His right coronary artery was grossly enlarged and had been compensating for the defect." Also, I guess it makes sense that he was a ball hog, since he still holds the record for most career points scored in NCAA men's division I (3,667 total, 44.2 per game), despite no 3-point line and playing only 3 years of varsity because freshmen were ineligible under NCAA rules. But it sounds like LSU wasn't any good at the time, so I guess they needed him to score a lot. Also, to your point of his ball handling ability, again from Wikipedia...In an April 2010 interview, Hall of Fame player John Havlicek said that "the best ball-handler of all time was Pete Maravich". "The interment of John Booth was without trickery or stealth, but no barriers of evidence, no limits of reason ever halted the Great American Myth." - George S. Bryan, The Great American Myth |
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