NBA season 2019/20
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@barbarian said in NBA season 2019/20:
Watching a bit of the 76ers lately, who seem to be doing just fine without Embiid. Simmons has really stepped up, and Horford is clearly relishing the more prominent role
Zion Williamson already more 3-pointers in his career than Ben Simmons
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@mariner4life said in NBA season 2019/20:
@barbarian said in NBA season 2019/20:
Watching a bit of the 76ers lately, who seem to be doing just fine without Embiid. Simmons has really stepped up, and Horford is clearly relishing the more prominent role
Zion Williamson already more 3-pointers in his career than Ben Simmons
Admittedly not difficult. I think Dwight Howard has more 3s than Ben
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Another razbra comment that has not aged well.
All the other Pels looked like they were worried about their minutes and played hero ball because Zion was finally here.
If he played 18min a game and averaged 22/7/5 he’d win the rookie of the year from Ja. Happy to be wrong about him. What a player.
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Kobe's career in numbers:
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I'm genuinely upset about this. I don't draw inspiration from many people. He was one. Not just for his basketball ability but more so for his work ethic, mindset, early success outside of basketball and his dedication to his family.
I watched lots of his interviews one thing I remember is him talking about how he would helicopter back and forward to training so he could drop off and pick up his kids!
RIP #manbamentality
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@Magpie_in_aus I’m a big Kobe fan and thought his midrange post up game was what made him so dominant (like MJ).
Sad news for all affected.
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Had a day to think about this.
Horrible tragedy.
Focussing just on Kobe for the minute. He was a hell of basketball player. One of the top 3 modern basketball players. Along with MJ and Lebron. Top 10 all time IMO and some will say top 3 all time. Absolute pro. Mean streaked. Ball hog. Fearless. Champion.
His legacy is set in stone and he was obviously an inspiration to many. I’m not going to dwell too much on the most controversial aspect of his career but I will say this. Second chances are not granted to everyone and sometimes those who do not deserve them, get them. He was, by his own admission someone who perhaps was not worthy of a second chance but he got one. He didn’t waste it. He became a great on the court and started to really blossom as a businessman and positive mentor off it. His production company was making big moves, Dear Basketball won him an Oscar and his Detail series with Daniel Cormier was excellent.
I’m sad because my son came in this morning upset that someone he idolised was gone. I was never a Kobe guy. I loved Jordan and hated the the Lakers. But I know what his impact on the sport was. I know I have made multiple shot attempts at my work bin. Saying “Kobe” as I missed with rolled up pieces of paper. I know he was loved by millions and the grief is mostly real. Tons of attention seeking posts for likes etc. Some classless posts about the controversy. But mostly it’s shock, disbelief and real sadness. I learned to like him in these last few years. He had an old school mentality, the Achilles tear free throws are something Buck Shelford would be proud of. His “soft” gif is a personal favourite to use on group messenger when a mate is being, well, soft.
Watching Lebron on the tarmac today, not knowing he was being filmed and clearly genuinely distraught was hard to watch.
The saddest thing in all of this though is that through his daughters basketball we got to see a softer side to him. Watching him go over game strategies with her court side and seeing him light up when she got it was brilliant. That moment, when your child gets it, is something we all hope to experience. And Ironically it was that thing, that shared love for a silly ball that led to their untimely passing. life is so unfair sometimes.
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I was never a lakers fan but always loved his competitive streak. Over the last 12-18 months have watched so many of his interviews etc. Enjoyed his interview with Patrick David Bet
Also his podcast with lewis howes was good.
I watched about 3 hours of ESPN 2 this morning. Some amazing raw stories of all the stuff you never here all the other people he was constantly checking on/keeping in touch with/ giving up time for.
As someone who is chasing their own entrepreneurial dreams and loves basketball, he was someone I looked up to (more off the court/mindset wise)
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@raznomore Nice post Raz. Personally, I wasn't his biggest fan, and I wouldn't have him in a top 10, let alone a top 3, but I guess it's not the time for that debate. Certainly nobody can doubt the work ethic or competitiveness of the guy. The FT's you mention were all-time, and he has had some huge moments on the biggest stage.
Just a shitty thing to happen to one of the greats, and a tragedy for his daughter and their surviving family.
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Sounds like it might have been pilot error and adverse weather conditions....
Los Angeles Police Department spokesman Josh Rubenstein said the department's Air Support Division grounded its helicopters Sunday morning due to foggy conditions and didn't fly until later in the afternoon.
"The weather situation did not meet our minimum standards for flying," Rubenstein said, adding that the fog "was enough that we were not flying."
LAPD's flight minimums are 2 miles of visibility and an 800-foot cloud ceiling, he said. The department typically flies two helicopters when conditions allow, one in the San Fernando Valley and one in the L.A. basin, he said.
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@canefan said in NBA season 2019/20:
Sounds like it might have been pilot error and adverse weather conditions....
Were the reports of the "engine sputtering" false? The S76 is a twin so it shouldn't have mattered, but there could have been some other failure that the witnesses heard.
Can only assume the pilot was instrument rated and therefor should have been able to manage flying in fog O.K. unless he had a failure. There will be several contributing factors, there nearly always are. Blaming the pilot is just the usual first reaction, and an easy one one that is often incorrect when the report comes out but nobody is paying attention anymore (unless you are an aviation nerd who reads them). An experienced pilot is unlikely to lose control or fly into a hill, even in zero visibility with radar assistance, ground proximity warning, etc.
4000fpm is extreme descent before impact. It is either an inexplicable loss of control by the pilot, or a mechanical failure. Some other inconsistencies in that report as well - he was below the level at which he could be picked up by radar and yet he was getting guidance from ATC. How?
I can only guess, but a police helicopter isn't much use unless they can see, so that probably isn't a safety issue but a practical one to have those minimums.
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I liked Kobe more after his career more than during his career.
He's fucking smart, very articulate, and very passionate. And it made him great to hear speak. And yes, the basketball relationship with is daughter is one of the sweetest things you will ever see.
It's really weird to realise he's gone.