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HarlemHeat37
05-30-2016, 10:22 PM
:lmao skinny Karl Malone
:lmao biggest choker in the NBA
:lmao waste of generational talent
:lmao wishes he had sidekick talent instead
:lmao terrified of the spotlight
:lmao scared to shoot the ball until the game is out of reach
:lmao needs Westbrook to eat all the blame
:lmao oily, disgusting skin
:lmao blowing a 3-1 lead :lmao
:lmao consecutive playoff runs where Westbrok severely outplays him
:lmao oh crap :lmao
:lmao completely useless without biased officiating
:lmao :lmao :lmao :lmao

http://2.bp.blogspot.com/-mdtubd7ZrVA/UrsJPX4akfI/AAAAAAAABXg/oGn4SI-aGY0/s1600/Screen+Shot+2013-12-25+at+8.21.15+AM.png

baseline bum
05-30-2016, 10:25 PM
He's the Sergio Garcia of the NBA. Real talk Harlem, would you sign the SF version of Aldridge?

HarlemHeat37
05-30-2016, 10:29 PM
^^ No:lol

Durant-Aldridge would be the softest non-White American duo I could think of, tbh..

Clipper Nation
05-30-2016, 10:30 PM
:lol oh crap logging off for another season, never to be seen again

Gummi Clutch
05-30-2016, 10:31 PM
I used to believe in this faggot, but it became clear to me 3 games ago

baseline bum
05-30-2016, 10:31 PM
Is his momma there to hug him in the tunnel again?

da_suns_fan
05-30-2016, 10:33 PM
Good enough to beat the Spurs in 6.

Thread
05-30-2016, 10:34 PM
Good enough to beat the Spurs in 6.

Thank Christ.

HarlemHeat37
05-30-2016, 10:35 PM
Good enough to beat the Spurs in 6.

I'm sure that will be a huge boost for his legacy when he retires:lol

baseline bum
05-30-2016, 10:36 PM
I'm sure that will be a huge boost for his legacy when he retires:lol

:lol

StrengthAndHonor
05-30-2016, 10:37 PM
:lmao skinny Karl Malone
:lmao biggest choker in the NBA
:lmao waste of generational talent
:lmao wishes he had sidekick talent instead
:lmao terrified of the spotlight
:lmao scared to shoot the ball until the game is out of reach
:lmao needs Westbrook to eat all the blame
:lmao oily, disgusting skin

https://media.giphy.com/media/3oAt2ediKZAAXVR5uw/giphy.gif

Splits
05-30-2016, 10:38 PM
:lol semen shielding

Clipper Nation
05-30-2016, 10:43 PM
:lol semen shielding

What happened, tbh? I thought Dominos was going to "explode in the second half" and "take over the game"? :lol

HarlemHeat37
05-30-2016, 10:44 PM
His numbers for the entire playoffs were very mediocre for a superstar player, tbh..consecutive playoff runs where he didn't play like a superstar..

Hopefully he will receive some blame for the first time in his career(excluding Mr. Unreliable, where everybody turned on that reporter and forced him to apologize and rescind the story:lmao)

Splits
05-30-2016, 10:45 PM
What happened, tbh? I thought Dominos was going to "explode in the second half" and "take over the game"? :lol

7 for 21 happened.

4 turnovers in the last 90 seconds of game 6 happened.

Clipper Nation
05-30-2016, 10:46 PM
7 for 21 happened.

4 turnovers in the last 90 seconds of game 6 happened.

Durbeta happened.

StrengthAndHonor
05-30-2016, 10:47 PM
What happened, tbh? I thought Dominos was going to "explode in the second half" and "take over the game"? :lol Kawhi (http://www.spurstalk.com/forums/member.php?u=44283)shitstorm

siraulo23
05-30-2016, 10:48 PM
come to the spurs and get a defensive center tbh :lol

Vokun
05-30-2016, 10:49 PM
Thank Christ.

Yeah really. Spurs would have gotten skullfucked by GSW. OKC's athleticism got it to 7 games

baseline bum
05-30-2016, 10:50 PM
What If This Is OKC’s Last Shot? (http://grantland.com/features/simmons-oklahoma-city-thunder-nba-championship/)
The Thunder may be writing another chapter in the book reminding us that greatness always has an expiration date

by BILL SIMMONS ON MAY 14, 2014
There’s a poignant moment in Jonathan Abrams’s oral history about the 2002 Kings, right after the section covering their gut-wrenching Game 7 defeat, when a Sacramento employee named Devin Blankenship remembers his coworkers consoling one another. They were saying all the right things about losing to the Lakers. It’s just the beginning. This is the start of something bigger. You can’t win the big one until you lose a few tough ones. Their boss overheard and went the other way, wondering aloud, What if that was it? What if that was our shot?

That moment resonated for a simple reason: That WAS their shot. And that WAS it.

The boss wasn’t describing a “shot” as much as a window. If you’re blessed with Michael and Scottie in their mid-twenties, that window should last for a decade, as long as nothing funky happens. If you’re catching C-Webb right as he’s hitting his prime, and you’re surrounding him with quality veterans who connect with his unselfish playing style, maybe that’s four or five guaranteed years. If you’re teaming up Pierce and Garnett and Allen at the tail end of their primes, you’re publicly hoping for five healthy years and secretly praying for three. Every A-list contender has a built-in window, and almost always, you know what it is. When that window slams shut well before you’re ready, you never really get over it.

Will we remember Oklahoma City that way someday? We know that it’s Kevin Durant’s seventh season and his sixth with Russell Westbrook. We know they’re playing for a small-market franchise that actively avoids the luxury tax. We know Durant’s contract expires in 2016, and Westbrook’s deal expires one year later. We know Westbrook endured three knee surgeries in the past 12 months. We know that bad luck comes in all shapes and sizes. We know the West is loaded, and we know LeBron is never going away. We know they easily could have blown the Memphis series, and we know the bumbling officials saved their season Tuesday night.

We overrate youth and potential with sports, movies, TV, music, art and even politics — it’s more enjoyable to imagine what something might become. We envision the Thunder overpowering LeBron’s Heat in Durant’s MVP season because that’s the age-old NBA formula, right? Young guys work their way up, learn a few lessons, suffer some pain, finally overpower the incumbents, battle all comers for the next few years … and then the cycle repeats.

That’s your best-case scenario for the Thunder. The other scenarios aren’t as pretty. Just like we overrate youth and potential, we underrate injury luck, unfortunate breaks, untimely trades, the Disease of More, greed and egos, poor coaching and plain old bad luck. The Thunder could definitely topple San Antonio and Miami next month, but they’re just as likely to not win a single title with Durant and Westbrook. The S.I. Vault, Basketball-Reference.com, dozens of NBA books and thousands of YouTube clips deliver the same message: Things are just as likely to go wrong as right. On paper, OKC should evolve into this generation’s version of the 1990s Bulls: Durant as Jordan, Westbrook as Pippen, and Ibaka as Grant/Rodman. It’s a star-driven league with the least amount of playoff variance in any professional sport. When you have a top-two player, a top-eight player and a top-25 player on one team, you should definitely win a ring.

Unfortunately, you never know when “The Rains of Castamere” will start playing. A similar window opened after Game 7 of the 1962 Finals, when the Lakers came within Frank Selvy’s errant 15-footer of upending Bill Russell’s budding dynasty. That Lakers team employed 27-year-old Elgin Baylor and 23-year-old Jerry West, two of the league’s best five players. (Sound familiar?) Nobody was thinking after the ’62 Finals, What if that was it? But they spent the next two years trying to find a good enough center, then Baylor wrecked his knee during the ’65 playoffs. So much for Elgin and Jerry owning the NBA. They never won a championship together.

Fifteen years later, Bill Walton’s precocious Blazers toppled Philly for the 1977 title, then took a 40-8 record into the ensuing All-Star break looking like Russell’s Celtics reincarnated. On February 13, 1978, Sports Illustrated ran a gushing feature about Portland’s night-to-night brilliance that included Rick Barry admitting, “The Blazers may be the most ideal team ever put together,” and Don Nelson declaring, “They are a team for all time.” Walton’s feet started aching two weeks later. They never won another playoff series with him, an unbelievable turn of events that inspired the greatest sports book ever written (David Halberstam’s The Breaks of the Game).

Every generation has its version of the ’62 Lakers and ’77 Blazers, contenders that fooled us into thinking their window would last longer than it did. The ’86 Rockets, ’88 Mavericks and ’96 Sonics were ravaged by drugs, injuries and/or money. An alpha-dog battle submarined the Shaq-Penny dynasty in Orlando and, later, a possible seven-title run for Shaq and Kobe in Los Angeles. Derrick Rose, C-Webb and James Silas suffered untimely knee injuries that ruined legitimate title windows for the Bulls, Kings and Spurs. Steve Nash’s critically acclaimed Suns teams kept falling short in increasingly unfair ways.

That window can be a cruel beast. For whatever reason, Dirk and Nash won three MVPs after breaking up, but they never made the Finals together. Yao and T-Mac never won a playoff series together. An inconceivable Wilt-Elgin-West trio lost two straight Game 7s in the Finals. LeBron spent seven seasons in Cleveland without ever winning a Finals game. Ewing and Barkley never won titles. Four unstoppable-at-the-time duos — Hakeem and Ralph, Penny and Shaq, GP and Kemp, and Malone and Stockton — somehow finished with a combined 8-20 Finals record. Can we really say, with any certainty whatsoever, that “Those guys are gonna be chasing championships and competing for years to come”?

You’re more likely to bemoan the opportunities that slipped away. My father and I talk about the Celtics blowing the 2010 title waaaaaaaay more than we talk about the Celtics winning in 2008. How does that make sense? We had a three-year window with those guys, minimum, and the over/under for titles was 1½. We went under. And we went under because Perkins got injured in Game 6, because we didn’t put them away in the third quarter, because Nate Robinson should have played more, because Rasheed was too winded to play 35 minutes in Game 7, because we didn’t get a freaking call in the entire fourth quarter, because Gasol threw Rondo out of bounds on the biggest rebound of the game … I mean, there’s a 100 percent chance that I’m never getting over that game. And neither will my father.

We thought we were in the minority … until Doc Rivers told me about eating dinner with former assistant Tom Thibodeau last summer. For whatever reason, they spent an hour talking about Game 7. They rehashed everything — every decision, every play, every bad break, everything. They nearly broke Kobe and stole the title that year. Came within a couple of minutes, actually. They couldn’t get over it. They just sat there eating and drinking and making each other miserable. Only later did Doc realize that the 2008 Finals never came up.

So what do you say when those opportunities haven’t slipped away yet, but you’re probably more likely to see that happen than anything else? Am I a sour pessimist for bringing this up? When should you start feeling real anxiety over something as simple as “We might have Durant and Westbrook for their entire careers … how could we NOT win a couple of titles?”

Watching the Thunder’s roller coaster ride these first two rounds — as they vacillate between breathtaking basketball and unconscionably stilted basketball, sometimes in the same game — has frustrated even non-OKC fans. To fend off the scrappy Grizzlies, they needed a career night from Reggie Jackson in Game 4, a poorly timed “Mr. Unreliable” headline after Game 5, a timely Mike Conley injury and a controversial Z-Bo punch. They knocked off Memphis in Game 7, then the Clippers ran them out of their own building in Game 1. At that point, the Thunder were 2-3 at home in the playoffs. What the hell was happening?

When Durant’s beautiful MVP speech seemingly inspired their best basketball in Game 2 and Game 3, as well as the first three quarters of Game 4, that seemed like something of a “Voilą!” moment. That speech was the catalyst! Move over, William Wallace, there’s a new sheriff in town! The Thunder were finally tapping into their considerable athletic gifts, much like the Bulls figuring it out in the 1991 playoffs and shifting into All-Madden mode. Westbrook was playing as unselfishly as ever. Durant was locked in. This was happening.

And then the last quarter happened. If you want to watch OKC at its worst, just watch the last nine minutes of Game 4: one-on-one offense, overdribbling, wrong lineups, bad strategy, no composure, no crunch-time savviness and 27-foot heaves. This was like watching Rick Adelman’s star-crossed Portland teams all over again. That unsettled malaise carried over to the first 47 minutes of Game 5, with their defense floundering and Durant inexplicably turning into a right-handed Josh Smith. Everything flipped again in the last 50 seconds, thanks to Durant’s monster 3, two utterly ridiculous calls, three egregious Chris Paul mistakes, and Westbrook draining three of the ballsiest free throws I can remember.

I left that game thinking two things …

How can anyone believe in this Thunder team?

And how can anyone NOT believe in this Thunder team?

It’s a great question. And it’s a great question.

We always hear about the “journey” with NBA champions. Wilt couldn’t get past Russell until 1967, when he regrouped and unleashed the best Russell imitation that’s ever been done. West couldn’t shed that “Greatest Player Who Never Won” label until the magical ’72 season. Julius never climbed the mountain in Philly until a man named Moses showed up. Jordan didn’t become an NBA champ until Scottie matured into a top-five player. Shaq and Kobe kept belly flopping until their unforgettable Game 7 comeback against the 2000 Blazers. The Heat kept caving in 2011 and 2012 until Game 6 against Boston, when LeBron finally said, “Out of my way, this is MY team.”

The Thunder’s “journey” scenario looks so obvious. They were the Up-and-Coming Young Guys in 2010 and 2011, then barged into the 2012 Finals before losing to Miami. With their best four players younger than 25, they seemed like the safest bet for a multi-title dynasty since the 1995 Magic. (Zero titles for them, by the way.) Just four months later, they stunned the basketball world by dealing James Harden to Houston for financial reasons; even worse, they didn’t obtain a guaranteed blue-chipper in return. Cue up the “journey” music. Actually, let’s just cue up Journey.



If Durant and Westbrook never win Oklahoma City a title, the Harden trade will forever be the first reason mentioned. We don’t need to rehash the gory details (I already did it here and here), other than to point out that — less than two years later — it’s clear that the Thunder never anticipated this particular post-lockout world. These days, the salary cap and luxury tax thresholds keep climbing, and the value of the league’s next media rights deal (still unsigned) is soaring to the point that afterthought franchises like the lowly Bucks are suddenly worth $550 million. The Thunder EASILY could have afforded Durant, Ibaka, Westbrook and Harden these next two seasons. Right now, they have Steven Adams and the 21st pick of next month’s draft to show for a first-team All-NBA guard. Can you ever recover from that?

After Westbrook’s untimely knee injury ruined their 2013 playoff chances, you could hear the Thunder’s window creaking for the first time. A perturbed Durant raised his offensive game to ungodly levels, realizing his destiny as some sort of unthinkable cross between Dirk Nowitzki, George Gervin, Tracy McGrady and Plastic Man (and I don’t mean Stacey Augmon) … you know, with just a hint of Magic Johnson’s passing sprinkled in because this wasn’t ridiculous enough. In a 16-week stretch from Christmas Day through Game 82 in April, KD threw up a 34-7-6 every night with 51-38-87% shooting splits. Even better, he started carrying himself like a Liam Neeson character — unfriendly, cold-blooded, blessed with a specific set of skills unique to him and only him.

As for Westbrook, it took 11 months and three surgeries before he finally looked like Force Of Nature Westbrook again. He’ll always be polarizing — the point guard who shoots 20-plus times a game, the creator who creates mostly for himself, the leader who rarely makes teammates better, the ultimate 90/10 guy, the running mate who refuses to accept that he’s a running mate. So what if OKC feeds off his fearlessness and unwavering intensity? So what if he’s an absolutely devastating athlete, one of maybe nine guys in basketball history blessed with the gifts to casually pick Mike Conley’s pocket DOWN TWO WITH SIX SECONDS TO GO IN A MUST-WIN PLAYOFF GAME? So what if he’s never had an above-average coach, dating back to college (and by the way, neither has Durant)? So what if the worst thing you could ever say about him is, “He’s wildly overcompetitive”?

I was fortunate enough to watch Jordan and Pippen in person during their collective apex, when they were ripping through overmatched teams like varsity studs whupping on the JV. Only two other pairings — LeBron and Wade during those first two years, and Westbrook and Durant right now — made me feel that way, as if their inherent athletic advantages were almost unfair. Is it frustrating that Westbrook’s shot selection occasionally lowers Durant’s offensive ceiling, that Westbrook keeps forgetting that he should be Pippen in their relationship? Of course. But if you’ve ever caught them in person, during one of those electric games when they’re unleashing athletic holy hell with Ibaka, it’s absolutely unforgettable.

That doesn’t stop the general public from picking them apart. Following the NBA has become a 24/7 thing thanks to social media, YouTube, Instagram and everything else; we never leave these guys alone. They’re constantly accessible. They’re constantly aware of what we’re saying. Shaq and Kobe never would have survived life together in 2014 — they would have imploded well before that third title. Scottie Pippen never would have survived the Migraine Game in 1990 or the Self-Benching in 1994; he would have been skewered and reskewered and rereskewered, and eventually they would have traded him before the second three-peat finished.

That’s why there wasn’t a snippier, angrier, more hostile contender than OKC during the regular season. They hated hearing about Harden, hated falling short, hated the Westbrook microscope, hated the constant scrutiny. Everything about them oozed the words “Leave us alone, let us play basketball.” When Jackson saved Game 4 in Memphis, Durant and Westbrook bear-hugged him for unusually long times. You could feel the relief pouring out of them. This wasn’t just about escaping a threatening playoff moment. It was bigger than that.

And I didn’t totally understand until Durant’s incredible MVP speech, which was simply one of the greatest off-the-floor moments in NBA history.

For 26 solid minutes, he talked candidly about his life, his family, his teammates, his coaches and even his front office. He remembered every obstacle he overcame, every moment that mattered, everyone who helped him along the way. He didn’t read from anything. It was unclear how much he even prepared. He broke down a number of times, and by the end, his face was covered in tears — some dried, some fresh, all of them real. Twenty-six minutes. Twenty-six! He came off so genuinely, so thoughtfully, so effortlessly … I mean, can you even compare it to anything? Could even the great Bill Russell have pulled this off?

After the speech, everyone focused on Durant’s wonderful words about his mother, and rightfully so — that section alone could have been a pantheon sports speech. But I couldn’t get over how graciously Durant treated his teammates. They were sitting behind him like little kids, fighting to keep their composure as he mentioned them one at a time. He explained how each player resonated with him, sprinkling each story with a personal touch and smartly saving his buddy Westbrook for last.

“I know you guys think I forgot Russ,” he joked as everyone laughed nervously. “I could speak all night about Russell. An emotional guy who would run through a wall for me. I don’t take it for granted. There’s days where I just want to tackle you and tell you to snap out of it sometimes. I know there’s days you want to do the same thing with me. I love you, man. I love you.”

Stop there. No way Jordan would ever describe Pippen that way. No way LeBron describes Wade that way. No way Kobe describes ANYONE that way. Durant’s best quality was always Duncan’s best quality — he doesn’t care how his team wins, just that they do. He’s one of the best teammates ever. And just with those eight sentences, he squashed even the most remote possibility of an Avon-Stringer ending. But Durant wasn’t close to being done yet.

“A lot of people put unfair criticism on you as a player,” Durant said, his voice quavering. “And I’m the first to have your back, man, through it all. Just stay the person you are, man. Everyone loves you here. I love you. I thank you so much, man. You made me better. Your work ethic — I always wanted to compete with you, I always wanted to pull up in the parking lot of the arena or the practice facility, and if you beat me there I was always upset. I always wanted to outwork you. And you set the bar, you set the tone. Thank you so much, man. Thank you. You got a big piece of this [trophy]. You’re an MVP-caliber player and it’s a blessing to play with you.”

So much for trading Russell Westbrook. I have been following sports for something like 40 years — I can’t remember a teammate sticking up for another teammate better than that. Not ever. The point was made. Russ is my brother. We are in this together for better and worse. And just like that, we went from thinking They’re trading Westbrook if they don’t win the title soon to They’re never, ever, EVER trading Westbrook. Kevin Durant flipped the script on the “journey,” just like that, in less than 50 seconds. Either KD sticks around like Duncan stuck around in San Antonio, or he’s a greater actor than Daniel Day-Lewis. I’m betting on the former. You can’t fake that stuff. You just can’t.

And you know what else? Even if they drive us bonkers sometimes, Durant and Westbrook might be imperfectly perfect for each other. You saw why last night, when a typically fearless Westbrook saved OKC from Durant’s abominable shooting night — his own version of LeBron’s perplexing Game 5 against Boston in 2010, a stink bomb that could have haunted him forever. Would LeBron have ever dumped Cleveland if he had Westbrook there? And why would Durant leave OKC when he has Westbrook there?

You could always find them a better coach, someone who would do things like “run an actual offense with plays and stuff” and “figure out on the fly how to get Durant the ball when he’s being defended by someone who’s 10 inches shorter.” And eventually, you could find them a real point guard, someone who allows both guys to play off the ball. But you could never replace what they have. It’s the rarest of basketball partnerships — two alpha dogs coexisting and complementing each other (for the most part, anyway), with their friendship transcending every conceivable landmine. Why would you break THAT up? Keep that window pried open, baby. For as long as you can.

So was last night’s remarkable comeback something of a watershed moment for the Durant-Westbrook “journey”? Can they extend their window for 10 years, or 12, or maybe even 15? Or will some Thunder employee be wondering What if that was it? What if that was our shot? next month and end up looking like Nostradamus? I don’t know, I don’t know, and I don’t know. That’s the thing about the NBA: You NEVER know. Just remember to keep enjoying the ride. Even when it’s a roller coaster.

Thread
05-30-2016, 10:51 PM
Yeah really. Spurs would have gotten skullfucked by GSW. OKC's athleticism got it to 7 games

If that helps you sleep at nite, knock yourself out.

You fucked up, dad. You let OKC Bogart ya, take your cookie, peek under your kimono, slap your cocksucker. Now look at ya:::totally piss pot.

spursistan
05-30-2016, 10:52 PM
2910258020

Captivus
05-30-2016, 10:54 PM
:lmao oily, disgusting skin


:lmao

http://static2.fjcdn.com/thumbnails/comments/Mokeyking+rolled+a+random+image+posted+in+comment+ 503+at+_6c4f3b6ac2ec49ac91502a1795d62baf.gif

RD2191
05-30-2016, 10:54 PM
2910258020
Lmao if real

Killakobe81
05-30-2016, 10:57 PM
:lmao skinny Karl Malone
:lmao biggest choker in the NBA
:lmao waste of generational talent
:lmao wishes he had sidekick talent instead
:lmao terrified of the spotlight
:lmao scared to shoot the ball until the game is out of reach
:lmao needs Westbrook to eat all the blame
:lmao oily, disgusting skin
:lmao blowing a 3-1 lead :lmao
:lmao consecutive playoff runs where Westbrok severely outplays him
:lmao oh crap :lmao
:lmao completely useless without biased officiating
:lmao :lmao :lmao :lmao

http://2.bp.blogspot.com/-mdtubd7ZrVA/UrsJPX4akfI/AAAAAAAABXg/oGn4SI-aGY0/s1600/Screen+Shot+2013-12-25+at+8.21.15+AM.png

People will blame Westbrook ...even some of the same posters that insist he is still the best player on okc

Arcadian
05-30-2016, 11:04 PM
Yeah, but still. Leonard + Durant + Aldridge = championship for the Spurs.

And Westbrick choked too.

HarlemHeat37
05-30-2016, 11:06 PM
Yeah, but still. Leonard + Durant + Aldridge = championship for the Spurs.

And Westbrick choked too.

:lol

Clipper Nation
05-30-2016, 11:07 PM
Yeah, but still. Leonard + Durant + Aldridge = championship for the Spurs.

And Westbrick choked too.
Durbeta and LaMarsha could play with LeBron and ten other clones of LeBron and still not sniff a ring.

Arcadian
05-30-2016, 11:12 PM
:lol

That's just too much talent for anyone else to overcome.

HarlemHeat37
05-30-2016, 11:17 PM
That's just too much talent for anyone else to overcome.

Until all 3 of them are afraid to shoot in key moments and make Danny Green run the offense:lol

Splits
05-30-2016, 11:18 PM
737489951420358656

Jeebus

Cry Havoc
05-30-2016, 11:20 PM
His numbers for the entire playoffs were very mediocre for a superstar player, tbh..consecutive playoff runs where he didn't play like a superstar..

Hopefully he will receive some blame for the first time in his career(excluding Mr. Unreliable, where everybody turned on that reporter and forced him to apologize and rescind the story:lmao)

Meanwhile, westbrook <3 goes 7-21 in the deciding game of the wcf and there's Nary a peep from HH about what a shitbox Russell has been for the past 3 games.

Arcadian
05-30-2016, 11:21 PM
Until all 3 of them are afraid to shoot in key moments and make Danny Green run the offense:lol

Leonard can be the guy. Have you lost faith?

Jzone
05-30-2016, 11:22 PM
2910258020

Always been a beta :lol

HarlemHeat37
05-30-2016, 11:23 PM
Leonard can be the guy. Have you lost faith?

I love Kawhi and I still believe in him, but it's frustrating how much he defers in key stretches..

oh crap
05-30-2016, 11:25 PM
:rolleyes OP was on a motherfucking milk carton when they were up 3-1. team choked, plain and simple. it is what it is and they are who I thought they were.

Brazil
05-31-2016, 10:47 AM
Until all 3 of them are afraid to shoot in key moments and make Danny Green run the offense:lol

:lol well at least Parker is not afraid to shoot in key moments

Clipper Nation
05-31-2016, 10:58 AM
:lol well at least Parker is not afraid to shoot in key moments
Too bad, he should be:

http://s5.postimg.org/rcwjg880n/RS_PO_BPM_differentials_worst.png

spurraider21
05-31-2016, 11:52 AM
Meanwhile, westbrook <3 goes 7-21 in the deciding game of the wcf and there's Nary a peep from HH about what a shitbox Russell has been for the past 3 games.
It's because RW is lighter skinned, tbh

HarlemHeat37
05-31-2016, 12:00 PM
2016 playoffs numbers:

Westbrook- 26 PPG, 51.5 TS%, 11 APG-4.3 TPG(2.6), 6.9 RPG at the PG position, .210 WS/48, 11.7 BPM(:wow), 2.3 VORP, 27 PER
Dominos- 28.4 PPG, 54.2 TS%, 3.3 APG vs. 3.6 TPG:lmao:lmao, 7.1 RPG as part-time PF:lol, .130 WS/48:lmao, 1.8 BPM:lmao:lmao, 0.7 VORP:lmao, 20.4 PER :lmao:lmao

Those are atrocious numbers for a "superstar" player..it has become a trend in the playoffs, he hasn't had a decent run since 2012:lol..if Lebron was putting up numbers like that, he would be getting obliterated by the media and casual fans..

-21-
05-31-2016, 12:07 PM
Until all 3 of them are afraid to shoot in key moments and make Danny Green run the offense:lol

Oh jeez, I can already see it... :lol We'd have to depend on Tony to close games again.

Cry Havoc
05-31-2016, 12:27 PM
2016 playoffs numbers:

Westbrook- 26 PPG, 51.5 TS%, 11 APG-4.3 TPG(2.6), 6.9 RPG at the PG position, .210 WS/48, 11.7 BPM(:wow), 2.3 VORP, 27 PER
Dominos- 28.4 PPG, 54.2 TS%, 3.3 APG vs. 3.6 TPG:lmao:lmao, 7.1 RPG as part-time PF:lol, .130 WS/48:lmao, 1.8 BPM:lmao:lmao, 0.7 VORP:lmao, 20.4 PER :lmao:lmao

Those are atrocious numbers for a "superstar" player..it has become a trend in the playoffs, he hasn't had a decent run since 2012:lol..if Lebron was putting up numbers like that, he would be getting obliterated by the media and casual fans..

I see you left out eFG%. Not surprising considering WB racked up a .436 over the WCF. Good for NINTH on the team. :wow :wow :lmao :lmao :lmao :lmao

One of the 5 best players in the world, and the only Thunder players who shot worse than Russ are Waiters, Payne, and Kyle fucking Singler. :lol

Clipper Nation
05-31-2016, 12:34 PM
2016 playoffs numbers:

Westbrook- 26 PPG, 51.5 TS%, 11 APG-4.3 TPG(2.6), 6.9 RPG at the PG position, .210 WS/48, 11.7 BPM(:wow), 2.3 VORP, 27 PER
Dominos- 28.4 PPG, 54.2 TS%, 3.3 APG vs. 3.6 TPG:lmao:lmao, 7.1 RPG as part-time PF:lol, .130 WS/48:lmao, 1.8 BPM:lmao:lmao, 0.7 VORP:lmao, 20.4 PER :lmao:lmao

Those are atrocious numbers for a "superstar" player..it has become a trend in the playoffs, he hasn't had a decent run since 2012:lol..if Lebron was putting up numbers like that, he would be getting obliterated by the media and casual fans..
Alphabrook :worthy:

TheGreatYacht
05-31-2016, 05:40 PM
Dominos "the biggest choker in the NBA" aka "skinny Karl Malone" dropping 14 4th quarter points in Kahwi the retard's grill :lmao

14

skut_farkus
05-31-2016, 10:54 PM
That's just too much talent for anyone else to overcome.

Terrence jones is shaking at the scenario tbh

dg7md
06-01-2016, 12:35 AM
He needs to be in another system. It's apparent that the mental lapses that OKC displays is the reason for their lack of championship pedigree. It's almost cancerous.

Denying Durant's talent is stupid... he's still a top 5 player in the league and you'd be crazy to not want him to sign with us in FA.

midnightpulp
06-01-2016, 12:51 AM
I agree with HH that Westbrook had a phenomenal playoff run, and I was ready to crown him like everyone else, but Westbrook is just as shaky in the clutch as Durant and other known chokers like Karl Malone, Charles Barkley, and Chris Paul.

Like I said in another thread, Westbrook isn't a stratosphere player for that reason. He's makes laughably stupid decisions in crunch time.

Gummi Clutch
06-01-2016, 01:25 AM
2016 playoffs numbers:

Westbrook- 26 PPG, 51.5 TS%, 11 APG-4.3 TPG(2.6), 6.9 RPG at the PG position, .210 WS/48, 11.7 BPM(:wow), 2.3 VORP, 27 PER
Dominos- 28.4 PPG, 54.2 TS%, 3.3 APG vs. 3.6 TPG:lmao:lmao, 7.1 RPG as part-time PF:lol, .130 WS/48:lmao, 1.8 BPM:lmao:lmao, 0.7 VORP:lmao, 20.4 PER :lmao:lmao

Those are atrocious numbers for a "superstar" player..it has become a trend in the playoffs, he hasn't had a decent run since 2012:lol..if Lebron was putting up numbers like that, he would be getting obliterated by the media and casual fans..
I think more emojis and it'll sound less forced. Narutoluvva shame level.

Kawhitstorm
06-01-2016, 01:48 AM
What If This Is OKC’s Last Shot? (http://grantland.com/features/simmons-oklahoma-city-thunder-nba-championship/)

Meth City welcoming its revered champions:

737766464267026432

Kawhitstorm
06-01-2016, 02:08 AM
Dominos "the biggest choker in the NBA" aka "skinny Karl Malone" dropping 14 4th quarter points in Kahwi the retard's grill :lmao

14

http://www.matevzrojc.com/wp-content/uploads/2012/06/durant-james-4th-quarter.png

Meanwhile, WestBrick tormenting the MVP after being unleashed from the shackles of Kawhi:

732405194961510401

:sleep

Kawhitstorm
06-01-2016, 02:14 AM
2016 playoffs numbers:

Westbrook- 26 PPG, 51.5 TS%, 11 APG-4.3 TPG(2.6), 6.9 RPG at the PG position, .210 WS/48, 11.7 BPM(:wow), 2.3 VORP, 27 PER
Dominos- 28.4 PPG, 54.2 TS%, 3.3 APG vs. 3.6 TPG:lmao:lmao, 7.1 RPG as part-time PF:lol, .130 WS/48:lmao, 1.8 BPM:lmao:lmao, 0.7 VORP:lmao, 20.4 PER :lmao:lmao



Oklahoma City Thunder http://i.cdn.turner.com/nba/nba/.element/img/2.0/sect/gameinfo/teamlogos/OKC.gif
108


Excitement
8.2 [241]


MVP
Steven Adams (OKC): +18.0%


Golden State Warriors http://i.cdn.turner.com/nba/nba/.element/img/2.0/sect/gameinfo/teamlogos/GSW.gif
102


Comeback
7.7 [69]


LVP
Kevin Durant (OKC): -30.3%






Oklahoma City Thunder http://i.cdn.turner.com/nba/nba/.element/img/2.0/sect/gameinfo/teamlogos/OKC.gif
91


Excitement
3.8 [1079]


MVP
Stephen Curry (GSW): +21.1%


Golden State Warriors http://i.cdn.turner.com/nba/nba/.element/img/2.0/sect/gameinfo/teamlogos/GSW.gif
118


Comeback
1.1 [993]


LVP
Russell Westbrook (OKC): -7.8%





Golden State Warriors http://i.cdn.turner.com/nba/nba/.element/img/2.0/sect/gameinfo/teamlogos/GSW.gif
105


Excitement
2.8 [1231]


MVP
Kevin Durant (OKC): +15.5%


Oklahoma City Thunder http://i.cdn.turner.com/nba/nba/.element/img/2.0/sect/gameinfo/teamlogos/OKC.gif
133


Comeback
1.1 [1030]


LVP
Draymond Green (GSW): -12.1%





Golden State Warriors http://i.cdn.turner.com/nba/nba/.element/img/2.0/sect/gameinfo/teamlogos/GSW.gif
94


Excitement
4.7 [885]


MVP
Klay Thompson (GSW): +16.8%


Oklahoma City Thunder http://i.cdn.turner.com/nba/nba/.element/img/2.0/sect/gameinfo/teamlogos/OKC.gif
118


Comeback
1.1 [1002]


LVP
Stephen Curry (GSW): -19.8%





Oklahoma City Thunder http://i.cdn.turner.com/nba/nba/.element/img/2.0/sect/gameinfo/teamlogos/OKC.gif
111


Excitement
6.3 [569]


MVP
Marreese Speights (GSW): +12.2%


Golden State Warriors http://i.cdn.turner.com/nba/nba/.element/img/2.0/sect/gameinfo/teamlogos/GSW.gif
120


Comeback
1.1 [945]


LVP
Russell Westbrook (OKC): -14.1%





Golden State Warriors http://i.cdn.turner.com/nba/nba/.element/img/2.0/sect/gameinfo/teamlogos/GSW.gif
108


Excitement
9.2 [121]


MVP
Klay Thompson (GSW): +49.8%


Oklahoma City Thunder http://i.cdn.turner.com/nba/nba/.element/img/2.0/sect/gameinfo/teamlogos/OKC.gif
101


Comeback
7.4 [102]


LVP
Russell Westbrook (OKC): -28.8%





Oklahoma City Thunder http://i.cdn.turner.com/nba/nba/.element/img/2.0/sect/gameinfo/teamlogos/OKC.gif
88


Excitement
6.0 [627]


MVP
Stephen Curry (GSW): +29.8%


Golden State Warriors http://i.cdn.turner.com/nba/nba/.element/img/2.0/sect/gameinfo/teamlogos/GSW.gif
96


Comeback
4.2 [504]


LVP
Andre Roberson (OKC): -11.8%

Sean Cagney
06-01-2016, 02:18 AM
If that helps you sleep at nite, knock yourself out.

You fucked up, dad. You let OKC Bogart ya, take your cookie, peek under your kimono, slap your cocksucker. Now look at ya:::totally piss pot.

And you won 17 games were put in the shitty lottery to draft another overrated bum and continue on the streak of missed playoffs..... TBH.

Kawhitstorm
06-01-2016, 02:23 AM
He's the Sergio Garcia of the NBA. Real talk Harlem, would you sign the SF version of Aldridge?

737705462951346177

737664206753783808



https://s-media-cache-ak0.pinimg.com/736x/e9/89/55/e989550b757748e0ff783623b4f9b187.jpg

http://image.oregonlive.com/home/olive-media/width960/img/oregonian/photo/2015/07/04/-b3619b1647775fe5.jpg

Thread
06-01-2016, 03:04 AM
And you won 17 games were put in the shitty lottery to draft another overrated bum and continue on the streak of missed playoffs..... TBH.

You let OKC punk ya. Lashing out at me & my failures won't change that.

Grow up.

midnightpulp
06-01-2016, 03:32 AM
You let OKC punk ya. Lashing out at me & my failures won't change that.

Grow up.

But, it was completely without merit. Like that .4 business. If you can't close the deal, those moments are gone in the wind.

Sean Cagney
06-01-2016, 03:42 AM
You let OKC punk ya. Lashing out at me & my failures won't change that.

Grow up.
SIR you let the league PUNK YA.. Not one team! The league CUB, in Kobe's burial season............. Kobe hit 60 on 50 but rode out a loser on a lottery team :hat

Thread
06-01-2016, 07:03 AM
But, it was completely without merit. Like that .4 business. If you can't close the deal, those moments are gone in the wind.

That's your end of it.

My end? They didn't sell your shit.

Thread
06-01-2016, 07:04 AM
SIR you let the league PUNK YA.. Not one team! The league CUB, in Kobe's burial season............. Kobe hit 60 on 50 but rode out a loser on a lottery team :hat

Just more bitterness because you missed the bus.

They didn't sell your shit.

140
06-01-2016, 09:19 AM
Yeah, but still. Leonard + Durant + Aldridge = championship for the Spurs.

With Manu and Duncan possibly retiring, Porker salivates at the thought of that team tbh :lol

Brazil
06-01-2016, 09:57 AM
2016 playoffs numbers:

Westbrook- 26 PPG, 51.5 TS%, 11 APG-4.3 TPG(2.6), 6.9 RPG at the PG position, .210 WS/48, 11.7 BPM(:wow), 2.3 VORP, 27 PER
Dominos- 28.4 PPG, 54.2 TS%, 3.3 APG vs. 3.6 TPG:lmao:lmao, 7.1 RPG as part-time PF:lol, .130 WS/48:lmao, 1.8 BPM:lmao:lmao, 0.7 VORP:lmao, 20.4 PER :lmao:lmao

Those are atrocious numbers for a "superstar" player..it has become a trend in the playoffs, he hasn't had a decent run since 2012:lol..if Lebron was putting up numbers like that, he would be getting obliterated by the media and casual fans..

thought you were discussing career numbers tbh

Clipper Nation
06-01-2016, 11:21 AM
Meth City welcoming its revered champions:

737766464267026432
Which one of them is da_suns_fan?

offset formation
06-01-2016, 11:32 AM
Which one of them is da_suns_fan (http://www.spurstalk.com/forums/member.php?u=10213)?

Thread too?

HarlemHeat37
07-04-2016, 12:00 PM
:lmao gotta get these out of the way before he wins his first title, tbh..