I was a Jazz fan. :nerd
Printable View
I was a Jazz fan. :nerd
:frying:Quote:
Originally Posted by Kori Ellis
Quote:
Originally Posted by GrandeDavid
True That.
Was 8, playing with mt G.I. Joes and Transformers. And I was way more into the Stros then because of my dad.
I was a senior in high school. Game 7 was on the same day as the local all-star football game for high school seniors. I was in a lockerroom at Trinity University with the rest of my West San Antonio teammates getting ready for the game, when someone mentioned that there was a TV showing the game in the coaches' office. Players from the East and West teams crowded into that office to catch a glimpse of that tiny TV and root for the Spurs. As the game progressed you'd see guys from the East team giving high fives to players from the West team and things like that. Then we went out and beat each other up for 3 hours.
My disappointment about the Spurs loss was mitigated late in the 4th Quarter of the football game when Nick Ramirez of McCollum H.S., having been given great time to throw by the offensive line, threw a long touchdown pass to Dyron Brodbeck of Taft H.S. to win the game for my team. I have now officially lived in the past.
I had attended Games 3 and 6 of that Portland series and remember thinking, like so many others, that the setback in Portland in Game 7 was minor, that the Spurs very young starters (2 rookies and 2 second year players) would dominate the West for a long time and Spurs fans would see Game 7 as a minor setback that was necessary to achieving domination. Yeah, not so much.
I was only eight. My dad probably watched.
Most SPURS fans that I know became fans because of DUNCAN and when the SPURS started winning. That is totally normal thought. I became a LAKER fan because of MAGIC, even thought my dad liked the LAKERS since they moved to our home town of LA.
The hard part as a Fan is to stay True to your team (Winning or Losing). I think SA SPURS Fans have that quality, I really admire that.
STAY TRUE!!!
Amen. Its easy to be a fan of a winner....it takes heart to stay with your team when they are losing.Quote:
The hard part as a Fan is to stay True to your team (Winning or Losing). I think SA SPURS Fans have that quality, I really admire that.
STAY TRUE!!!
It was amazing how many Magic "fans" became Laker "fans" then suddenly became Heat "fans" because of Shaq. Same with the Bulls. They went from very few fans to millions to gone again. I imagine when Duncan leaves, some will go with him. If and when the Spurs fall on hard times again, more will leave. Those of us who will stay behind will enjoy the extra legroom on the bandwagon.
Good for you for staying with your team. :tu
I was in Disney World with my family getting updates every 10 minutes.
Quote:
Originally Posted by GrandeDavid
I was at the Memorial Coliseum, conflicted at the time of who I wanted to win. Spurs win, great...Blazers win, possiblity of watching the NBA Finals live. Strickland's pass wasn't really to the baseline, it was more to his right (Jerome Kersey). Those were the good years of Blazer ball, was nice to have season tickets back then. Now you can't even give the tickets away.
Quote:
Originally Posted by RonMexico
David's Rookie Card was 89-90 Hoops only, not Upper Deck. Upper Deck was 1991.
I was in college, me and my buds would always get together at someone's place to watch the Spurs, especially in the playoffs. I just remember being completely dumbstruck after Strickland made that no look behind the back pass. I was also very drunk and proceede to pick up a lamp and throw it across the room, this lead to an almost fight between me and some of my drunk friends who were also pissed off. We all got over it eventually. :lol
I was in Boston in graduate school. Strickland's pass is what everyone remembers, but there were a lot of painful things about that game.
-Spurs had a 6 point lead with about 1:30 left in regulation and blew it.
-Willie Anderson has the ball on a breakaway with less than 10 seconds in regulation left coming down the court for the winning dunk. Clyde Drexler makes probably the best defensive play of his life by coming out of nowhere and just grazing the ball with the tips of his fingertips, causing Willie to lose control of the ball out of bounds and the game to go to OT.
-Strickland's pass was questionable, but if Sean Elliotttttttt had done the right thing and made the backdoor cut to catch the ball, we'd probably be talking about it like it was the greatest play in Spurs history.
-After The Pass, Portland fast breaks up the court and, I think Terry Porter gets fouled by Strickland on the break. Even though Strickland was clearly making a play on the ball, the refs call a BS flagrant foul to seal the game.
To this day, I'm convinced that if the Spurs had won that game, they make it to the Finals that year, and, if not that year, the DRob/Larry Brown Spurs win a title at some point.
Yep Sean was cutting towards the basket and then just stoppedQuote:
Originally Posted by ShoogarBear
I was 26, a season ticket holder watching with some fellow season ticket holders, we cried in our beer
That's ok It just made the Memorial Day Miracle that much sweeter
http://www.nba.com/media/playoffs200...ott_99_450.jpg
http://www.nba.com/playoffs2003/greatest_elliott.html
That's right - it was Hoops... good call.Quote:
Originally Posted by Beaverfuzz
Either way, if anyone wants to talk about plenty of legroom on the bandwagon - trying being an Arizona Cardinals fan since you were 4...
Quote:
Originally Posted by RonMexico
Ouch!!!!
Awesome account! And it seems you and I are the same age, whatever that means.Quote:
Originally Posted by FromWayDowntown
I became a fan in 1980 when my family moved to San Antonio from Virginia.Quote:
Originally Posted by KB24
They were winning then with Ice, Junior, Mitch, A-Train, Banks, etc. I stayed a fan since then...including those lean years in the late 1980's.
As for the question to start the thread...I was working at Chewy's in North Star Mall and we brought in a portable TV and watched it. I was so upset when Strickland through that bonehead pass over his head to the peanut vendor in the stands. That was the turning point in the game.