You know that it was...don't deny it.He had to try those kung-fu moves on someone.
IMO, its just as disrespectful for a coach of one team to engage a player of the opposite team in that way. To his credit, Sheed has not been the problem child with Detroit as he was with the Blazers. That goes back to the team-first at ude that has made the Pistons successful. While legal, it is a bull way to play. A lot of us Spurs fans, myself included, didn't like it when it happened to Bruce Bowen and Tim Duncan, so we can't at Detroit getting mad. I don't think what Sheed did was neccessary but the idea that he is willing to stick up for his teammate works for me.
That seems a bit odd coming from a fan of a team who has a certain player known for playing dirty and kicking an opponent in the face.@ the fact that people like you think this was intentional.
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You know that it was...don't deny it.He had to try those kung-fu moves on someone.
I don't think he actually did it on purpose, I was just trying to make a point. You know .... Spurs fans call Sheed a thug, many leagewide fans call Bowen a thug for "dirty" tactics.
The karate kick was just too good for me to pass on.![]()
i don't mind sheed as a player, i just think it's childish for him to continue to hold a grudge against dunleavy.
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