Did he say that? What are you laughing about?
That's off the court, dealing with failure stuff. I would attribute that to maturity not him losing his compe iveness. On the court he still brings that fire, still gets as emotional as anyone on the team, still willing to sacrifice his body despite being a senior citizen, and still eager to contribute as much as his body allows him to.
It's impossible for a guy like him to just turn that off, imo.
Did he say that? What are you laughing about?
Truth.
Peeps need to calm down and quit reading between the lines. He's not passive-aggressive.
Spurs will get a good solid punch in the mouth this series and it will fuel them. Memphis is the perfect first round opponent.
Every now and then this guy pops out and Post the most Cliche, Vanilla, Casual Post...
Hilarious.
TD and Manu should have jointly retired after the 2014 finals
And when he joins the opposite team we lose
ISO bball is sucky bball and UNbeautiful, unsuccessful bball
Of course the offense gets stuck in an iso-centric way of playing. Dont know if Manu is still hoping for ways to make t he offense more fluid or he's just hoping the team goes back to the beautiful game. Alas, it's too late to change it now at this stage
Because like you with TP, people on here just have an idea in their head and no matter what they will project that onto the player.
Manu of course has fire and him being more reflective about his career now is no surprise. Manu has always been very candid and open his entire career.
I'm not worried about Manu sucking due to him checking out.
Porker's fat rolls and quadruple chin say otherwise, tbh.
Says the one running the player fan shtick that lost its shine 5 years ago on this site.
Don't quote me or address me in any other way you sucking sock puppet...about basketball or any other subject.
Different experience as in a scoreless experience? Then yes.
There is no Spurs player I've had a love/hate relationship over the years than Manu. My god I've been so mad at that guy I wanted to fly to Argentina and hunt him down. THEN...he'll redeem himself. The most important thing, to me, that Manu did, and the difference between the way he played in the Miami loss to the redemption the following year, is he learned to play within himself and to me, that's an important aspect to sport and all things in life. You do need to push yourself but at the same time, do whatever it is you do, within your skill set/capability and KNOW WHAT THAT IS. Manu figured that out. Took a bit, but he did figure it out. Manu has always pushed the envelope of his skill set. As he aged, it started to bite him because he didn't have that physical capability to be that ALL THE TIME, but he did learn. You pick your spots and opportunities. He figured it out. Parker is learning that to. You have to have longevity. Pick your time and spot. As the old joke goes, 'Two bulls standing on the top of a hill. The young one spots a herd of cows in the valley and says to the old bull, lets run down there and one of those cows.' The old bull says, 'Lets walk down and them all.'
'A man's gotta know his limitations'
--Clint Eastwood
Last edited by ErnestLynch; 04-16-2017 at 01:23 AM.
A guy saying he wouldn't mind playing 20 more games and having one more year on his contract gives you the impression he's going to retire?
Was huge defensively today. Good thing he can take some minutes away from our 29yr old past his prime starting SG....
Manu is most definitely retiring.
One good game out of 6.
Good thing we didn't waste it
SA Girl, he played badly last night?
Frankly team was lucky they didn't waste good games from their guys. They really didn't play well as a group (save kawhi and he wasn't exceptional that game... was game 3.. no one had it going and for what it's worth.. I don't think it was wasted. All the young players got the chance to compete against Memphis starters and they played as well as one could have hoped... they didn't lay down and die.)
The only real hearbreaker was game 4 bc kawhi was so exceptional... really at the time, made sad he didn't get help. I think Manu probably felt so bad about that (if it hurt us as fans, can you imagine how teammates felt letting him down?) and so they came out balling in game 5.
No matter what happens we have to appreciate this team and not take them for granted.
Hopefully Manu has a few more. I'd like for it to be more than just 1 out of 6... we shall see. I keep thinking Pop has to play his younger guys more, but they are bound to make a mistake here or there and go back to the doghouse. In Manu Pop trusts...
but it's become clear to me, this is Manu's last run.
He had two bad TO and only one made basket. That is way down from RS production... so it is subpar.. I wouldn't call it a good game tbh.
Last edited by SAGirl; 04-28-2017 at 05:32 AM.
I really love Manu but I wish he knows when it is time to quit. Being the compe or that he is I hate seeing him struggle like this and become more of a liability. To be fair I was at one of the games and he was really involved in coaching the guys during the timeouts. He was even in the coaches huddle.
To say the truth this was a really particular series. Memphis is a top 5 defense in the nba, and their offensive averages were better than their rs averages.
So in reality they played a team with ratings near the top 10 in the league.
We have to see now how he fares against Houston. Which is a better offensive team but in defense the drop off is giant. Memphis is 5th in Drtg while Houston is 18th.
Not to say that physical teams are bound to bother Manu at this stage in his career.
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