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  1. #26
    Damn You Commies T Park's Avatar
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    Well their first outing against Phoenix wasn't good.

    But getting to drool at Becky Hammon all night was sweet....

  2. #27
    Winning is boring. flipcritic's Avatar
    My Team
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    Everytime I think of the WNBA, I recall the time Rick Reilly tried out for it. Classic.

    http://sportsillustrated.cnn.com/ins...ife_of_reilly/

    Someday somebody may whisper in your ear, "Hey, buddy, how'd you like to spend an entire day rubbing bodies with 107 fit, glistening young women?" Resist! If you don't, you'll end up like me, a semifunctioning blood clot, a man with more scratch marks than Ricky Martin, a boy toy used and discarded by ruthless females.

    That isn't what I expected when I agreed to be the only man to compete in last week's WNBA predraft camp in Chicago. What I expected was a) a good roomie; b) some partial nudity; and c) to have my way with these girls, basketball-wise.

    See, I had never attended, watched or given two bobby pins about a WNBA game. I figured it was women in comfortable heels shooting two-hand set shots and running to the bench to check their Maybelline.

    Right away there were signs that maybe I was wrong. For example, at the player physicals the day before the camp, Dr. John Heffrin shook my hand and said, "We're going to have the defibrillator at the gym, just in case." He wasn't smiling.

    Then, in my complimentary WNBA player's bag -- which included, yes, sports bras -- some wise gal had slipped in a listing of Chicago funeral homes. Then I got a look at the schedule for the next day: 9:15 a.m.-12:15 p.m., half-court games; 2-8 p.m., full-court games. And I thought, 8:03, defibrillator.

    Now, I may not be Billy Blanks, but I'm not Tyra Banks, either. I'm 6'1", 180 pounds, sturdy in a 42 year-old kind of way. But when I went to my power-forward spot and a woman named Frankie Boyd, 6'4" and 180 pounds, senior, Ole Miss, got the ball in the post, yo-yoed it, slammed her butt into my intestines and her elbow into my teeth (sending me skidding back on my shorts), and laid in the uncontested bunny, I wished very much that I had stayed home and rotated the tires.

    Why must women be so violent? They grabbed me. They shoved me. They pinched me. They held their ground. They were huge. At one point I was guarding 6'4", 250-pound UCLA center Janae Hubbard, a woman who on the court didn't seem to care in the least about Maybelline. I came out, and my coach, Greg Williams, an assistant with the Detroit Shock, said, "Son, you couldn't play dead in a cowboy movie."

    I tightened my sports bra. I bruised, pinched and elbowed the women back. For me, chivalry was dead. In one skirmish with Boyd, I held her, she slapped my hands away, she hooked her arm around my back, I grunted, we leaned hard into each other, both bathed in sweat, thus re-creating most of my high school dates.

    I started making shots. A baby hook. A three-pointer. A thumping putback. I returned to the bench. "I bet you scored 10 points out there," Williams said, "and gave up 20."

    But you don't understand! I had to guard 6'8" Rhonda Smith, who had fingernails like RuPaul! I had to stay with Mic e (Spinderella) Marciniak, the 1996 Final Four MVP! I had to stop women who would humiliate the tall white geeks at the end of every NBA bench. "Did you play basketball when you were young?" a well-meaning teammate asked me on the sideline. Uh, ouch. Oh, yes, I wanted to say. I was in charge of getting the ball out of the peach basket.

    Then came the full-court games. Refs. Stat crews. At one point, gassed, I looked over to Williams and pulled on my shirt, the universal sign that a player needs to come out. Williams just looked blankly at me. I did it the next time down. Nothing. A third. Zilch. I grew woozy. There was a timeout. "Didn't you [pant] see me [gulp] tug on my [spit] shirt?"
    I asked.

    "Oh," Williams said. "I thought your jersey was sticky."

    God, it was fun. My teammates took me in, slapping me on the rear and never laughing at my air balls. I love the WNBA now. There's more teamwork than in the NBA, better fundamentals and far fewer paternity suits. I have a new definition of femininity. What I look for now in a beautiful woman is big hands, scabby knees and a nice box-out butt.

    As I was leaving, I saw Nancy Lieberman-Cline, one of the greatest woman basketball players ever, who's now G.M. and coach of the Shock. I asked her what she thought of my game. "I honestly think," she said, "you'd be a very good fifth-round pick."

    That soothed my aching pride until that night, in the tub, I read something that sort of took the glow off: Tuesday's draft has only four rounds.

  3. #28
    Banned
    My Team
    San Antonio Spurs
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    2,321
    Nobody will pay real cash to see womens sports. Hot naked women are the only ones people pay cash to see, thus all the empty stands and the lowest ratings in sports. Spurstalk posters could outplay most of them girls.

  4. #29
    Whoa. That's deep. spurschick's Avatar
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    The Silver Stars beat the Connecticut Sun tonight in the home opener. They played great in the first half, pulled a "Spurs" in the 3rd quarter and were able to hold on to win the game. Erin Buescher is fearless.

  5. #30
    Believe.
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    62
    I'll be going to Friday's game against the Storm. Looking forward to it.

  6. #31
    SpursTalk Sneakerhead KEDA's Avatar
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    Just for the record, I went to the game last night and I was pleasantly surprised on how the WNBA works. It was a lot better then I thought. It actually appears that we have a pretty compe ive ball club. I will most certainly attend a few more games this year.

  7. #32
    Whoa. That's deep. spurschick's Avatar
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    WNBA opens with new faces atop two franchises, familiar challenge at gate
    By JOHN LOMBARDO, Sports Business Journal

    The WNBA opens its 11th season with two new team owners, one less charter franchise and a challenge to rebound from an all-time low average attendance last year.

    Most notable for the new season, which tips off Saturday, is the continued trend toward private ownership that this year brings new groups in Los Angeles and Houston, increasing the number of privately owned franchises in the 13-team league to five.

    In Los Angeles, Lakers owner Jerry Buss sold the Sparks to an investment group led by Katherine Goodman and Carla Christofferson. Goodman is a former Hollywood executive; Christofferson is an entertainment attorney.

    Houston Rockets owner Leslie Alexander this winter sold the Comets to furniture mogul Hilton Koch reportedly for $10 million, though neither side revealed the specific sale price.

    The Sparks and Comets join the Connecticut Sun, Chicago Sky and Washington Mystics as the WNBA’s privately held franchises.

    While these new owners are in, out for 2007 is one of the WNBA’s charter teams: the Charlotte Sting, which ceased operations in January. The league could not find a suitable buyer for the franchise, formerly owned by Bobcats owner Bob Johnson. Still, the league expects to expand in 2008; groups in Denver and Atlanta are expressing interest.

    WNBA President Donna Orender said that even with one less franchise this year, she expects an increase in average attendance after watching last season’s regular-season average fall 8.6 percent from 2005, to an average of 7,479 fans per game, the lowest in the league’s history.

    “Attendance will be up,” said Orender, starting her third season as league president. “Overall, we are doing a great job of featuring great basketball. We have committed ownership groups all the way around that are committed to their teams and their communities.”

    With the shift toward independent ownership, teams are increasing front office staffs, and their local sales efforts are being bolstered by the NBA’s team marketing and business operations department.

    “Everything is being done on a local level with the league sharing best practices with us,” said Margaret Stender, president of the Chicago Sky, which begins its second WNBA season after ranking last in average attendance last year. “Our front office has increased from 19 to 29, and we’ve doubled our sales staff to eight employees. We are now very aggressive about group sales and we weren’t last year, which was a rookie mistake.”

    The WNBA is also rolling out two advertising campaigns to help drive fan interest.

    The first campaign, “Dads and Daughters,” began airing in February with spots featuring Chauncey Billups of the Detroit Pistons and Ray Allen of the Seattle SuperSonics and their daughters extolling the virtues of the WNBA.

    This week, the WNBA will unveil its seasonlong campaign with the tag line “Journeys,” featuring players explaining how they made it to the WNBA. “The biggest challenge for us is to make sure that people are aware that there is a fantastic product called the WNBA,” Orender said.

    The league’s 2007 regular-season television schedule calls for 16 games on ESPN2 and five games on ABC. Last year, the WNBA generated a 0.2 average rating (204,269 households) for 13 games on ESPN2 compared with a 0.3 rating (218,518 households) during the 2005 season. Regular-season ratings on ABC were flat with 2005, with a 0.7 average for six games.

    ESPN2 will air five doubleheaders on Tuesday nights. One programming shift moves the WNBA All-Star Game off ESPN during the middle of the week to a weekend slot on ABC this year.

    “Interest in women’s college basketball is getting bigger, and [the WNBA’s] demographics are growing, but the tough thing is that the league kicks off now at the end of the NBA season and runs through the summer, which is the lowest time for ratings,” said Larry Novenstern, executive vice president of national electronic media for Optimedia. “That can be tough, but you can turn that around and say they have an opportunity because there is also less original programming during the summer.”

    The WNBA also will air 70 games on NBA TV, up from 50 last season.

    “There will be more broadcast hours this year than in other years,” Orender said.


    On the sponsorship side, the WNBA hasn’t added any leaguewide sponsors in the offseason, though Orender said deals are pending. Last year, the league added Ocean Spray’s Craisins brand and Discover as league partners, and the strategy is to find sponsors independent of the NBA’s corporate business, as deals were leveraged in the past to include the WNBA. Ten of the WNBA’s 20 total partnerships overlap with the NBA.

    Locally, team partnership revenue is up 10 percent, and the average number of team sponsorships has grown to 32 from 30.

    “You have to have a national footprint, you have to have scale and you have to have growth to attract partners,” said Gary Stevenson, president of OnSport and a former NBA executive who was involved with the launch of the WNBA. “Participation rates [in women’s basketball] are huge and continue to grow. My view is that the WNBA is viewed a bit unfairly. It’s still a young league, and if you look at the impact it has had on women’s sports and basketball, you would deem it a huge success.

  8. #33
    SpursTalk Sneakerhead KEDA's Avatar
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    Silver Stars GTG????

  9. #34
    Gimmie 5! dknights411's Avatar
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    Nobody will pay real cash to see womens sports. Hot naked women are the only ones people pay cash to see, thus all the empty stands and the lowest ratings in sports. Spurstalk posters could outplay most of them girls.
    You wanna take them on?

  10. #35
    Whoa. That's deep. spurschick's Avatar
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    Post-game interviews with Coach Hughes, Becky Hammon and Erin Beuscher.

    http://www.wnba.com/silverstars/courtside/070523.html

  11. #36
    Whoa. That's deep. spurschick's Avatar
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    Basketball: Silver Stars hold off Storm for second-straight victory at AT&T Center
    Natalie England - Express-News

    Silver Stars coach Dan Hughes likes defense. Remember that when he was in Cleveland, his teams set some defensive statistics that still rank among the league's best.

    So, it's natural that when Hughes talks about his Silver Stars' speed and athleticism, it's in conjunction with how that fuels the defense.

    But on Friday against Seattle, the Silver Stars turned those defensive assets into a fun-and-gun offense — and Hughes didn't seem to mind.

    Behind 25 fast-break points and 40 points in the paint, the Silver Stars ran away with an 82-71 victory over the Storm in front of 5,806 at the AT&T Center.

    "Our mobility, it's a real part of who we are, and it's something that people have to deal with," Hughes said. "It allows us to play in transition. That's a facet we've got."

    The Silver Stars also have a bevy of players willing to score — and from a variety of spots.

    With a wicked combination of layups and timely 3-pointers, Becky Hammon led the way with 21 points. Erin Buescher added 18 and also had a career-high five steals. More than once, she was on the finishing end of one of her own takeaways.

    Shanna Crossley knocked down 4 of 10 3-pointers for 14 points.

    Vickie Johnson earned a double-double with 10 points and a career-high 10 assists.

    The Silver Stars matched a franchise record with 26 assists on 33 field goals, and shot 46 percent from the field.

    "It was an easy 10 assists for me," said Johnson, who also had three steals. "Everybody was shooting the ball so well."

    The Silver Stars also are carving out another characteristic — when teams push them, they now have the ability to push back.

    After trailing by as many as 15, the Storm cut their deficit to 57-51 on a Lauren Jackson three-point play at the 3:13 mark of the third quarter.

    But the Silver Stars responded with the same kind of charge they made on Wednesday when Connecticut shrunk a deficit from 25 to four points. They closed the quarter with 10 unanswered points and took a 67-51 lead.

    Crossley scored the final eight of those on a pair of 3-pointers and a fast-break bucket. Buescher, who poked away two steals during that span, had the other basket.

    And after Seattle opened the fourth with an 8-0 run to trim its deficit to eight, the Silver Stars found an answer.

    Ruth Riley converted a Seattle turnover with a 16-foot jumper, and Hammon threw down her final 3-pointer of the game following an offensive rebound by Johnson to put the Silver Stars comfortably out front by 11 with 5:36 remaining.

    "They are really turning some heads right now," Storm coach Anne Donovan said of the Silver Stars.

    Janell Burse led Seattle with 19 points, but the Storm's offensive flow was often interrupted with their 19 turnovers, which led to 29 points for the Silver Stars.

    "We feed off our defense," Johnson said.

    http://www.mysanantonio.com/sports/b...e.3a8aaff.html

  12. #37
    God Talks To Me. angel_luv's Avatar
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    A customer at the mall and I today were talking about the Silver Stars. She said they look like a good team this year.
    We should all go to a game together.

  13. #38
    Whoa. That's deep. spurschick's Avatar
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    Stars Dial in Long Distance to Top Comets

    HOUSTON(AP) - Becky Hammon scored 26 points, leading the San Antonio Silver Stars to a 82-71 win over the Houston Comets on Tuesday night.

    The loss marks the first time in franchise history the Comets have started 0-3.

    San Antonio (3-1) recovered from a 13-point first quarter deficit by outscoring the Comets 29-9 the rest of the first half. Hammon had 13 points in the first half, including eight points in a 13-0 run to end the half as the Silver Stars took a 35-28 lead.

    The Silver Stars increased their lead to 58-44 with 1:42 left in the third quarter on Sophia Young's layup. Houston (0-3) closed within seven points several times in the fourth quarter, but got no closer.

    Hammon was 6-of-9 from behind the arc to lead San Antonio, which hit a franchise-record 13 three-pointers. Young added 16 points, and reserve Erin Buescher netted 11 points.

    Mic e Snow led the Comets with 20 points and 12 rebounds, her second straight double-double. Tina Thompson added 18 points, and Hamchetou Maiga-Ba had 12 points. Sheryl Swoopes only scored six points and didn't hit a field goal until there was 5:42 left in the game.

    Houston was 9-of-12 in the first quarter, then shot 9-of-33 in the second and third quarters combined.

  14. #39
    DEEP in the Q
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    I'm going for storm in this don't really follow WNBA. Going for Seattle because of homegrown Lauren Jackson. Lets hope she leads Australia to Olympic glory in Beijing..

  15. #40
    Better than you MajorMike's Avatar
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    I actually flipped on and off the game last night. The run was very nice.

    I may start watching the Stars... they are more exciting than atm even.

  16. #41
    The Wheel Is Turning... shelshor's Avatar
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    Thursday's game against Phoenix should be a good guage of how much better they are this year

  17. #42
    These aren't the droids you're looking for jman3000's Avatar
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    a female friend of mine invited me to go with her to a silver stars game... i'm still debating on whether ill lose man points or not.

  18. #43
    Whoa. That's deep. spurschick's Avatar
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    Mercury Roll Past Silver Stars

    SAN ANTONIO, May 31 (AP) -- Diana Taurasi, who was ejected for the first time in her career in Phoenix's previous game, scored 21 points Thursday night to lead the Mercury to a 97-85 victory over the San Antonio Silver Stars.

    Taurasi, who was called for a flagrant foul and given two technicals in the second quarter of the Mercury's 76-75 victory over Sacramento on Tuesday, finished with five rebounds and six assists. She had 18 points in the second half.

    Tangela Smith added 22 points, 14 in the first half, on 9-of-12 shooting for the Mercury, while Cappie Pondexter had 19, Penny Taylor 13 and Kelly Miller 10. The Mercury (4-1) tied the franchise record for best five-game start and picked up their first road win of the season.

    Phoenix, which led 44-31 at halftime, was perfect from the free throw line, going 18-for-18.

    The Silver Stars (3-2), whose other loss was to the Mercury 81-72 in the season opener on May 19 in Phoenix, were led by Becky Hammon's 25 points. She was 4-of-11 from the 3-point line. Hammon has led the Silver Stars in scoring in every game.

    Sophia Young had 22 points for San Antonio and Marie Ferdinand-Harris added 10.

    The Silver Stars cut the lead to nine points on a layup by Young with 2:19 left in the third quarter, but it was as close as they would get.

  19. #44
    Whoa. That's deep. spurschick's Avatar
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    a female friend of mine invited me to go with her to a silver stars game... i'm still debating on whether ill lose man points or not.
    Well, if you're not man enough, then I guess you shouldn't go.

  20. #45
    SpursTalk Sneakerhead KEDA's Avatar
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    If I ever get invited to go back to a Silver Stars game I will go, I had fun that night, and didn't lose any man points, although I did lose some french fries!

  21. #46
    Whoa. That's deep. spurschick's Avatar
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    Richard Oliver: Second-fiddle status to Spurs wearing on Silver Stars
    Web Posted: 06/02/2007 08:14 PM CDT
    San Antonio Express-News

    Less than 24 hours earlier, the Spurs had captured another Western Conference le at the AT&T Center, sending a sellout crowd of 19,000 fans into a rapturous frenzy.

    But those cheers had long since died away as Sophia Young sat on a chair before her locker in the bowels of the same arena.

    Still in her Silver Stars uniform, ham-sized bags of ice strapped to both knees, the 6-foot-1 power forward looked as if she'd bled more than sweat on the court during 32 minutes of hard toil against Phoenix.

    Her 39th WNBA game had played out as a miserable 97-85 Silver Stars loss punctuated by 13-straight missed shots, including five blown layups, to start the second quarter, head coach Dan Hughes' first technical of the season and Mercury star Diana Taurasi's celebratory taunts in the closing moments.

    That Young had collected 22 points, one off her career best, to go with a team-high seven rebounds and three assists didn't soothe her exasperation.

    "We go out there," the former Baylor standout said wearily, "and play with heart as much as the Spurs do."

    And they do.

    Which makes what is happening all the more maddening for the women playing the games.

    The Spurs' continued success, which will spill again into most of the opening two months of the Silver Stars' schedule, has further dwarfed the franchise's impact on a community that has yet to embrace it with even a semblance of the zeal accorded the men.

    For Young and her teammates, last week provided a particularly stark reminder.

    Hours after the Spurs routed the Utah Jazz in Game 5 of their series, positioning the NBA club for its fourth league le, the city's WNBA entry took the court to find that the fever gripping fans Wednesday night apparently had left them recovering on their couches Thursday.

    Only days after Robert Horry hip-checked Steve Nash into the scorer's table at the AT&T Center, inflaming the San Antonio-Phoenix series into a must-see conflagration of emotion in the NBA playoffs, the cities faced off again in another important Western Conference match.

    This time, with WNBA supremacy at stake, the Silver Stars' Becky Hammon found herself hip-to-hip against the Mercury's Cappie Pondexter, but in a showdown so lightly regarded that the squeaking of their sneakers was drowned out only by the obligatory arena rock and announcer exhortations.

    The Silver Stars, who had come in 3-1 and optimistic because of Hughes' aggressive roster makeover, missed 18 shots in the first quarter and 31 through the first 16 minutes en route to trailing badly at the half.

    Yet, in an explosive third quarter, the teams combined for 69 points on 24-of-37 shooting, with Taurasi and Pondexter teaming for 20 points and Hammon and Jones for 17.

    It was a 10-minute stretch that showcased what the league can be when the product works as assembled.

    "It's a lot to get excited about," Hammon, the guard who has become the marketable face of the Silver Stars, said later. "We're just looking to make a push."

    San Antonio isn't alone. The 13-team WNBA, still subsidized by $12 million from the NBA annually, made a dubious claim of an average attendance of 7,500 last year, but the team in Charlotte folded, and the league's championship game had to be shifted to another Detroit arena because of a Mariah Carey concert.

    On Thursday night, even with San Antonio impassioned for pro basketball by another Spurs conference crown, the Silver Stars announced an attendance of 5,247 — likely twice the number actually on hand.

    A wag sitting at courtside chuckled.

    "The good thing is, when they do those Sure Shot promotions at these games," he said, "everyone gets a shirt."

    Shortly after, Young couldn't find the humor in it. The player, her heart for the sport beating every bit as strong as any Spurs star, shrugged.

    "For the general population, the NBA is more popular," she said. "You're just going to get that. It's not anything I can fix. But we're all athletes, we're all positive — and we all love this game."

    For another night, at least, that would have to be enough.

  22. #47
    Whoa. That's deep. spurschick's Avatar
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    Crossley carries Silver Stars over Storm
    The Associated Press-Elaine Thompson

    SEATTLE --
    Shanna Crossley scored all 14 of her points in the fourth quarter to lead the San Antonio Silver Stars to a 78-68 victory over the Seattle Storm on Saturday night.

    Crossley made four 3-pointers in the final quarter to help the Silver Stars (4-2) build a 20-point lead. It was the second victory in eight days for San Antonio over the Storm (2-2).

    Lauren Jackson had 20 points and 14 rebounds for the Storm. Iziane Castro Marques added 10 points.

    Vickie Johnson and Ruth Riley each had 13 points for San Antonio. Johson also had 10 rebounds.

    The Silver Stars led by as many as nine points in the third quarter and led 57-51 after three quarters before blowing the game open in the final quarter.

    Crossley, a reserve who averaged 11.4 points per game in the first five, took control in the final quarter. She made a 3-pointer after a steal and hit another one as she fell to the floor with Jackson in her face.

    Becky Hammon, who played eight seasons in New York before being traded before this season to San Antonio, had 12 points. Hammon had scored more than 20 points in the previous three games.

    The Storm had an eight-day layoff since losing 82-71 at San Antonio on May 25. Sue Bird had seven points, four below her average for the Storm. She was 3 of 12 from the field.

    One Storm fan showed his support for Jackson, of Australia, by holding up a 4-foot plastic kangaroo every time Jackson scored.

    Riley scored 11 points in the first quarter for the Silver Stars, hitting all four of her shots from the field.

    Seattle shot only 38 percent from the field.

  23. #48
    I Drink Elephant Poop Bear Grylls's Avatar
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    Do people actually go to these games?

  24. #49
    Dragic to Spurs!!! Kamnik's Avatar
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    Hopefully Beno will get some playing time
    i laughed out loud at that

  25. #50
    Double Time pooh's Avatar
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    They looked good the other night against the Storm.

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