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  1. #101
    🏆🏆🏆🏆🏆 ElNono's Avatar
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    This is actually getting pretty funny.
    Just because you present two options doesn't mean they have to be 50/50.
    That's all the options we have...

    Good thing people can't play matchups and plan against him in the regular season!
    Not worth it. Winning the regular season doesn't win you a trophy.

    A strawman argument is when someone makes a point unrelated to the argument and guns it down, and pretends he refuted the original point. That is not what I did. Learn what logical fallacies are if you want to play in that space.
    Also, the 1,000 number I chose was arbitrary, and that he's taken 1,471 shots in the playoffs shows nothing about sample size without the proper context.
    Keep that...

    If I dust off the binomial distribution and come up with some confidence intervals and hypothesis tests that show the sample size is way too small, would knuckleheaded you even be able to understand it?
    Maybe we should ask Bernoulli to take 3s in the playoffs...

  2. #102
    🏆🏆🏆🏆🏆 ElNono's Avatar
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    You originally said he was "a terrible defender" and said nothing about the playoffs. Your new story may hold water, I don't know. But the way you worded it did not. The Spurs give up less points per possession with Bonner on the floor than they do with him off it.
    The problem with Matt has always been the playoffs. Nobody here cares about the regular season, tbh.

  3. #103
    You down wit' O.C.D.? Borosai's Avatar
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    Dislike. Envy. Same thing.

    People need a scapegoat. Bonner never has and never will determine the fate of the Spurs in the playoffs. He can help or hurt, but the Spurs will only go as far as the stars take them, series after series (or just one). Unless, of course, you guys expect the Spurs to have great players up and down the roster.

    Manu getting hurt every year. Tony getting outplayed by the opposing PG. Duncan getting older. Those are the serious problems. Complain about that if you want. The Spurs didn't get swept by the ing Suns, and they didn't get beat by an 8th seed, because of Matt Bonner.

    The Spurs need the Big 3 to play BIG. They need more depth up front. They need better team defense. But continue focusing on Matty while he chows down a hoagie and takes another dump.

  4. #104
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    Yes, past performance is in general indicative of future performance. But not always. The roulette wheel is the common, easy example.
    You lost me when you compared the game of basketball to roulette. The game of basketball is far, far different than a flip of a coin or a spin of a roulette wheel. Emotions (which include fear, confidence, trepidation, etc.), chemistry, experience and other intangible elements play a sizable role in the eventual outcomes. Regarding basketball, considering that the past is very likely to have been influenced by such intangibles, it's not much of a logical leap to say that the past can give you a hint of what will come in the future. And when the exact patterns are viewed on multiple occurrences, the ability to chalk everything up to variance decreases greatly.

    I do not understand how you've arrived at your conclusion. This subject has been studied to death, and I've never seen one reliable study that didn't conclude that past clutchness had ZERO bearing on future performance. Not one.
    There has been very little study on clutchness and the role it plays in the NBA. In fact, I bet you can't even point me to one study that supports your statement that clutchness has no bearing on the future. The studies you are referencing most likely are regarding baseball, which I believe is not fairly comparable.

    Moreover, recent studies prove that pressure has a measurable affect on NBA players (click here if interested). With baseball, even that has never truly been proven. So the fact that pressure undeniably changes how an NBA player performs begins one on the road to understanding that pressure affects different players more than most.

    I mean, I hope you can show me the light and point me to studies that back your claim. It'd be much easier if I believed in Bonner's biggest bugaboo simply being variance. But as the studies come out about pressure and its relationship to NBA players, the less I can believe it's simply been a glorious fluke.




    Anyways, thanks for responding and hopefully you respond again

  5. #105
    🏆🏆🏆🏆🏆 ElNono's Avatar
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    Meh, I pointed out when the Memphis series was over that Matt wasn't the sole reason we lost...

    His production (or lack thereof), however, does exacerbates the difficulties the team has, simply because of the system we use. And this is what timvp was pointing earlier on the Blair vs Bonner argument. The system puts a lot of weight on the stretch 4 creating the spacing for the guards and Tim to play inside. When your designated shooter can't deliver, you really are screwed.

    On the defensive end, Tim has aged and physical basketball like the brand you see in the playoffs does take a toll on him. He needs help, and a soft, poor rebounder like Matt hardly provides much help. Thus, seeing Tiago getting an emergency appearance in the last few games of the series was hardly surprising.

    All that said, let me point it out again: He was not the sole reason.

  6. #106
    Kiwi, Advanced Stat Fan
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    In general, alot of the hate is that Bonner does not conform to the traditional skills of his position, and a lack of understanding of the value of his play, misinterpreting the extra missed shots from shooting 3's as fast break points/opportunities(He shoots 40%, which means he misses 60%, and lots of fast breaks from long rebounds), where the majority of statheads view them as extra opportunities to rebound, and the longer shots increase the probability of an offensive rebound(There was a paper at Sloan about this effect this year.) His defense is occasional poor, and he s up, but if he was a great defender as well as a 40% shooter, he'd get paid a ton more. People just expect the defense to be great here, as the players who've traditionally been here at PF/C have been great defenders. Could call this a cultural legacy of D-Rob/Tim.

    I agree with a lot of what Drz has said. Sample size is small, and from a statistical POV, we're far better off using the regular season to predict playoff performance, if we assume each shot is an independent trial(as most people would model it.) We don't know whether the poor performance is just random deviation from long run performance(in which case, he's as likely to underperform in the playoffs again as any other player), or if there are specifics to Matt Bonner that explain the failing. For this, you'd look at style of play(e.g, Shooting big men/Role playing shooting bigs etc) and find a group of players similar in style to Bonner, then test for performance in the playoffs vs not in the playoffs. If, as a group, their performance suffered in the playoffs(on a per minute basis, adjusted for usage etc) then you predict a falloff from Bonner.

    The other unknown, which you can't look at past statistics for, is performance under pressure, using a psychological profile of Matt, and how a person with that profile tends to perform under high(er) stress situations.

    Simply saying Bonner has sucked in the playoffs before, so he will again is not really a valid argument. It's an opinion, and there is data of a sort to support it, but you're taking a bucket of data and ignoring the ocean.

  7. #107
    Lab Animal Capt Bringdown's Avatar
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    Bonner is a dark cloud hanging over the team. Even the departure of RJ and the return of SJAX does not dispel the despair of an impending Bonner playoff appearance.
    Especially when you realize there's better cards that should be played.

  8. #108
    Veteran Spursfanfromafar's Avatar
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    Someone in this thread said that, the hate for Bonner is irrational, but there is no need for Popovich to play him so much more minutes than Tiago Splitter.

    I completely agree. I don't see the reason for the excessive hatred for a bit player like Bonner who is paid sub-par money for a big in the middle of his career (just past his peak?) and he certainly does not typify or explain the Spurs' lack of championships (unlike their tremendous success generally).

    For me, Bonner is a great situational player, helpful against certain matchups, against certain teams that are dullards in defense and don't respect his 3-shot, and against certain coaches. And he is paid par money for a situational player.

    I don't however think that he deserves his excessive minutes over Splitter. It is only because the Spurs have a very skewed bigs roster - a Duncan whose minutes have to be managed in his evening of his career, a undersized big in Blair - and because Pop has skewed the minutes in favour of Bonner over Splitter that we see what we see today.

    I hope the Spurs quickly get Diaw (most favourable) or Turiaf (less optimal but a decent addition) to address this skew. Once they do that, I think the skew in favour of Bonner over Splitter will be lessened. And Bonner's abilities can be better maximised as a situational player.

  9. #109
    I'm poplovin' it! TJastal's Avatar
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    Doesn't take a rocket scientist (ha-ha) to see that the more pressure packed a game is, the more Bonner starts to panic out on the floor. He'll start rushing shots, making mental miscues, etc. He also plays very timidly. I think he could break out of this negative pattern if he focused on playing more like Brian Cardinal "the Custodian" and quit worrying about everything and just start playing tough basketball. I think once he laid somebody out on the floor his confidence would shoot through the roof. He has the physical tools to be a hard nosed defender out there if he wanted to be. Officials tend to respect those types more. I think he's just plain scared of getting chewed out by Pop over something dumb. Which is a crying shame.

  10. #110
    Veteran BG_Spurs_Fan's Avatar
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    "Statistically speaking?" I'm not a regular here, so I don't know if you're giving me a good trolljob. No, what your saying is false. Factually false, not opinion false. That's like saying "I rolled a die three times and it came up 6 all three times, so statistically speaking, it's just as likely to come up 6 again." Not true.
    Excuse the interruption, but if you're really a professional statistician and you come up with such an incredibly false comparison, then I can't believe you're making your money out of statistical analyses.

    For someone who keeps telling many different people how stupid they are, you sound pretty dumb yourself, tbh.

  11. #111
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    Dislike. Envy. Same thing.

    People need a scapegoat. Bonner never has and never will determine the fate of the Spurs in the playoffs. He can help or hurt, but the Spurs will only go as far as the stars take them, series after series (or just one). Unless, of course, you guys expect the Spurs to have great players up and down the roster.

    Manu getting hurt every year. Tony getting outplayed by the opposing PG. Duncan getting older. Those are the serious problems. Complain about that if you want. The Spurs didn't get swept by the ing Suns, and they didn't get beat by an 8th seed, because of Matt Bonner.

    The Spurs need the Big 3 to play BIG. They need more depth up front. They need better team defense. But continue focusing on Matty while he chows down a hoagie and takes another dump.
    He has determined the fate. That happens when he's getting 20+ minutes in crucial playoff games at a crucial position. Remember game 6 last year when Dice reinjured his neck and Bonner had to play instead? The game was pretty much lost during that time period. When Dice came back in Randolph was on fire and couldn't be stopped.

  12. #112
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    Someone in this thread said that, the hate for Bonner is irrational, but there is no need for Popovich to play him so much more minutes than Tiago Splitter.

    I completely agree. I don't see the reason for the excessive hatred for a bit player like Bonner who is paid sub-par money for a big in the middle of his career (just past his peak?) and he certainly does not typify or explain the Spurs' lack of championships (unlike their tremendous success generally).

    For me, Bonner is a great situational player, helpful against certain matchups, against certain teams that are dullards in defense and don't respect his 3-shot, and against certain coaches. And he is paid par money for a situational player.

    I don't however think that he deserves his excessive minutes over Splitter. It is only because the Spurs have a very skewed bigs roster - a Duncan whose minutes have to be managed in his evening of his career, a undersized big in Blair - and because Pop has skewed the minutes in favour of Bonner over Splitter that we see what we see today.

    I hope the Spurs quickly get Diaw (most favourable) or Turiaf (less optimal but a decent addition) to address this skew. Once they do that, I think the skew in favour of Bonner over Splitter will be lessened. And Bonner's abilities can be better maximised as a situational player.
    Exactly Bonner at best is situational. Remember when Stojakovic was getting abused by Bosh in the Finals? Carlisle made the adjustment and realized that wasn't a good series/matchup for him. If he had continued to play the Mavs probably lose the Finals. It's the exact same thing with Bonner. There are some matchups that are just bad for him.

  13. #113
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    teams respect his shot after OJ Mayo makes him put the ball on the floor
    The problem is Bonner plays like he's 6 ft. I've never seen a guy so big play so small. At 6'10 he should be able to get his shot of against most guards. With his bulk he should be able to muscle his way in the post.

  14. #114
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    Wow I thought it was lower.
    33% on 3's is bad for a guy who only takes wide open 3's. In the playoffs most players take 3's with defenders just about to block their shot. Bonner only takes the wide open kind.

  15. #115
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    I do believe Bonner will come up short in the playoffs once again. There's nothing to suggest he won't. To judge how well a player will likely do in the playoffs, we have two avenues: 1. See how that player has done in the playoffs in the past, and 2. See how that player has done in pressure situations during the regular season.

    Bonner's production has been underwhelming in both scenarios.

    To believe that Bonner will succeed in this year's playoffs, I'd have to ignore both subjective and objective analysis of his past. I just can't do that.




    No offense but you must not read most of what I've said about Bonner over the years. In fact, in this very thread I said Bonner in the regular season has been better than Robert Horry ever was.

    Again, Bonner is a great regular season player. And I don't even think "great" is an overstatement because he consistently puts up fantastic plus/minus numbers. It's not just this year, every single season he's been in the rotation his plus/minus stats have been one of the very best on the team ... if not the absolute best. Bonner has helped the Spurs win countless regular season games over the years ... perhaps more than any role player of the Duncan era (as long as you don't consider Bowen a role player).

    Bonner really does spread the floor and the evidence is in the numbers. On top of that, he's an above average defender in the regular season. And while his individual rebounding numbers aren't spectacular, his boxing out is so good that the Spurs always rebound better with him on the court than with him off the court.

    I can't stress enough how much I love Regular Season Matt Bonner.

    However, the big problem with Regular Season Matt Bonner is that his regular season success simply doesn't translate to the postseason. And it's not just something simple like he shoots his three-pointers worse in the playoffs. It's an all-around decline in his game, much of which isn't really actually his fault.

    Come playoff time, opponents get to scout the Spurs a lot more. The pace slows. The game becomes more of a grind instead of free flowing. All of that works against Bonner. By scouting him closely, teams can figure out exactly how to defend him. The slower pace and grinding flow decrease his areas of effectiveness even more.

    The results have been consistent over the years. Bonner goes from posting great plus/minus numbers in the regular season to posting horrible plus/minus numbers in the postseason. On top of that, all of his traditional stats take a tumble ... he shoots worse, he shoots less, he rebounds less, he gets less assists, he turns the ball over more -- literally every single metric goes south.

    Either Pop can believe that the clockwork-like drop in Bonner's effectiveness every playoffs has been one gigantic fluke, or he can look at the facts and realize that playoff basketball is different and Bonner's game doesn't fit playoff basketball nearly as well as Bonner's game fits regular season basketball.

    I hope Pop eventually believes the latter before it's too late.
    Bonner is pretty much a casualty of game planning in the playoffs. Playoff opponents can look at the plus/minus numbers and realize how important Bonner is. As a result they gameplan to take him out of the game. Usually you gameplan against the star players but because of how Bonner is used it's a unique situation. He's a crutch for the big 3 that hurts the team when taken away.

  16. #116
    Veteran BG_Spurs_Fan's Avatar
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    Bonner is pretty much a casualty of game planning in the playoffs. Playoff opponents can look at the plus/minus numbers and realize how important Bonner is. As a result they gameplan to take him out of the game. Usually you gameplan against the star players but because of how Bonner is used it's a unique situation. He's a crutch for the big 3 that hurts the team when taken away.
    I'm no Bonner hater, but if that plan you're talking about consists of constantly leaving him wide open and attacking him when he's defending the post, then yea, I guess you're right.

  17. #117
    I'm poplovin' it! TJastal's Avatar
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    Bonner is pretty much a casualty of game planning in the playoffs. Playoff opponents can look at the plus/minus numbers and realize how important Bonner is. As a result they gameplan to take him out of the game. Usually you gameplan against the star players but because of how Bonner is used it's a unique situation. He's a crutch for the big 3 that hurts the team when taken away.
    +1

    Funny thing is, the Memphis Grizzlies not only took him out of every game, they did it using an assortment of guards so they could continue to stuff the paint with bigs.

    I can only imagine that Lionel Hollins must have spent many nights leading up to the playoffs game planning every little detail on how to shut down Pop's
    little 3-ring circus/dog and pony show.

  18. #118
    Believe.
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    The problem with Matt has always been the playoffs. Nobody here cares about the regular season, tbh.
    Maybe this year he will finally get to 150 3PA. Sorry but using a small sample size to try and claim it is a good predictor and discount the notion that there could be a progression to the mean just doesn't hold water.

    I'm with you on Bonner being a pussy in crunch time. You can watch him and see it in his body language but putting up 18 shot attempts as if its meaningful doesn't posit anything.

  19. #119
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    Maybe this year he will finally get to 150 3PA. Sorry but using a small sample size to try and claim it is a good predictor and discount the notion that there could be a progression to the mean just doesn't hold water.

    I'm with you on Bonner being a pussy in crunch time. You can watch him and see it in his body language but putting up 18 shot attempts as if its meaningful doesn't posit anything.
    The funny thing is I've always wondered why team don't just come down the court and shoot 3 pointers every time when they are behind big. It's one of the most efficient shots and with enough attempts you will progress to the mean. Remember McGrady's 13 points in 35 seconds? I think that could happen more often if teams used that strategy.

  20. #120
    Out with the old... Obstructed_View's Avatar
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    Not sure where you got your info. His 21.0 mpg is 8th on the team, behind (in order) Parker, Duncan, Leonard, Green, Ginobili, Neal, and Blair.
    Yes, one of those guys plays his position: Duncan.


    Again, not sure I understand where you're coming from. You're saying the 7th highest 3 pt. % in the NBA (.449) shouldn't be below the median defender? Do you realize that "below the median" means bottom half? That'd be awfully swell if a 3 point specialist were a top half defender, but it's faaaaar from a requirement.
    The quote you posted didn't say he was below the median on defense, it said he's below median of everyone at his position. That his great shooting percentage doesn't bring him into the top half of the league is a condemnation of his horrible defense and lack of rebounding.

    Yes, clearly this was Bonner's fault. If he'd made his career .418 mark, we'd have scored 18 more points over those 32 playoff games!! That's OVER half a point per game, WOW!!!
    Funny how you only include one side of the game if it suits your argument. Bonner took Horry's spot, on both offense and defense. With Horry the Spurs went to at least the conference finals. With Bonner the Spurs have been upset three years in a row in humiiliating fashion. Sorry you refuse to do the ing math.

  21. #121
    Out with the old... Obstructed_View's Avatar
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    The funny thing is I've always wondered why team don't just come down the court and shoot 3 pointers every time when they are behind big. It's one of the most efficient shots and with enough attempts you will progress to the mean. Remember McGrady's 13 points in 35 seconds? I think that could happen more often if teams used that strategy.
    The Dallas Mavericks tried that about 15 years ago. It doesn't work.

  22. #122
    Inthe land of audiophiles angelbelow's Avatar
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    Wow Drz really does only come out when Bonner's honor is at stake. Your hostile approach makes it more comical, is that what you're going for?

    Why would looking at his regular season statistics raise our confidence in his playoff performance when the two are so different? Bonner tends to do well against teams who are average to below average defensively. Looking at his regular season statistics vs. playoff caliber teams would be a better way to go about things IMO. Against teams like Orlando, Philly, Chicago, Miami, Bonner has either shot poorly or shot very little (he did play well against Dallas 3 times though). Against OKC, hes shot well at 50% from the 3 (38.5% overall), but his makes and attempts are fewer compared to his season averages (1.3M down from 1.8 and 2.7 A down from 4.1A.) Bonner has a averaged 3+ 3pointers makes vs. teams like Utah, Washington, Charlotte, Detroit and Atlanta. None of those are great defensive teams and only the Hawks are currently in playoff standings. Its not strictly one way or the other but more often then not he struggles against playoff teams as opposed to playing very well against teams who are less disciplined.

    Additionally, Bonner has a very specific quality that he brings to the team. Minimizing that quality only reveals that he does very little else well. But I don't dislike Bonner the player. It's actually pretty fun watching Bonner (or any player) light up teams from downtown. But Pop has to make the adjustment when Bonner is ineffective.

  23. #123
    Watching the collapse benefactor's Avatar
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    Drz...with the effective Bonner support troll goods, tbh.

  24. #124
    silverblk mystix
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    In case you are too stupid to realize how stupid you are, the flaw in your logic is that there are quite a few more alternatives than the two you presented.


    If you used the past tense, you'd be correct. "Dropped" off... "Fell" off... by using the present tense, you leave it ambiguous as to whether or not his past troubles mean he will continue to have trouble in the future. Based on your past posts, I believe you think he'll have poor playoff performance in the future, which is why I've attacked your beliefs. But let me know if I'm wrong and I'll happily get off your case.


    That's odd that you'd cite +/-. Are you not aware Bonner is the Spurs' adjusted plus/minus leader this year? Over Parker, over Duncan, over everybody. Don't bother pointing me to the articles of apm's flaws, I'm already aware.

    Edit: Looks like he is the unadjusted leader too, see link below. I'm very curious to hear what you have to say about this. For the love of god, please don't let it be a Jim Mora-like "pleaayoffsssss!!!"

    http://www.nba.com/statistics/plusmi...t=9&team=Spurs

    I have a lot of respect for the work and effort you put into this site. I'm truly hoping you'll dig deeper into Bonner's play and understand how he helps the Spurs win games. "Spreading the floor" isn't just some fun phrase that doesn't mean much. It's revolutionized the game for teams that have realized its value.

    Do you watch hockey? If you do, you've seen the vast increase in offense when it's 4 on 4 instead of 5 on 5. The increase is MASSIVE. Now, imagine a hockey team that plays all its offense 4 on 4, but somehow keeps its defense 5 on 5. That's huge, right? That's what Bonner brings to the table. He could sit there on the 3 point line and eat a hoagie or drop a deuce, but as long as teams have to respect his shot, he's doing more for the Spurs winning games than almost anyone else on the team.


    Very true!


    Very false! And very small-minded. Yes, baseball stats are easier to interpret due to the more individual nature of the sport, but that does NOT imply they are not indicative of the quality of the player. I wonder if you think that because you struggle to understand them, and your feeble mind thinks "gosh, I can't handle this, I'll just bash them! Dem der stats r bad!!!"



    You clearly pulled this out of your ass. There is no supporting evidence for this. I'm sure you'll trot out the "I watch the games!" line, which any respectable analyst would know is bull .


    silverblk mystix, of all the Bonner basher posts, yours was easily the dumbest and least coherent. You are doing the other Bonner bashers a disservice by posting in this thread. Your stupidity reflects poorly on them. You would be doing all of us a favor by leaving this thread. Thank you.
    What a bunch of garbage disguised as a polite argument.

    Shoulda' known you were a troll when you initially posted.

    " There are three kinds of lies;lies, damned lies and statistics."

    Color it any way you want....or you could just watch a in' game.

    Lame troll, but I'll give you credit for duping us into playing...

  25. #125
    Veteran sammy's Avatar
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    Why Bonner is disliked?

    Because he sucks, plain and simple. No defense, no rebounding and has feet of cement so when Timmy needs help guarding he's not where he's needed so Timmy has to guard the paint by himself! When needed to shoot or make shots, nothing but bricks! He nowhere to be found in the playoffs, therefore he's overpaid and worthless! For all that, he get's minutes at the expense of others who play a whole lot better! Too bad they didn't trade his worthless ass!

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