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  1. #126
    Veteran
    My Team
    Dallas Mavericks
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    1,033
    Pau is playing like a feline.

    I gotta use this.

  2. #127
    bandwagon hater
    My Team
    San Antonio Spurs
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    8,385
    If the Grizzlies continue to give this much compo ion to the Mavericks, they (Dallas) dont have a chance in round 2 if they make it.
    Last edited by phyzik; 04-23-2006 at 11:51 PM.

  3. #128
    redirkulous mavsfan1000's Avatar
    My Team
    Dallas Mavericks
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    14,096
    Dallas's bigs played smart though against him. They forced him to be a jump shooter and gave him ton of room so he could get by them and than got physical around the basket against Gasol. Gasol did play scared though. Playoffs have not been friendly to him.

  4. #129
    Damn You Commies T Park's Avatar
    My Team
    San Antonio Spurs
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    55,054
    Gasol is one of the most overrated players in the NBA.

    Period....

  5. #130
    Senior Member RON ARTEST's Avatar
    My Team
    Sacramento Kings
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    2,165
    Gasol is one of the most overrated players in the NBA.

    Period....
    what? if anything hes underated are you kidding me? people barely even talk about him when they talk about big men in the NBA. hes 20 and 10 every night and his passing skill have imroved every season that goes bye. you have no idea what the your talking about. i agree with most that he is a soft player but get real.

  6. #131
    Veteran ManuTim_best of Fwiendz's Avatar
    My Team
    San Antonio Spurs
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    8,897
    i don't get to see the Gasol play, so I can't judge his game, but I think T Park's just firing off his mouth about someone else's team's franchise player.

  7. #132
    In Manu we STILL trust! rayray2k8's Avatar
    My Team
    San Antonio Spurs
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    5,635
    Gasol is one of the most overrated players in the NBA.

    Period....
    My pops ragged on him pretty good, calling him a hippie.
    I say he looks more like a bum.
    Maybe if they gave him a dollar he would of worked a bit harder.
    And when Gasol hit the floor over the camera men, i heard him say "Hes looking for loose change"!!
    I think im gonna be hitting the photoshop soon.

  8. #133
    jho's headband ponky's Avatar
    My Team
    Dallas Mavericks
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    5,013
    HAHAHA, this thread was a great read. There is nothing wrong with Gasol, he was just getting some rest for the playoffs. You really think a softie like Gasol would be playing if his foot was bothering him tonight? Check out the last two season and check the number of games he actually did miss due to foot injuries. If his foot was bothering him there's no way he would have played tonight. We are just a better team but it's cool if some of you don't recognize, you will in about two weeks time.

  9. #134
    jho's headband ponky's Avatar
    My Team
    Dallas Mavericks
    Post Count
    5,013
    My pops ragged on him pretty good, calling him a hippie.
    I say he looks more like a bum.
    Maybe if they gave him a dollar he would of worked a bit harder.
    And when Gasol hit the floor over the camera men, i heard him say "Hes looking for loose change"!!
    I think im gonna be hitting the photoshop soon.

    maybe you should work on trimming your eyebrows and losing the elf hat first, goodnight!

  10. #135
    Believe.
    My Team
    Dallas Mavericks
    Post Count
    313
    boy it was a great game. i was actually at the game. I was walking around with a sign that said "The Lakers SUCK!". everyone loved it.

  11. #136
    Believe. CubanMustGo's Avatar
    My Team
    San Antonio Spurs
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    10,567
    http://sports.espn.go.com/nba/dailyd...ilydime-060424

    The beauty of the playoffs is that there's no hiding who you are. During the regular season, what with the blur of games and varying schedules, a good player who gets enough touches and plays enough minutes can produce the kind of stats and highlights that will fool 78.4 percent of the people who call themselves basketball fans or experts or aficionados or whatever other le looks good on the business card in your mind.

    Pau Gasol is a good player. Maybe even a very good player. Great player? Franchise player? Put-a-team-on-his-back-and-carry-them player? I've heard people refer to him in those terms. I've never seen it, although to be honest, I saw the Grizzlies live twice and maybe a dozen times on TV.

    Including Game 1 against the Mavericks.

    Gasol finished with a team-leading 24 points, seven rebounds, four assists and two blocked shots. In a team-leading 41 minutes. Respectable numbers. Good-player numbers. Maybe even very-good-player numbers.

    They were also meaningless numbers, in the context of winning or losing the game. Which is why numbers can't be trusted to assess a team or a player or a game. (Sorry, Hubie.) Gasol was so timid in going scoreless in the first half that his supporters were left murmuring about his foot injury obviously bothering him. That theory was blown up by coach Mike Fratello, who told a reporter coming out of the locker room that his star forward was physically fine but that his "confidence" apparently was shaken. I only wish the reporter had told us how exactly Fratello said it, since I can't think of more damning words by a coach about his star at halftime of a team's first playoff game.

    Gasol, of course, then offered more proof there was nothing physically wrong by galloping down court to finish a third-quarter fastbreak with Bobby Jackson.

    The only mystery is that GM Jerry West didn't storm the court right after that dunk and hold a press conference to announce that Gasol had been suspended for not showing up until the third quarter of a playoff game. That, after all, would seem the only appropriate response in light of 76ers GM Billy King going off on Allen Iverson and Chris Webber for showing up less than an hour before the team's next-to-last regular-season game.

    Now, anybody willing to dismiss his first half because of his second-half production doesn't understand the responsibility of the star of an underdog team. This is, supposedly, the Grizzlies' leader, their go-to guy. And it's not that he just didn't score. That happens. He wasn't doing anything, other than waiting for the defense to collapse enough for him to get rid of the ball. He looked nervous, or scared, take your pick.

    That will happen sometimes to good players. Maybe even to very good players. Great players? Franchise players? Never.

    -- Ric Bucher, ESPN The Magazine

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