At least you weren't like the broadcasters from last night and their endless references to the Raptors now being extinct.
Raps are here to stay people!![]()
At least you weren't like the broadcasters from last night and their endless references to the Raptors now being extinct.
Raps are here to stay people!![]()
U can use it if u want to ; I can replace it, no problem
Aw... you're sweet. I'll put it in my sig.Thanks.
Keep it as your avitar and start posting even more.![]()
ok then
this series were funny for me....
i cheered for Raps the whole season (in the east) and the Spurs in the west
but after 5 minutes of game 1 i started to cheer for nets
reasons
1. Boki
2. Boki
3. Kidd
4. Raptores are too unexperienced and would get eliminated fast even if advancing; Bosh didnt show much
my observations/thoughts:
1. Nets are a very experienced veteran team and Raptors didnt have much chance against them; even the 2 games Raptors won could be very easily won by the Nets
2. damn Vince Carter.... except his crazy dunking he is a walking vaginahe has got skills and body to be one of the all time greatest players but a weak WEAK mind
3. Kidd is amazing; you got to love to watch him play, he makes everyone around him a better player
4. Raptors have a BRIGHT future! if i were in their place i would try to trade Bosh for someone wit a post up game to complement Baragnani (D. Howard, Oden, E. Okafor or someone like that)
5. i didnt Bosh in this series; or maybe Nets just did an amazing job defending him
6. Baragnani is an amazing talent; more than worth of that no. 1 pick
7. i was sorry to see Nachbar to miss 2 game winners; even though he had a really clutch 3 and several other imporant plays and an impressive series as a role player i am relieved to see Nets advance
dont want him to remember these series after his missed oportunities
edit:
p.s.
lets show support for Boki and the Nets here
http://www.spurstalk.com/forums/showthread.php?t=66310
Last edited by Kamnik; 05-06-2007 at 04:07 AM.
Raptors hold their heads high and learned plenty of valuable lessons this season...
Raptors Take More than Dirty Socks Home on Locker Cleanout Day
http://www.nba.com/raptors/news/ulmer_050507.html
May 5, 2007
(TORONTO) -- So where are the Toronto Raptors right now?
Remember the final scene in Rocky I.
The fight is over, the music is swelling, Rocky has battled Apollo Creed for 15 rounds and the ring announcer in the background proclaims Creed is still The Champ. The music keeps on soaring. No one even pays attention, so great has been the battle and the valley crossed.
That’s where the Raptors are now. Right there. Losers in name only.
Saturday, the Raptors cleaned out their lockers and played meet the press for the final time on the heels of Friday’s agonizing 98-97 road loss to the New Jersey Nets.
Everything started to click for Chris Bosh in the fourth quarter of Game 6.
After sporadic play in the first two games, the Raps were blown out of Games 3 and 4 in New Jersey and then, after coach Sam Mitc juggled his lineup and the club took another gulp of air, the Raps did the unexpected, beating New Jersey in Game 5.
Then came the unthinkable, a shootout in Jersey that ended only when Jose Calderon put a pass a foot too short for a Chris Bosh dunk
By then, Calderon and T.J. Ford had returned from injuries to score 36 points. Morris Peterson, an afterthought through the middle of the season contributed 17 more as well as fine defensive work on Vince Carter.
The pillar of the franchise, Chris Bosh, delivered 23 points and rookie Andrea Bargnani, who may emerge as an even more formidable scorer than Bosh, added 17.
How did they get here?
The Raptors were little more than curiosities when the season started, a team with 27 wins the season previous and a roster remade with an Italian rookie and players unknown in NBA circles who had played in Israel, Spain, Italy and elsewhere.
The Season:
The Raptors walked into an uninviting scenario. They were blowing up their lineup and importing players who would need time to grow accustomed to each other, all the while negotiating a wicked early schedule.
The Raptors lost all four games on a West Coast road trip and started 2-8.
“To me, when we came back from the West Coast 2-8, everybody said we were done, we couldn’t beat Cleveland,” said Coach Sam Mitc .
Instead, Chris Bosh scored 25 points and the Raptors dropped the Cavs 95-87.
Mitc found hope in another win.
“We got drilled pretty good in Miami and coming back on the back to back, when Orlando was playing as well as anyone in the East, we went into that building and won (91-84 on Dec. 13). No matter how bad things got, that showed what we were capable of.”
For once, the breaks were following Toronto. With the third-quarter buzzer a second away, Bosh put up a 55-foot swish against the Wizards, Jan. 31. It was that kind of season.
“Thinks like that happened all year,” Bosh said. “I could remember the year before, things like that happened to the other team. That just shows how things really turned around for us.”
The Raptors beat Washington 119-109. The win capped a 10-5 January. They were now a .500 team and they would add 20 wins to their previous total.
Along the way they would fashion a tandem at point guard widely considered among the NBA’s best.
Ford brought a noticeably better shooting touch, averaged 14 points a game and easily outran defences.
Calderon, only mildly impressive as a rookie, delivered a spectacular second season and boosted his field-goal percentage from .423 to .521. Jorge Garbajosa and Anthony Parker became glue players. Bargnani hit for 15 or more points in 22 games and Bosh averaged 22.6 points and 10.7 rebounds. The turnaround was so significant, Mitc was named Coach of the Year
http://www.nba.com/raptors/news/ulmer2_050507.html
May 5, 2007
Continued from Page 1
The Decisions:
General manager Bryan Colangelo has to decide whether to re-sign Mitc , who is rumoured to be high on wish lists in Indiana and Charlotte.
That starts with conversations with Mitc ’s agent Lonnie Cooper on Monday.
“We’ll try to negotiate a fair and reasonable deal and hope we can get this resolved quickly,” Colangelo said.
“It’s our intention to get Sam under contract as quickly as possible. That much is clear. Whether Sam decides this is the right situation for him has to be part of the equation too.”
Mitc said naturally money and term were issues, but he wanted to return to Toronto.
Andrea Bargnani gives Raptors fans just one of the many bright things to look forward to. “That’s not going to entirely be my decision. All I can do is try to do the best job I can do. I haven’t thought about it too much.”
Meanwhile, swingman Morris Peterson is looking at free agency. Peterson endured a disappointing season. His starts went down from 77 to 12 and his points per game halved from 16.8 to 8.9.
“Coming back is definitely a possibility that’s realistic,” he said. “Like I said, I love the city. The fans have embraced me from day one.”
“I’ve talked to him a couple of times at great length,” said Colangelo. “I’ve shared with him that I have a lot of respect for him.”
The problem is expectations, he said.
“Is he’s going to be here and frustrated and want to play more. One season biting your lip is one thing. I can’t see him wanting to do that two seasons in a row.”
The Byzantine logistics of the CBA might present an opportunity, Colangelo said.
“There is an interesting situation with his contract in that he is a free agent. I think some people will look at the last few games and say that’s the Morris Peterson we know and remember and feel he’s got a lot of basketball left. Maybe there’s a deal there, a sign and trade, something that lands him in a better situation. “
The Future.
The Raptors prospectus shifted dramatically in one night. The club’s gutsy performance in Game 6 proved how badly the post-season experience was needed and how profoundly the team had profited from it.
“It was a battle with the Nets, trying to figure their defence out and being aggressive at the same time,” said Bosh, who struggled through much of the series. “Game 6, I was just aggressive. I remembered everything. I was focused and most of all, I was having fun.”
Clearly, the Raptors, with few players outside Rasho Nesterovic boasting any kind of playoff experience, needed to work in the glare of prime time.
“You look at the Isiah-Detroit teams, Chicago with Michael Jordan,” said forward Anthony Parker. “A lot of teams have to go through trying times before they turn the corner and become great organizations and I certainly feel we have the building blocks to do that.”
The Raptors were routinely out-rebounded and if Peterson goes, there will be a need for an offensively gifted swingman.
“The obvious thing is we need to add some pieces because we came up short in advancing,” said Mitc . “You look at the future of T.J., Andrea, Chris (Bosh), (Kris) Humphries and Joey and all those other young guys. It’s bright.”
There is much to do but the pairing of the club’s two young big men should ensure respectability for years to come.
Next year, Bargnani will become a far more prominent part of the offence.
“He has the tools and the potential to be a great player in this league,” said Bosh, who should know.
“The more that he asserts himself and the better he gets, and the more I do…it’s going to be scary.”
Because of previous trades, the Raptors will not have a draft choice.
“One thing we have to do is have players in the current system continue to get better and not take this experience and relax, which I’ve seen happen before,” said Colangelo.
“That taste that’s in your mouth right now, that’s bitter from losing last night. Taste that bitterness, don’t taste sweetness from the success of a 47-win season. That’s not good enough. It’s never good enough.”
Andrea Bargnani & Jorge Garbajosa Highlight 2007 All-Rookie Team
Raptors Rookies(TORONTO) -- The Toronto Raptors announced Wednesday forwards Andrea Bargnani and Jorge Garbajosa have been named to the 2007 T-Mobile NBA All-Rookie First Team. Bargnani was the first overall pick in the 2006 NBA Draft. Garbajosa, a native of Madrid, Spain, joined the Raptors via free agency in July 2006. Rounding out the 2007 first team are Portland’s Brandon Roy, Minnesota’s Randy Foye, Memphis’ Rudy Gay and Portland’s LaMarcus Aldridge.
Bargnani finished in the top 10 among rookies in seven of nine major statistical categories, including third in points per game (11.6) and fifth in minutes (25.1) and blocks (0.82). In January, he was named T-Mobile Eastern Conference Rookie of the Month after helping the Raptors to a 10-5 record, posting averages of 11.1 points, 3.6 rebounds, 1.2 assists, 0.8 steals and 27.0 minutes in 14 games. He shot .410 (57-139) from the field and .394 (26-66) from three-point range during the month and led the team’s bench in scoring six times.
Bargnani became the third Raptor to receive multiple Rookie of the Month awards upon receiving the February honour. For the month, he posted averages of 14.3 points, 3.9 rebounds and 28.7 minutes in 12 games. He shot .508 (62-of-122) from the field, .483 (29-of-60) from three-point range and .826 (19-of-23) from the line and led the team’s bench in scoring seven times.
Garbajosa finished the season fifth among rookies in rebounds (4.9 rpg) and posted a 1.22 steals-per-turnover ratio. He started 60 of his 67 games, contributing 8.5 points (eighth among rookies) in 28.5 minutes (third). Garbajosa’s 60 starts was the third most by a Raptors rookie in team history.
In December, Garbajosa was named the winner of the T-Mobile Eastern Conference Player of the Month. During the month, he helped the Raptors to an 8-8 record, posting averages of 10.7 points, 6.5 rebounds, 2.7 assists, 1.3 steals and 34.8 minutes in 15 games. He shot .439 (69-157) from the field and .933 (14-15) from the line and led the team in rebounding four times.
Both Bargnani and Garbajosa were named to the rookie team for the T-Mobile Rookie Challenge played during All-Star Weekend. Bargnani scored 12 points in 23 minutes, while Garbajosa totaled six points, four rebounds and four assists.
This marks the first time in franchise history that two Raptors have been named to the first team in the same season. In total, eight Raptors have been named to the All-Rookie First Team (Damon Stoudamire, 1996, Marcus Camby, 1997, Vince Carter, 1999, Morris Peterson, 2001, Chris Bosh, 2004 and Charlie Villanueva, 2006).
Since the NBA began selecting All-Rookie teams in 1962-63, two players from the same ballclub have made the First Team just 16 times.
The T-Mobile NBA All-Rookie Second Team consists of Utah’s Paul Millsap (36), Charlotte’s Adam Morrison (35), Chicago’s Tyrus Thomas (26), Minnesota’s Craig Smith (21) and Boston’s Rajon Rondo (10), Charlotte’s Walter Hermann (10) and New Jersey’s Marcus Williams (10) all tied for the final spot on the second team.
The voting panel consisted of the NBA’s 30 head coaches, who were asked to select five players for the first team and five players for the second team, regardless of position. Coaches were not permitted to vote for players on their own team. Two points were awarded for first team votes and one for second team votes.
Building upon its already strong appeal to the nation's youth and as the Official Wireless Services Partner of the NBA, T-Mobile is showcasing the NBA's youngest players -- the Rookies -- through the NBA's Rookie program. Highlights include rookie awards presentations including the T-Mobile Rookie of the Year, and the T-Mobile Rookie Challenge & Youth Jam, an All-Star compe ion between NBA rookies and second-year players. At this year's compe ion during NBA All-Star 2007, T-Mobile, along with NBA Cares, hosted more than 6,000 area students in the lower bowl of the arena for a special night of watching some of the best basketball players in the world. This is a part of T-Mobile's continued efforts to connect kids to positive people, places and programs.
Below are the results of the balloting for the 2006-07 T-Mobile NBA All-Rookie teams:
Player Team First (2 pt) Second (1 Pt) Total
Brandon Roy Portland 29 - 58
Andrea Bargnani Toronto 28 1 57
Randy Foye Minnesota 21 6 48
Rudy Gay Memphis 12 15 39
Jorge Garbajosa Toronto 13 11 37 (tie)
LaMarcus Aldridge Portland 14 9 37 (tie)
2006-07 T-Mobile NBA ALL-ROOKIE SECOND TEAM
Player Team First (2 pt) Second (1 Pt) Total
Paul Millsap Utah 10 16 36
Adam Morrison Charlotte 12 11 35
Tyrus Thomas Chicago 5 16 26
Craig Smith Minnesota 1 19 21
Rajon Rondo Boston 1 8 10 (tie)
Walter Hermann Charlotte 1 8 10 (tie)
Marcus Williams New Jersey 1 8 10 (tie)
Other players receiving votes, with point totals (first place votes): Tarence Kinsey, Memphis, 6 (1); Renaldo Balkman, New York, 5; Rodney Carney, Philadelphia, 5 (1); Sheldon Williams, Atlanta, 4; Allan Ray, Boston, 1; Thabo Sefolosha, Chicago, 1; Daniel Gibson, Cleveland, 1; Jordan Farmar, L.A. Lakers, 1; Josh Boone, New Jersey, 1; Sergio Rodriguez, Portland, 1.
I was just going to post that- heard it on the radio on way home from GTG.
Props A.B. & Jorge.
Raptors represent!![]()
Garbajosa on the first team is a joke. Walter Hermann, Craig Smith and Paul Millsap all had better seasons.
Garbajosa and Morrison should headline the First Team All-NBA Overrated Rookie team.
I was surprised to see Hermann's vote total so low, especially when he played so well at the end of the season- but Garbajosa started for the team with the fourth best record in the East.
I knew you would have to comment on this-- where's your Bustnani crack?
LOL. Do you watch the games or just look at random statistics and make wild statements accordingly.
http://www.thestar.com/Sports/article/210953
Raptor puzzle mostly in place
What's next for the Raptors?
THE CORE
Chris Bosh
Three-year contract extension with a player option for a fourth year kicks in next season. Cornerstone of the franchise, he keeps improving.
T.J. Ford
Three-year contract extension with a player option for a fourth year kicks in next season. Young point guard learning his way as team leader.
Andrea Bargnani
Under rookie contract for next three years with a team option for a fourth. Vastly improved from start of year, sky's the limit.
THE SUPPORTING CAST
Anthony Parker
Two years remaining on contract. A glue guy who might have most complete game on team.
Jose Calderon
One year remaining on contract. Could be best backup point guard in the league, comfortable with role.
Jorge Garbajosa
Two years remaining on contract. Has to come back from serious leg injury.
Rasho Nesterovic
One year guaranteed remaining, one year player option. Solid, if unspectacular. If Bargnani's projected as a starter, he could be moved.
I hope Sho stays with the Raps. I like the team a lot; have some additional favorite players from this season- Uros, Calderon, and AB especially.
But if Sho goes, I just need to know where so I know who I am rooting for.
THE QUESTION MARKS
Morris Peterson
Free agent this summer. It'd be a big surprise if longest-serving Raptor was in Toronto next season. May fetch good value in a sign-and-trade.
Joey Graham
One year left on deal. Infuriates coaches with inconsistency, shocks them with athleticism, but it might be time to move him along.
Kris Humphries
One year left on rookie contract. Good backup deep in rotation, energy guy who can help if he'll be satisfied with secondary role.
Juan Dixon
One year left on contract. Good rotation player in regular season, proven scorer who can help.
Luke Jackson
A guaranteed deal for next year. He's cheap – less than $500,000 – and much more a project than a prospect. Depth guy.
Pape Sow
Free agent in the summer. Everyone loves the guy, but not sure there'll be room at the end of the roster for him.
Uros Slokar
Free agent this summer. See Sow. Same deal, but may have enough potential that they keep him around for another look.
Darrick Martin
Free agent this summer. If he wants to play another year as a de facto coach, they should bring him back; if he wants to coach, they should add him to the staff.
There's only soooooo many teams you can root for AngelFor your sake I hope they keep him in Toronto!
http://www.nba.com/raptors/news/ulmer.html
Time for the Ulmies
May 18, 12:06 p.m.
Okay, Raptors general manager Bryan Colangelo is coming off a shutout season. The only thing close to a misstep for the reigning NBA Executive of the Year was landing Fred Jones and Colangelo remedied that by swapping him for the more valuable Juan Dixon.
When half the town wanted coach Sam Mitc fired after a slow start, Colangelo stuck with him. Mitc would emerge as the Coach of The Year. Drafting Andrea Bargnani, signing Anthony Parker and Jorge Garbajosa, acquiring T.J. Ford, Rasho Nesterovic and Kris Humphries. Masterstrokes.
But as Colangelo readily admitted in accepting his latest bit of management hardware, he found a "blank canvas" in Toronto because of acting GM's Wayne Embry's financially liberating trade of Jalen Rose.
Many a lumberjack can cut a tree. Rare is the craftsperson who can make it a cabinet. Don't bother looking that up, I came up with it just now.
To get the Raptors to the next level, Colangelo knows he needs to boost the team's athleticism, primarily by landing an athletic swingman.
This won't be easy.
He has precious few tools. Nesterovic may be redundant if Bargnani, as expected, spends more time this season playing centre. Morris Peterson is a sign-and trade possibility. There is a mid-level exception in play but no current draft choices (they've already been dealt).
The Raptors have organizational depth at one position. Their tandem of Ford and Jose Calderon rivals any in the league save for Steve Nash and Leandro Barbosa but having that kind of depth of talent and a willingness by both players to share the position for the common good may be too great an advantage to sacrifice in trade.
Colangelo hinted that the club would be looking at signing away restricted free agents The list of players knocked around, Golden State's Mickael Pietrus was dubbed the best of the bunch on the blog of Star scribe Doug Smith, is far from sterling.
In one spectacular year in Toronto, Bryan Colangelo has overseen a remarkable transformation, a 20-win improvement on the floor and a new relevance for the Raptors in the eyes of the media and the hearts of fans.
This then, is the beginning of the second year and a second chapter. The strokes won't be as bold, you can't bring in nine new players every year, but the ingenuity and imagination necessary to push the team from a one-year-wonder to consistent playoff contender will be just as difficult to manage.
How he does it, and you know he will, promises to be one of the most entertaining elements of the off-season.
Finally, it's time for the Year-End Ulmies, those coveted awards that signal a season well lived.
Most improved player: Jose Calderon.
Guy cool enough to play James Bond: T.J. Ford.
Most enviable release: Andrea Bargnani.
Funniest answer: Bargnani, again, when asked what his mother cooks him, looked down balefully at reporter as if he had two heads (okay, it was me). "Spaghetti," he said.
Most open interview: Joey Graham.
Most serene: Chris Bosh in a walk.
Most knowledgeable of game: Anthony Parker.
Hair most resembling that of a sportswriter: Jorge Garbajosa.
Player I would call to help fix my computer: Uros Slokar.
Greatest Humanitarian: Pape Sow.
Yes!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!![]()
![]()
Mitc Gets Contract Extension
http://www.nba.com/raptors/news/ulmer.html
Mitc 's the Man
May 22, 5:06 p.m.
The phrase “I managed good but boy, did they play bad’” is generally credited to Casey Stengel. As always, there is a profound truth buried with the nonsense.
Sam Mitc , the reigning NBA Coach of the Year won 47 games this year but might have done a better job in 2005-2006, when he looked down his bench and saw Rafael Araujo instead of Kris Humphries and Mike James instead of T.J. Ford.
In 2004-2005, he managed 33 wins with Aaron Williams, Lamond Murray, Milt Palacio and an unhappy Jalen Rose.
Give any man a truckful of bricks, wood and tools and he can build you a castle. If you really want to see what he’s made of, give that same man some sand, a bucket and some surf.
Sam Mitc has worked with every imaginable element and that’s why he was at the Air Canada Centre yesterday along with Raptors GM Bryan Colangelo and MLSE Chairman Larry Tanenbaum, announcing a new four-year-contract.
Mitc ’s return wasn’t much of a mystery. Committed to sticking with Mitc despite a rocky start this season, Colangelo paid for his loyalty to the tune of several million dollars and got precisely the man he had wanted. He spent part of one season and all of this one making sure.
“The first meeting we had he assured me he would give me every opportunity to be successful and he’s been a man of his word,” Mitc said. “That’s why I’m still here.”
“Sam is fair with all the players, he treats them all equally regardless of star status and that’s something that is very, very delicate in this business,” Colangelo said. “They always seem to be prepared and ready. Despite only winning 27 games last year, the team was always prepared and always found a way to be compe ive.
“This year we found a way to be compe ive but we also found a way to close. That’s the evolution of a team, the evolution of a coach, of a coaching staff and I can only imagine it getting better in the future.”
This is where Mitc racked up the hard miles. When he arrived here three years ago, he came with a mindset and sensibilities heavily shaped by his 13 years yeoman service in the NBA.
But coaching is a profoundly different gig. Media is a minor concern to a player, a major one to a coach. Meetings, managing coaches, orchestrating travel, working with players, setting the correct tone, monitoring demands from inside the organization for appearances and player participation, these things mean learning to delegate and trust.
If you gave a high school coach the reins of an NBA team, his first game might not be a bad one. He would however, likely be done by week’s end. The trick is mastering everything that comes with the part where you walk down the sidelines and shout at referees.
“Every day you learn a little bit,” Mitc said. “You grow as a person and that has helped me the most as a coach. Learning to rely on other people, understanding you can’t do everything by yourself, you just grow on a day-to-day basis.”
That he has mastered just that stirs a paternal pride in Tanenbaum.
“Sam had a tough time when he was here,” Tanenbaum said. “We helped Sam to work through some of the issues that were here when he first came in here. We’ve had a few bonding experiences.”
“We cried together and laughed together. We did a lot of that.”
For Mitc , that often meant making due with a paper-thin lineup when the injuries were kept at bay and a laughable one when they weren’t. Mitc , as he should, sees those first two years as some of his best work.
“I think I learned to coach those first years when we weren’t as good. You had to. You had to bear down. You had to spend more time watching tape, more time with your players, more time coming up with fresh ideas to keep your team compe ive and playing hard. This year, when we got better talent, I wouldn’t say it was easier, but it was refreshing. It was a common thing to look down the bench and see guys who could do the job.”
Mitc ’s story couldn’t be written any other way. He grew up in Columbus, Georgia in a house packed with siblings. His parents worked tirelessly. Mitc starred at Mercer College, but was cut by Houston Rockets because the team’s first round choice had a guaranteed contract. It took him stints in Europe and the Continental Baseketball Association to get back the NBA and he needed every bit of resolve he showed in getting to the league, plus a little bit more, to become the rarest of things – a coach with a second contract. Now he’s got what he’s rarely had and honestly deserves: security.
“Sam came from a very hard life,” Tanenbaum said. “He didn’t come by it easy. He worked for everything he got…That’s a great attribute, the ability to know you want to succeed and work hard for it. “
Sorry Angel.
Pre-draft CampBryan Colangelo, Sam Mitc and their various trusty lieutenants are in Orlando this week at the NBA's annual pre-draft camp and that sounds like a strange place for a whole whack of Toronto people to be, given the Raptors don't have a draft pick.
But the work really isn't in the watching of players.
The work is in the chats they'll have with other general managers, in the rumours they'll pick up and in the informal discussion they might have with agents who prowl the Disney hallways.
And remember this: all those trades that Colangelo may have considered but didn't consummate in February could very well be on the table again.
One guy they had interest in, according to a couple of spies, is Golden State's never-used Sarunas Jasikevicius and that might be a name being kicked around this week.
They'll be shopping Morris Peterson, at least informally, to gauge interest and you can be sure if someone wants to talk about Rasho Nesterovic, they'll listen.
So no matter what dearth of news comes out of the camp, rest assured work is being done.
I'm sorry for Sho. I'll root for whatever team he joins/ is sent to.
But that is something for another day because...
According to Slovenia time, it's Sho's birthday!!!!!!!!!
![]()
![]()
![]()
![]()
![]()
![]()
![]()
![]()
![]()
And last but never least, Raptors Red Cake.
![]()
![]()
There are currently 1 users browsing this thread. (0 members and 1 guests)