Great thread. So proud of Manu![]()
I've been one of his biggest critics the last few years. Playing out of control, passing into the stands, being a turnover machine, having a great game followed by 5 terrible games. My biggest beef was as he aged, he didn't play 'within himself'. Writing checks his body couldn't cash sorta' thing. But man, he got it together and EVERY TIME the Spurs needed that spark, he delivered.
Thank you Manu. Incredible year, incredible playoffs. You came through.
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He played very well.
Absolutely. I have always loved Manu for the same reasons many Spurs fans do, but also because I was an athlete and I appreciate and connect with guys like him. I was furious over last year and really thought he was on his last legs and nothing was more gratifying to me than seeing Manu work so hard and play so well. That's Manu. He avenges any wrongs he might have done and takes it personally. It's why no matter how bad he was playing, Pop couldn't pull him last year.
Last edited by DPG21920; 06-16-2014 at 01:16 AM.
You know Ginobili is old if he has dunked on a dinosaur. You the man, Manu!
We wouldn't have won tonight if it wasn't for his spark in the first half off of the bench!![]()
And the legend goes on...
The manner in which he began to show signs of deterioration - the turnovers, the bad plays, missed shots, etc. - never really impacted how I felt about him. Yeah, he could be frustrating at times because it looked to us like someone throwing his head against a wall over and over again and hoping eventually to knock it down. To us, his shortcomings seemed obvious, and the way he kept throwing himself into the paint or rocketing passes into the nosebleeds or coughing up the ball on a drive was indicative of the end of his usefulness and showed signs that he just wasn't able to rationalize his own weaknesses anymore. I think a lot of us cast him as stubborn, tbh.
But I was reminded tonight of what Pop once called him, "the ultimate compe or", and that's really what he's always been. The guy who never really becomes timid or shies away from pressure, who keeps throwing himself at a defense and trusting that eventually something 2005-esque will come his way and the opponent will crack. 2013 was about Manu suffering through those indignities for an entire season, ultimately suffering a humiliating defeat that many put a vast amount of blame on his shoulders for, and then 2014 was the wall finally giving way. He came back after that season and stayed healthy, and he kept driving and twisting and shooting and making ridiculous passes and crazy three-pointers and sometimes his body failed him, but he remained exactly what we've always loved him for being. Manu, despite his age and physical limitations, has never once stopped competing for this team and for Duncan and Pop. The legacy he'll have once he retires is too great for any one postseason debacle to erase. For so long he's been the one intangible thing that Pop could unleash on a team he couldn't quite crack, and Manu would just go to work. He came up short, a lot, last year, but this season he came at it again with the same tenacity he's always had and this time he delivered, just like he did so many times before.
This le, regarding Manu, isn't about redeeming himself, as far as I'm concerned. I think it's more about him reminding me (and a lot of us) why he's so great and why we as Spurs fans love that er to death.
Well said.![]()
That dunk was the play that took all hope away from the Heat and the following 3 pointer was just a kick in the nuts.
ManuDunkonBoshwill forever live on in history. Highlight of his career
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wasn't his dunk similar to the no-call last year when Allen mugged him?
if so, talk about revenge on that clown.
Manu redeemed himself this year. Hats off to him.
That was the GAME THERE, they never had a shot afterwards.
He did and then some! He showed up and proved he still has it in big games. Nobody can say ever again about him.
It would have been very fitting as well as deserved if Manu had been named mvp or co mvp. Without looking I would say his +/- numbers were off the charts. All due respect to young pup Leonard's performances but with it being so close stat wise I give it to Manu for the intangibles, leadership, seniority, past history and the fact that he was arguably mvp in other years but took a back seat to Duncan and Parker. In other words he was due. But as we all know he is team first and probably prefers it this way. So proud of him and to me he is the true MVP of the e series.
For the Spurs to repeat, other than keeping every rotation players and signing a serviceable big, Manu's health and status will be a key factor. On the other hand, I don't worry about Timmy. At least for now, he seems to be able to play another 2-3 years.
So how many years will it take for ESPN to replay that dunk? You know if it had been the other way around we'd be seeing that dunk ad infinitum on every broadcast for the next week or 2.
The faces in the background. That Asian guy and Green can't believe it and Ayers well...![]()
I believe so as well. I don't think people really realize just how good he was in these playoffs and these finals. It's not all stats. Not all buckets are created equal.
Manu was incredible. What a pleasure to witness!
He deserves his new contract $$ and I was so wrong to doubt it 12 months ago...
Props Manu, you are one of the greatest Spur ever
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