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  1. #1
    I refuse to act with common decency spurscenter's Avatar
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    Last edited by spurscenter; 11-19-2007 at 03:46 AM.

  2. #2
    Optomistic but Realistic MrChug's Avatar
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    And he likes black women apparantly.

  3. #3
    Believe. CubanMustGo's Avatar
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    He sux. According to the Dallas Morning-News he is more Whag Zhizhi than Yao.

  4. #4
    I refuse to act with common decency spurscenter's Avatar
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    does he have to jump to dunk?

  5. #5
    Booyakasha fraga's Avatar
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    ^^A little bit...but apparently he's got stamina issues...and he's not all that agile...which is to be expected with someone that enormous...

  6. #6
    Veteran WalterBenitez's Avatar
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    What does he do? is he comparable to Yao?

  7. #7
    <><><><><><> ALVAREZ6's Avatar
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    He's weak as , he couldn't back norcal down.

  8. #8
    I refuse to act with common decency spurscenter's Avatar
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    Eight Feet High and RisingIs Sun Ming Ming too tall to play basketball?
    By Josh Levin
    Posted Wednesday, Feb. 28, 2007, at 3:27 PM ET

    Sun Ming Ming. Click image to expand.Sun Ming Ming waits for a rebound
    When you go to see the world's tallest basketball player, you're paying to watch a guy stand up. Tonight, Sun Ming Ming is sitting down. It's the third quarter, and the 7-foot-9 center is riding the bench with six fouls. One enterprising fan tries to make the best of it. He creeps up behind Sun then puts an arm around the giant's sweaty shoulder. Sun grimaces and pushes him off—no posing for photos during the game. A few steps away, in the gym's back corner, kids gawk at a life-size cardboard effigy. The cutout shows Sun in profile, his eyes cast upward. It looks like he's searching the horizon for a nine-footer, a Goliath to lure away the camera phones.

    Sun Ming Ming plays for the ABA's Maryland Nighthawks, a minor-league team based in the D.C. suburbs. Sun's big-man-in-a-small-gym act—the Nighthawks' tiny, rented arena looks like a set for a basketball-themed Gulliver's Travels—is the perfect tonic for a small-time, attention-hungry hoops league. Since its rebirth in 2000, the ABA has tried, and usually failed, to win over fans with wacky rules (a four-point shot), groundbreaking personnel moves (the Nashville Rhythm hired, and fired, the first female head coach of a men's pro basketball team), and brute force (the league has had as many as 57 teams at a single time). Sun Ming Ming's Nighthawks debut, which attracted a standing-room-only crowd, proved that even the ABA can't screw up the King Kong marketing strategy. Nothing drives ticket sales like a freak of nature.

    What does Sun get out of being enlisted as a basketball sideshow? A little bit of compe ion and a lot of conditioning work. The 23-year-old Sun, who was born in rural Northern China, grew to 7-feet-8 3/4 inches—almost tall enough to make him the world's tallest man—thanks to an undiagnosed brain tumor. Excess growth hormone turned Sun into a basketball scout's fever dream, a player who can dunk without jumping, but it also left him too sluggish to run around. After two surgeries to remove the tumor, Sun can now train for hours without getting tired. Charles Bonsignore, Sun's American agent, says he now simply needs to "spend as much time on the floor as possible."
    Click Here!

    Considering that he's spent more time on talk shows than basketball courts the last few years, it's no surprise that Sun is a long way from the NBA. The requisite YouTube highlight videos—including this one, which shows him banking in a series of unguarded layups—are most notable for what they don't show: Sun Ming Ming running. For someone 7-foot-6, the Houston Rockets' Yao Ming is astoundingly quick and agile. Still, Yao was the runaway winner of a recent poll asking pro basketball players to name the slowest player in the NBA. If Yao is a tortoise, then Sun is a giant tortoise. He's not a beanpole like, say, Shawn Bradley, and he struggles to lug his 370 pounds up and down the court. For Sun, the up-tempo ABA is an acid test. If he's going to make it big, he's going to have to keep up with smaller, quicker players.

    In his Nighthawks debut, I watch as Sun spends half the game on the wrong side of the court. When the team's point guard—a street-ball star who answers to "White Chocolate"—sprints ahead of the pack, he hangs back, waiting for everyone to reverse course. Once everyone's all together, it's clear that Sun isn't just slow in wide open spaces. On defense, he plays the same role as the windmill on a minigolf course, moving his arms back and forth in a deliberate pattern, making contact with the ball and opposing players whenever they stray into his path. When the ball caroms off the rim, he can't ratchet his arms up fast enough to snare the rebound. And despite weighing nearly 400 pounds, he can't outmuscle players who are a foot shorter and 150 pounds lighter.

    On the offensive end, Sun has some moments of brilliance. He dribbles once and swishes a baseline jumper. He rattles the ball down from just past the free-throw line, and he makes a short hook shot. When he holds the ball tentatively instead of firing it up, a teammate yells, "Shoot that big man!" The crowd, though, finds it harder to adjust to the idea of a 7-foot-9 guard. When Sun misses a 15-footer, a woman yells, "Get under the basket!"

    Sun's excellent shooting ability is kind of poignant, considering it's the one basketball skill a big man doesn't need. To make himself useful, a humongous center must be able to rebound, block shots, and push guys around in the paint. Sun can't do those things because he's reached the height of diminishing returns. He's probably the first basketball player who's too tall to play basketball.

    There are a few enormously tall guys who have proved the doubters wrong. Gheorghe Muresan, who along with Manute Bol is the tallest player in NBA history at 7-foot-7, averaged 14.5 points in 1995-96 and won the league's Most Improved Player award. After retiring because of chronic injuries, he became a basketball teacher in suburban Maryland. When Sun moved to town, Muresan had himself a client.

    Muresan knows a lost cause when he sees one: The man once gave me a basketball lesson. But he doesn't think Sun is hopeless. During the Chinese center's second home game, I watch Muresan watch his new pupil. He tells me that he needs to "keep his hands up for rebounds, keep his hands on the ball." In the third quarter, Sun gets the ball in the low post. "Go up! Go up! Go up!" Muresan yells. Instead, Sun passes to a teammate. "He can do a lot of stuff," Muresan says, turning to me. "He's not very athletic, but he has very good ball-handling."

    After the game, Sun goes straight for Muresan and extends his hand. Soon after, Muresan slips out the door, and Sun is the only giant in the room. I ask him some stupid questions—"How do you think you played?"—but he laughs and doesn't answer. He's surrounded by autograph seekers and picture takers. The crowd looks up, and he looks straight ahead, over the tops of their heads. Sun signs his name in Chinese characters—on scraps of paper, minibasketballs, a kid's shoe. "I just want to stand next to him," a blond woman announces. She poses with her back facing him, her fingers pointing up.

  9. #9
    No More Pink NorCal510's Avatar
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    He's weak as , he couldn't back norcal down.
    worrddd

    id post that up

  10. #10
    I refuse to act with common decency spurscenter's Avatar
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    word

  11. #11
    No More Pink NorCal510's Avatar
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    Worrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrd

  12. #12
    I refuse to act with common decency spurscenter's Avatar
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    roooooooaaaaaaaaaaaaaads

  13. #13
    No More Pink NorCal510's Avatar
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    Wahhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhh

  14. #14
    <><><><><><> ALVAREZ6's Avatar
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  15. #15
    Hedo Layup Drill ShoogarBear's Avatar
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    Holy crap.

  16. #16
    In Limbo mardigan's Avatar
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    They had a special on him on TLC or Discovery health or one of those channels not to long back about his health struggles. He seems like a very, very nice person. He has had a huge struggle in his attempt to make the NBA, with tons of adversity, and I really hope he makes it.

  17. #17
    Tim to Tony to Manu! bdictjames's Avatar
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    Does he have an outside game?

  18. #18
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  19. #19
    No More Pink NorCal510's Avatar
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    he'd knock the out of you

    just cuz he's skinny and asian doesn't mean anything. even id kick your ass.

  20. #20
    I refuse to act with common decency spurscenter's Avatar
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    ill hold him down while you jap him

  21. #21
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    Saw a thing about him on Discovery Health. He is that tall because his pituitary gland had a tumor blocking it.

    He has just recently began to start develop physically to where he is in shape for basketball. He is very new to the game

  22. #22
    may the force kick yo ass ObiwanGinobili's Avatar
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    he'd knock the out of you

    just cuz he's skinny and asian doesn't mean anything. even id kick your ass.
    he's not skinny.

  23. #23
    may the force kick yo ass ObiwanGinobili's Avatar
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    They had a special on him on TLC or Discovery health or one of those channels not to long back about his health struggles. He seems like a very, very nice person. He has had a huge struggle in his attempt to make the NBA, with tons of adversity, and I really hope he makes it.

    I saw that too nad I ame away thinking the same thing.
    he's an awesome guy, very nice, works very hard.
    (he was working his ass off in the gym the whole time he had that brain tumor and come to find out he could hardly breathe or stand the whole time... but he would still do it!)

    but honestly I don;t see him playing in the NBA.

  24. #24
    Believe in The Big Three SANANTOJAMES's Avatar
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    hes probably a terrible free throw shooter

  25. #25
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    ^^A little bit...but apparently he's got stamina issues...and he's not all that agile...which is to be expected with someone that enormous...


    TLC showed the special about Giant, and they showed SUN MING practiced and his tryout with the Lakers. Later, they found that he got tumor on his brain. The tumor was the reason for his abnormal size and lack of stamina. Fortunately, they were able to removed the tumor. After the operation, his movement, personality and stamina improved a lot. Now, they are hoping a NBA team will give him a chance to play and fulfill his dreams. For me, I would like to see him play in the NBA, as long as he doesn't wear Spurs uniform.

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