benny ha scritto:mi è scesa una lacrima grande caniGGGia, se la gazzetta non ti prende non capisce un tubo di sport
Se è bravo, a maggior ragione non lo dovrebbero prendere!
Bravo= onesto
onesto= non comandabile
L'equazione è semplice. Funziona così dovunque ci sia potere... e dal momento che i "media" sono un potere, non può regnare la meritocrazia, sinonimo di bravura, sinonimo di onestà, sinonimo di incorruttibilità.
raf ha scritto:E non la riesci a vedere la differenza fra i due?
E' come mettere a confronto Marat Safin e Richard Gasquet.
Non regge.
WAIT A MINUTE!
T-MAC a talento non è secondo a nessuno, o quantomeno il tuo paragone non rappresenta in maniera chiara la realtà.
Wow that's it, that's your best shot?!? [IL MAGO vs. Dunleavy]
E te pareva...
Sheed ma mi spieghi che cazzo scrivo a fare?
Rasheed rethinking retirement? Dirk re-ups with Dallas
- With Doc Rivers deciding to return to the Celtics next season, and Boston close to re-signing Paul Pierce to a four-year deal, a source said Saturday night that there is a "possibility" that veteran forward Rasheed Wallace could re-think his decision last month to retire after 15 NBA seasons. The Celtics believed Wallace would retire after the team's seven-game Finals loss to the Lakers, and he appeared to make the decision final a week or so later.
Because Wallace had two years and $13 million (including $6.32 million next season) remaining on his deal when he retired, the Celtics have been looking into moving his contract to another team, which would then get the savings from Wallace's cap number, in exchange for assets. But obviously, if Wallace decides to play next season, that team wouldn't get the money off of its cap.
Rivers decided to return for the last year of his contract last week, after his family members encouraged him to come back and give it one more try with his veteran team next year. That was followed by Pierce quickly getting close to a four-year contract worth more than $60 million with Boston.
The potential development with Wallace came on a day that the Mavericks, in a hardly surprising result, reached terms with former MVP Dirk Nowitzki on a four-year deal worth $80 million. Like Pierce, Nowitzki opted out of the final year of his contract, leaving $21.5 million on the table, seemingly in order to get one last long-term deal before 2011, when the likelihood of a lockout by the owners is significant.
Negotiations between Nowitzki and the Mavericks took only one day, with his representatives and the Mavericks reaching agreement quickly. Nowitzki could have gotten a maximum of $96 million from Dallas, but left some money on the table in order to allow the team to have more room to sign other players, including free agent center Brendan Haywood. Haywood met Saturday with the Heat in North Carolina and has interest from a number of other teams, including the Cleveland Cavaliers.
ESPN.com first reported the agreement between the Mavericks and Nowitzki.
«Non oso neanche immaginare a cosa possa essere la vita senza il basket» - FB
canigggia ha scritto:E te pareva...
Sheed ma mi spieghi che cazzo scrivo a fare?
Rasheed rethinking retirement? Dirk re-ups with Dallas
- With Doc Rivers deciding to return to the Celtics next season, and Boston close to re-signing Paul Pierce to a four-year deal, a source said Saturday night that there is a "possibility" that veteran forward Rasheed Wallace could re-think his decision last month to retire after 15 NBA seasons. The Celtics believed Wallace would retire after the team's seven-game Finals loss to the Lakers, and he appeared to make the decision final a week or so later.
Because Wallace had two years and $13 million (including $6.32 million next season) remaining on his deal when he retired, the Celtics have been looking into moving his contract to another team, which would then get the savings from Wallace's cap number, in exchange for assets. But obviously, if Wallace decides to play next season, that team wouldn't get the money off of its cap.
Rivers decided to return for the last year of his contract last week, after his family members encouraged him to come back and give it one more try with his veteran team next year. That was followed by Pierce quickly getting close to a four-year contract worth more than $60 million with Boston.
The potential development with Wallace came on a day that the Mavericks, in a hardly surprising result, reached terms with former MVP Dirk Nowitzki on a four-year deal worth $80 million. Like Pierce, Nowitzki opted out of the final year of his contract, leaving $21.5 million on the table, seemingly in order to get one last long-term deal before 2011, when the likelihood of a lockout by the owners is significant.
Negotiations between Nowitzki and the Mavericks took only one day, with his representatives and the Mavericks reaching agreement quickly. Nowitzki could have gotten a maximum of $96 million from Dallas, but left some money on the table in order to allow the team to have more room to sign other players, including free agent center Brendan Haywood. Haywood met Saturday with the Heat in North Carolina and has interest from a number of other teams, including the Cleveland Cavaliers.
ESPN.com first reported the agreement between the Mavericks and Nowitzki.
il solito sheed
So never mind the darkness
We still can find a way
'Cause nothin' lasts forever
Even cold November rain
cani se ti posso dare un consiglio prima di scrivere un altro bellissimo articolo(sei davvero bravo complimenti) aspetta prima che il buon sheed prenda una decisione definitiva xkè x come è fatto lui potrebbe ripensarci altre 10 volte e non penso che le dita di alcun essere umano potrebbero resistere allo scrivere altri 10 articoli di quella lunghezza
Rasheed Wallace is considering a comeback to the NBA, according to sources.
Wallace has been working out and investigating possible teams he can sign with for the remainder of the season.
One league source who has talked with Wallace recently describes him as “serious” about a return to the NBA this season.
When reached on Friday, Wallace’s agent, Bill Strickland, would only tell Yahoo! Sports’ Marc Spears: “As a veteran player, [Wallace] knows what it takes to be reinstated.”
No team contacted by Yahoo! Sports has been in conversation with Wallace.