This one time, no transportation was available. We were forced to hitch a ride with the Kenosha Kickers.
I love their hit Polka Polka Polka.
This one time, no transportation was available. We were forced to hitch a ride with the Kenosha Kickers.
We mortgaged our house to bring a polka band to my 12th birthday party but all we could afford was a Tejano band. Still, fun to dance to.This one time, no transportation was available. We were forced to hitch a ride with the Kenosha Kickers.
OMG, that three still stings even after all these years.But the biggest game we had tickets to was the one that never came to pass… lower Bowl tickets to Game 7 of SUNS V. BULLS. A game for THE AGES! Until Paxson for 3.
UGHHHHHHHH!!!!!!
The waltz down the court layup by Jordan right before hand stings just as much.OMG, that three still stings even after all these years.
They played a helluva game of hot potato on offense those last few possessions. The Barkley Suns were incredibly mentally weak.The waltz down the court layup by Jordan right before hand stings just as much.
Majerle shot an eight footer on the baseline as the shot clock expired… that was so short, it barely even grazed the net.They played a helluva game of hot potato on offense those last few possessions. The Barkley Suns were incredibly mentally weak.
Mentally weak? A mentally weak team never wins Game 5 in Chicago. Sorry not buying that at all.They played a helluva game of hot potato on offense those last few possessions. The Barkley Suns were incredibly mentally weak.
Weird post. Every team took MJ to 6 games in the Finals so the Suns were nothing special there.Convince me that the Barkley Suns were mentally weak in general. That mentally weak team had taken one of the mentally strongest players of his time, Michael Jordan, to six games. The reason we can know those Suns gave the Bulls a tough series was that the Bulls coach personally said so. I'll grant that Danny Ainge might have been mentally weak, though. (In addition to being counterproductively arrogant.)
And the Bulls could make many teams look mentally weak. Dennis Rodman did it to Shaquille O'Neal and Michael Jordan did it to Karl Malone.
And if the Suns made errors against the Rocks, well, the Rocks had the one player whom Michael Jordan admitted to fearing!
And what was the excuse when they totally choked away back to back series against the Rockets when they were the more experienced team?Okay, but I call it mere inexperience, not mental weakness. Only the same problem that let the pre-dynasty Bulls keep losing to the Celtics and Pistons.
“Little man, you got me, little man, don’t do it again, though, little man”That's easy, partly because I already said it. Two words: Hakeem...Olajuwon. For two consecutive playoffs, he didn't take down just the Suns, he took down the entire West. With a mediocre team. Olajuwon deserves to be remembered as one of the two best players of the nineties. It means something when Michael Jordan admits to having feared a player.
(It also means something that the only Suns player who one remembers successfully ramming his way to the basket against Olajuwon wasn't Barkley.)
It shortened his great years. He played past his primeKevin Johnson showed no fear of going to the rim on anyone and was often not rewarded with a foul.
The pounding may have helped shorten his career.
You’re right. That dunk was meaningless in the grand scheme and came at the end of his blowing our second consecutive home game after taking a 2-0 lead in Houston.As amazing as that dunk was, if I remember correctly, it occurred once the game was over and the Suns had no chance of winning. I might be confusing it with some other dunk, but I am like 90% sure I am right.
It shortened his great years. He played past his prime
Doesn’t matter. KJ tried hard to score and Hakeem definitely tried to block it. To try to excuse it as possibly Hakeem not 100% because the game was over is a fallacy.As amazing as that dunk was, if I remember correctly, it occurred once the game was over and the Suns had no chance of winning. I might be confusing it with some other dunk, but I am like 90% sure I am right.
I don’t think he meant that Dream didn’t try to block it. Only that in the grand scheme of things, it wasn’t that consequential to him because it came at the end of a game that not only was pretty much over, but also a devastating playoff defeat.Doesn’t matter. KJ tried hard to score and Hakeem definitely tried to block it. To try to excuse it as possibly Hakeem not 100% because the game was over is a fallacy.
Lifting Oliver Miller off the court probably didn't help either.Kevin Johnson showed no fear of going to the rim on anyone and was often not rewarded with a foul.
The pounding may have helped shorten his career.
But my point is that none of that matters in the context of that photo in particular. Now if you are talking about what that meant for the rest of the game, that’s fine. But there is no reason to lesson the impact of the play simply because the game was “over.” If it was then Hakeem wouldn’t have bothered to try to block it.I don’t think he meant that Dream didn’t try to block it. Only that in the grand scheme of things, it wasn’t that consequential to him because it came at the end of a game that not only was pretty much over, but also a devastating playoff defeat.
Agree to disagree.But my point is that none of that matters in the context of that photo in particular. Now if you are talking about what that meant for the rest of the game, that’s fine. But there is no reason to lesson the impact of the play simply because the game was “over.” If it was then Hakeem wouldn’t have bothered to try to block it.
So you don’t think it’s an impressive dunk? What exactly are you disagreeing with?Agree to disagree.