Anthony Edwards With Another A1 Sound Bite

UserNameless

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Everywhere...You never there.
Ok yeah he’s definitely the future of the league . He’s nice on the court and actually has a PERSONALITY, which is sooooo rare with the NBA newbies .

I’m thinking he and Ja are the two that are will offer the most compelling narratives on and off the court . Now whether the NBA wants to push them to the forefront is another story :mjpls:
:mjlol: @ asking a 19 year old kid from Atlanta if he's an A-Rod fan


More white tone deafness .
His game plus his personality is gonna make him a mega star
It SHOULD. Key word ... should .
the man isn't even a fan of basketball and they expect him to like baseball?


:mjlol: low key facts !
 

concise

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Naw..no excuses.

These young people dont know anything history related and shockingly sports related by most athlwtes today.


:childplease:

All it takes is education, or marketing.


Here's an article about how many black MLB players in the late 80s, early 90s had no clue who Jackie Robinson was, in the years before they retired his number and started the massive education campaign.




Baltimore Sun - We are currently unavailable in your region




Here, in 1991, was Vince Coleman, on a night to honor the Negro leagues in New York, of all places: "I don't know nothing about no Jackie Robinson."

Two years earlier, a little over 40 years after Robinson broke baseball's color line, the now-defunct Sport magazine asked a number of black major leaguers what Robinson meant to them. Dave Henderson ("The success of Jackie Robinson is the reason why I wear his number") and Mel Hall ("Robinson is the reason why I'm here today. Robinson gave us equal opportunity in sports") got it. However ...


"Jackie Robinson? What year did he die? I wasn't old enough to remember him." (Phil Bradley)

"Sorry, I can't help you." (Ricky Jordan)


"I can't really say nothing about the guy because I never followed baseball. I just played the game." (Jerome Walton)

"I didn't follow Jackie Robinson's career." (Dwight Gooden)

And: "I don't know anything about Jackie Robinson." (Ken Griffey Jr.)

Yes, that Ken Griffey Jr. The same one who started the movement that culminates in today's across-the-board standing ovation for Jackie Robinson from baseball to America and the world. Griffey was the first to go to Bud Selig and ask to wear No. 42 today. News got out, and the idea caught fire.
 

Ethnic Vagina Finder

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North Jersey but I miss Cali :sadcam:
Man Mike Trout don't know who Mike Trout is :mjlol:
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