This is the worst article about an athlete I've ever read

Dusty Bake Activate

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@Malta you gotta find this dude and kill him. :violent:

http://m.bleacherreport.com/article...-tim-duncan-being-underappreciated-tim-duncan

Do*not cry for Tim Duncan.

Even if he wins this*NBA*title, Duncan will be applauded and appreciated only for a while, same as the other titles. It certainly won’t last long.

And when his career does end, it’s inevitable by now: He will be underrated forevermore, his highlights archived but never viewed, his greatness easily forgotten.

Not right, necessarily.

Fair enough, though.

That’s what happens when you are a historically great player who simply does not inspire.

As someone who has had no interest in sharing his time, passion and wisdom with the world, Duncan chose this path. If you don’t open up and give of yourself when you’re in the spotlight, then there are certain things you just*aren’t going to get.

Just ask Kareem Abdul-Jabbar, the league’s all-time leading scorer who closed himself off so much that he now stands as the consummate example of a player who will never get full credit for what he accomplished.

There is a public predisposition against those who are abnormally tall and are not particularly flashy. But to remember the feats of great athletes of any shape or style, we need more from them than success. We want to feel excitement, fall into their stories and believe we can do more because they overcame their odds.

Over his outstanding 16-year NBA career, Duncan*hasn’t let us in to understand how or why he has been so outstanding.

Without the explanation, well, he*doesn’t stand out at all.“

As I go through my career and through these games, that’s not anything I ever look up or think about,” Duncan said at the pre-NBA Finals media availability. “Will it matter at some point? Maybe it will, but I have nothing to do with how people see me at that point. I’m just here to enjoy it and do the best I can.”

Typical Duncan detachment. Even in explaining why he*doesn’t engage us, hedoesn’t engage us.

So Duncan just goes on shooting the ball from his favorite spot at the left elbow, even though from the stoicism on his face, who knows if he loves the bank shot any more than the running hook. Or if he loves anything, ever.

For sure he delivered on the court again Thursday night in the NBA Finals opener: 20 points, 14 rebounds, four assists and three blocks as the*Spurs*won in*Miami. It was the only time a player as old as Duncan, 37, has posted a*20-14 game*in the NBA Finals except for when Abdul-Jabbar did it in the 1985 NBA Finals.

And with the Spurs now in favorable position, expect the talk only to increase about how if Duncan wins a fifth NBA championship, he’ll have furthered his legend in this game.

In a record-keeping way, for sure. In a broader sense, no way.

Even if he loses this series, Duncan is already an undeniable winner in every way as a basketball player. Yet because we fail to understand his fire, all we can do is accept his results that never resonate.

Let’s be honest: Has Duncan ever been a big part of anyone’s life outside of San Antonio? How much have you even noticed him the past six years, when the reality is that Tony Parker was already NBA Finals MVP for San Antonio’s last title in 2007?

Check the index in the back of Chris Ballard’s 2009 NBA book “The Art of a Beautiful Game” and you’ll find six pages with direct references to Duncan, and two of them were only about noting that he threw the kick-out passes for Steve Kerr three-point shots.Parker had six mentions in the book’s index, too.*Dwight Howard*had 45.*LeBron James*had 80.

Kobe Bryant*had 140.

Ballard, a*Sports Illustrated*writer, nevertheless endeavored to write a magazine feature about Duncan a year ago, and as much as Ballard tried to humanize Duncan, that piece focused as much on Duncan’s reluctance to cooperate as anything.*Sports Illustrated*called it “21 Shades of Gray.”

For all the focus on fundamentals when it comes to Duncan, here’s the first one: He has made a basic choice not to consider you at all.

So why should you consider him?

One of the few stories people have heard by now about Duncan, though many younger fans might not have heard it because he sure*isn’t going to revisit it, is how his mom died of breast cancer the day before he turned 14.

Her death is what moved him to become more of the introvert we’ve*seen throughout his career.

In the 2004 book “Tales from the Wake Forest Hardwood” by Dan Collins, Duncan is quoted as saying: “My mom dying is what did that to me. I love my dad, but after my mom died, I never listened to anybody pretty much. It*wasn’t that I was a pain or a problem child or anything. I just got my own views and I went with them. It’s something that from that point on, it was clear to me I had to do what I wanted to do.”

So Duncan made his choices and reaped his benefits, specifically uncommon privacy and the freedom to focus on his craft. He has done it his way, and it has been perfectly respectable.

But Duncan was never going to get all he deserved by doing it this way.His legacy will pay the price, as it should.

:trash:
 
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mozichrome

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:smh: this piece of shiit article

so nobody gonna remember or should remember the great NBA career Duncan has after he's done because he wasnt personable enough?
 

Ronald McDonald

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bleacherreport is probably one of the WOAT sites when it comes to shyt like this.
 

Ritzy Sharon

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OEmF7.png
 

FloorGeneral

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I finished the article. The idea that you have to open up to the media to be appreciated is patently absurd. The sense of entitlement some of these "journalists" have is astounding. They think that the players owe them something, outside of basketball. The nerve of this dude writing an article like this.

If I was ever even .01% as talented as someone like Duncan, I've always been the type of person that I'd like to think I'd carry myself in a similar manner. Do I know you? No? Then why exactly should I open up and share things with you? As a fan, none of that stuff even matters. Seriously, Do I need to know what motivates him? How he prepares himself? Absolutely not. If I was talented enough, and had professional aspirations, what motivates Tim Duncan isn't gonna help me on my way. And as a fan that in reality is lazy and sits on the couch watching, it damn sure isn't gonna help me in my journey to get another soda.

I applaud Tim even more, cause 1. he's been GREAT (re: in the spotlight) his whole career, and 2. he's NEVER let these clowns in the media dictate what he does/says or how he does it. Salute that man.
 

Codeine Bryant

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Tim Duncan needs to be more like this





:troll:
 
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Arrogance.

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Bleacher Report. Ha. Ha ha ha. :leostare:

The bad thing is, their SEO style written articles are finding a bigger and bigger audience. Editors instructing their writers on how to rile up an audience for clicks, pageviews, and comments? Working. I can't even be mad at the hustle, but the shyt that gets passed on as journalism as a result hurts my stomach. Bill Plaschke has trolled his way to better written shyt pieces like this.

There's a difference between not engaging the media and holding contempt for them. Duncan just doesn't give a fukk about your opinion :yeshrug: I wish there were more athletes who expressed that in a non-confrontational way, or without having a bunch of media controversies before pulling the plug on engaging with those guys.
 
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Bleacher Report has the worst writers, they should stick to gimmick lists for traffic since their writers are not good at what they do and mostly just outsource from other sites
 

TooLazyToMakeUp1

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Out here in my damn drawls
He's eatin', gettin' paid and winning :shrug2:. People love to talk about athletes and their egos, but like some of y'all have said; Journalists are full of themselves. They think athletes owe them sh!t, like they made them or something.

+1000 reps to Tim Duncan for giving those hoes that silent, understated, apathetic :yamad:. I remeber when Kobe didn't f*ck wit the media and sh!t like that, and they used to get p!ssed off because he was so private.

They want n!ggas to shuck and jive, but Timeh ain't havin' that :birdman:. Lebronze is open and friendly, but the more open he is, the more they use it to trash him when he does or says something wrong because they need something to write about. Now if Bronze was quite and withdrawn, they'd still find ways to knock him like they're doing Timeh. It's a catch 22 really


He still ain't the best of the generation tho :childplease: :troll:
 

Dusty Bake Activate

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He's eatin', gettin' paid and winning :shrug2:. People love to talk about athletes and their egos, but like some of y'all have said; Journalists are full of themselves. They think athletes owe them sh!t, like they made them or something.

+1000 reps to Tim Duncan for giving those hoes that silent, understated, apathetic :yamad:. I remeber when Kobe didn't f*ck wit the media and sh!t like that, and they used to get p!ssed off because he was so private.

They want n!ggas to shuck and jive, but Timeh ain't havin' that :birdman:. Lebronze is open and friendly, but the more open he is, the more they use it to trash him when he does or says something wrong because they need something to write about. Now if Bronze was quite and withdrawn, they'd still find ways to knock him like they're doing Timeh. It's a catch 22 really


He still ain't the best of the generation tho :childplease: :troll:
Was about to dap this until I read the spoiler.
 
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