VIDEO: Jaylen Brown playing a fan 1-on-1

Draje

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I hope as a grown man you wrote this post wit the :dame: face on.

If I knew any better I would think Draymond was your daddy

I saw Draymond play in HS and college, recognizing he's better than you isn't hard. Draymond is extremely strong even among NBA players. He'd bully the fukk out of you, drop step your entire chest inwards, and dunk on you.

Have you played against D1 ballers, D-league players, or even high end D2 players?
 

knickscrusaderm

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I saw Draymond play in HS and college, recognizing he's better than you isn't hard. Draymond is extremely strong even among NBA players. He'd bully the fukk out of you, drop step your entire chest inwards, and dunk on you.

Have you played against D1 ballers, D-league players, or even high end D2 players?
Breh...what the fukk :dead:.

You clearly not built like that...those in the know know :sas2:
 

Paradise50

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anigif_enhanced-buzz-27952-1384965139-19.gif

After Rondo became serious about basketball, he attended Louisville's Eastern High School for three years. During his junior year at Eastern High School, he averaged 27.9 points, 10.0 rebounds and 7.5 assists which earned him a spot on the All-State honors and was named the 7th Region Player of the Year. He transferred to Virginia's Oak Hill Academy for his senior year where he averaged 21.0 points per game (ppg), 3.0 rebounds per game (rpg) and 12.0 assists per game (apg) and finished the 2003–04 season with a 38–0 record.
I remember that all star weekend when Rondo was some event. He kept knocking down 3's and folks were :ooh:



I heard Ben Wallace would play pick up at his alma mater some summers and be knocking down 3's :damn:
 

Ronnie Lott

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Anyone who legitimately thinks they can beat certain NBA players should go to a summer league tryout for your local NBA team. You'd be in for a rude awakening and the people you'd be playing against aren't even in the NBA

Bro. The speed and sheer size of NBA players is obviously far greater than your average Joe. shyt even if you balled against D1 college nikkaz, you can tell the difference. I've played them cats, and it's a completely different level than random nikkaz at The rec center
 

Professor Emeritus

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Every time someone makes this statement on here, I always find myself looking at videos of Chris Dudley....



His senior year in college, Dudley averaged 17 and 13 on 57% shooting with 3 blocks a game. Had three 25-point games and five 18-rebound games while nearly leading the NBA in rebounds for the year.

Yeah he was at Yale, but put up 17 and 13 in a win over UConn, 21 and 20 in a win over UMass, 13 and 9 in an overtime loss to Miami, and 18 and 6 in a loss to Notre Dame (who finished the year #18).

If he was doing that against college athletes, gives you an idea what that 7' ogre would do to regular folk.
 

Professor Emeritus

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I love how they're not even talking shyt players, they're naming all-stars.

I seen Curry, Rondo, Draymond, Nash...

Look, Nash guarded the greatest players in the world EVERY time he stepped onto the court. He struggled at times, but he still guarded them, and made them miss half the time.

And it's not just that these guys are more athletic than you (which they are). It's that they are 20x better and more experienced than you in EVERYTHING that happens on a basketball court. Their hands move quicker. Their steps are more decisive. They've played twenty times as much ball as you and seen far more than you ever have. They can sense which move you're starting before you've even fully committed to it. They will make moves on the court in a way that you never never faced.

Someone who spends 10,000 hours of their life perfecting something is going to be a completely different creature than someone who does it as a hobby.

It's like watching some chess grandmaster lose to the greatest player in the world, then say, "Look at how bad he lost. I could take him!" :mjlol:

Sorry, but Draymond would destroy you OFFENSIVELY, and Nash would rip your heart out with his defense. :yeshrug:
 
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