《大麻名人堂#1》
這位大麻狂熱愛好者,在抽完大麻沒多久之後拿下奧運男籃金牌,以下是他的生平介紹:
凱文·韋恩·杜蘭特(英語:Kevin Wayne Durant,1988年9月29日-),出生於美國華盛頓特區,現役美國職業籃球運動員,現效力於NBA聯盟布魯克林籃網,場上位置為小前鋒,也可出任大前鋒。
2×NBA總冠軍(2017、2018)
2×NBA總決賽MVP(2017、2018)
NBA最有價值球員(2014)
6×NBA年度第一隊(2010−2014、2018)
3×NBA年度第二隊(2016−2017、2019)
11×NBA全明星賽(2010−2019、2021)
2×NBA明星賽MVP(2012、2019)
4×NBA得分王(2010−2012、2014)
50-40-90俱樂部(2013)
世界籃球錦標賽MVP(2010)
美國年度最佳籃球員(英語:USA Basketball Male Athlete of the Year)(2010)
全明星周末H–O–R–S–E比賽(英語:NBA All-Star Weekend H–O–R–S–E Competition)(2009−2010)
NBA新秀挑戰賽MVP(2009)
NBA年度最佳新秀(2008)
NBA最佳新秀陣容第一隊(2008)
35號球衣為德克薩斯州大學奧斯汀分校所退休
美國大學年度最佳籃球員(英語:List of U.S. men's college basketball national player of the year awards)(2007)
NCAA全美共識第一隊(英語:NCAA Men's Basketball All-Americans)(2007(英語:2007 NCAA Men's Basketball All-Americans))
USBWA全國年度最佳新人(英語:USBWA National Freshman of the Year)(2007)
12大聯盟年度最佳球員(英語:Big 12 Conference Men's Basketball Player of the Year)(2007)
12大聯盟聯賽MVP(英語:2007 Big 12 Men's Basketball Tournament)(2007(英語:2007 Big 12 Men's Basketball Tournament))
奧斯卡·羅伯森獎(英語:Oscar Robertson Trophy)(2007)
阿道夫·魯普獎(英語:Adolph Rupp Trophy)(2007)
奈史密斯學院年度最佳球員(2007)
約翰·伍登獎(英語:John R. Wooden Award)(2007)
麥當勞高中全明星賽MVP(2006)
#大麻合法化
同時也有13部Youtube影片,追蹤數超過23萬的網紅Fun hunting,也在其Youtube影片中提到,UNDISPUTED - Tom Izzo, Gabe Brown get into heated argument in NCAA Tournament | Skip reacts...
ncaa tournament 在 Facebook 的精選貼文
雖然你在麥迪遜花園廣場被保安阻攔,但無阻你帶領母校喬治城大學取得大東區聯盟冠軍🏆 下一個目標就是月底開展的NCAA美國大學籃球聯賽。
BTW, 評述員在這條影片最尾的時候,很興奮地說出Hoyas win Hoyas win 多少次呢?我都搵次評述的時候試下先😂😂
#patrickewing
#Georgetown
#NCAA
ncaa tournament 在 Emil Cheung 張存華 - 華弟 Facebook 的精選貼文
What a heartbreaking game 💔for the Purdue Boilermakers but I’m still proud of you all!! Thank you for the great season !!Met the best performer in tournament so far, Carsen Edwards two years ago at Taipei, I knew he’s gonna be big!💪🏻 Please stay one more year at Purdue, Carsen!🙏🏻🙏🏻😭 #Purdue #Boilermakers #CarsenEdwards #NCAA #MarchMadness #MattPainter #今天不要跟我聊NBA
ncaa tournament 在 Fun hunting Youtube 的最讚貼文
UNDISPUTED - Tom Izzo, Gabe Brown get into heated argument in NCAA Tournament | Skip reacts
ncaa tournament 在 pennyccw Youtube 的最讚貼文
Trey Burke won’t admit the braided hair is a tribute to his idol, Hall of Famer Allen Iverson. The Knicks’ new starting point guard does admit, though, he is striving to come close to Iverson’s grandeur.
Burke has done Iverson proud on back-to-back nights. One night after leading to the Knicks to victory in Washington with late heroics in his first start for the team, Burke did one better in notching a career-high 42 points — 35 after halftime — to go with 12 assists on Monday.
It wasn’t enough to stop Kemba Walker and the Hornets in a 137-128 overtime thriller at Spectrum Center. Walker posted 11 of his 31 points in overtime and hit a game-tying 3-pointer with 17 seconds left in regulation over Michael Beasley.
Burke had a chance to win it in regulation. After waving off Hornacek’s timeout gesture, Burke wound down the clock, waved off a pick from Luke Kornet, lost control of the ball and had to heave up a desperation airball at the buzzer. But wins and losses aren’t as important to the Knicks in March and April as finding their 2018-19 point guard. In his two starts, Burke is making the case he’ll be their starting man next season.
“Charlotte continued to allow me to see what I can get off the screen and I took advantage of it,’’ Burke said. “I’m not thinking about having a bad game. That’s how I played in the past. Now I don’t what care what no one thinks. That’s how I can play freely. Being a young player in the league, sometimes it takes longer to adjust.’’
Late Sunday, after his first start as a Knick resulted in a rare road win over the Wizards, Burke sat in the visitors’ locker room next to his former Michigan buddy, Tim Hardaway Jr., who recently described a Burke performance as filled with “his little A.I. moves.”
“I just got tired of cutting my hair,” Burke said of the Iverson comparison. “I think the fans saw it and ran with it.”
Against Washington, he showed flashes of Iverson’s razzle-dazzle, willing the Knicks to victory with 19 points, three steals and three assists.
Monday, it was Iverson deluxe — shooting 19-for-31 from the field in becoming the first Knick since Bernard King in 1985 to post a 40-12 game.
“Nothing new to me,’’ Hardaway said. “I’ve been seen him doing this since we were at school in Michigan. He’s meant to be here. He’s supposed to be here. He’s not a G-League player, he’s not an overseas player.’’
The 2013 Utah lottery pick is in the middle of reversing a reputation as a bust in 29 games with the Knicks. It seems management finally noticed enough to allow Knicks coach Jeff Hornacek to give Burke his first start.
“I got a long way to go,” said Burke, who has a partially guaranteed deal for next season. “I know that. A.I. is a goal. Pound for pound, one of the greatest to ever play. I want to get there one day. I believe it.”
The Michigan man and former NCAA Tournament hero had to restart from the bottom. But Burke has the kind of Iverson brashness these young Knicks will need next season.
“When I get my hair braided, everyone’s like, ‘You look like Iverson, you got the tattoos, the way you move,’” Burke said. “More than anything, it’s my movements and crossover. That’s all from watching him. His mid-range. I watched a lot of Michael Jordan. Those were two guys who inspired me to play the game of basketball. I can remember being 4, 5 years old watching those two.”
ncaa tournament 在 pennyccw Youtube 的精選貼文
It was last night's best bet on Broadway -- Allen Iverson of Georgetown against Stephon Marbury of Georgia Tech. The scene was Madison Square Garden. The occasion was a semifinal game in the 11th annual Preseason National Invitation Tournament.
The war between the precocious college basketball stars was more or less a draw. Iverson had the better numbers, but he also had a better team behind him. A noisy and appreciative crowd of 15,249 watched Iverson and Georgetown pull away in the second half to a 94-72 victory. That was no surprise because the Hoyas are ranked fifth and Georgia Tech 25th in the latest Associated Press poll.
The triumph sent Georgetown into tomorrow night's final against Arizona. In the first game of the semifinal doubleheader, Arizona held off Michigan, 86-79.
With little more than three minutes left in the game, Georgetown got a scare when Iverson jammed his left thumb. He left and did not return, but later, in the locker room, Iverson said the thumb was fine and he would be ready for the final. Still, as a precaution, he was taken to a hospital for X-rays.
Iverson shot 9 for 16 from the floor, 1 for 6 from the 3-point line. He finished with 23 points, 6 assists and 2 steals. Marbury (4 for 14, 0 for 4 on 3-pointers) ended with 13 points, 8 assists and 7 steals.
Before they are nominated for the Hall of Fame, it should be pointed out that Iverson made eight turnovers and Marbury six. But as point guards, they handle the ball more than others, and it also should be remembered that Iverson is a 19-year-old sophomore, Marbury an 18-year-old freshman.
Here are their assessments of the game:
Iverson on Iverson: "I think I played all right. But I made a lot of mistakes."
Iverson on Marbury: "He's a great player, but he's a freshman. He's got a lot to learn, just as I've got a lot to learn. He'll get better."
Marbury on Marbury: "I think I did a pretty good job. But I don't think I'm playing my normal game. I'm not shooting well."
Marbury on Iverson: "You can only try to contain him. He'll get his points, regardless."
Marbury was the more spectacular player. The Coney Island youngster played with the peripheral vision and magic of a Magic Johnson or Isiah Thomas. Once, on the run, he bounced a perfect long pass to a teammate sandwiched between two defenders. Several times, he drove to the basket and jumped and, when a defender would double-team him, he dished off the ball to an open teammate.
But Marbury did not have the help that Iverson did. Victor Page, Georgetown's freshman shooting guard, was the high scorer with 25 points. Othella Harrington, the 6-foot-9-inch senior center, was held to 2 points in the first half but finished with 14 points and 14 rebounds. Georgetown's bang-the-boards defense outrebounded Georgia Tech, 45 to 24.
John Thompson, in his 24th year as Georgetown coach, likes his team. "They've got a lot to learn," he said, "but it's a team I can drive. You don't drive people who aren't talented."
Georgia Tech Coach Bobby Cremins said he knew why his team was beaten badly.
"I think it was too much, too soon," he said. "We were not ready for that type of game. We're young, we hung in there, but it's tough on a young team."
The first semifinal matched Arizona's speed, defense and experience against Michigan's youth and bulk. Arizona broke open a tie game in the last 13 minutes.
The Wildcats, ranked No. 19, made fewer errors than 16th-ranked Michigan. Much of the time, it kept the ball from Michigan's post players and forced the Wolverines into bad shots from the outside. When Michigan closed to 79-77, Arizona tried to freeze the ball, Michigan double-teamed it and Joseph Blair, the Arizona center, got loose under the basket and sank the game-clinching field goal and free throw.
"Their post players beat us to death," Michigan Coach Steve Fisher said. "It seems like every shot they made in the second half was a result of our defense. But eight of our players are freshmen and sophomores, and you know it's going to happen some. I'm mad. I told our team they should be mad we didn't play better. You can't be afraid to make mistakes. Maybe I made them afraid to make mistakes."
Coach Lute Olson was pleased with the way his Arizona team played.
"The difference down the stretch," he said, "was probably that we had a lot more experience. But the only way to get experience is playing. You have to go through it with game pressure."
Reggie Geary, Arizona's point guard, scored only 8 points but also had 7 assists and 2 steals. Once, trying to keep a ball inbounds, he crashed into the press table and knocked over a telephone. He picked up the phone and put the receiver to his ear. It worked. He nodded and went back to business.