Blackburn13
Blackburn13
Blackburn13

Yes. They have several talented young players, a boatload of draft picks, and essentially a 50-50 chance at a superstar prospect in this draft. Before he took over, they didn’t even own some of their own first rounders in the upcoming years (people forget the saric trade also got the sixers 2017 pick back) They were a

This article is laughably disingenuous. I stopped reading after your take on the Holiday trade. They didn’t just get Noel, although that wouldn’t have been a horrible trade. They get a lottery pick the next year, which Hinkie turned into Dario Saric and the Sixers first rounder in 2017 back from Orlando, which the

Because it will have. The Sixers are in an objectively far superior position today than when he took over. And he gave them enough chances at a high pick that they likely will “luck” into a stud. Which means it won’t be luck. that’s the position he put them in.

As a Sixers fan, I don’t think you understand our teams recent history or reality. Hinkie was the first time that the team had a purpose, had a plan, for decades. We’ve had to deal with Billy King, Tony Dileo, Doug Collins Larry Brown, who while he wasn’t awful, literally didn’t draft Paul Pierce because of a

Not science fiction, but when I visited Bowdoin this last fall while looking at colleges, they have six word stories up, and one was “the Philanthropist returned what he stole.”

Worth noting: I'm pretty sure he's had multiple concussions in the past. I believe he had one last year, but it may have been more.

Yeah but if they hired him they'd probably win, unlike the other two

I get what you're saying, but at a certain point playing pro sports isn't really a kids game. The work it takes to get there and remain there isn't really a game, it's pretty grueling, and its very competitive. It's not just carefree running through the park

I don't know if Leach belongs in this category, hes actually a good coach.

It's more that you could audibly hear the guy yell oh shit.

Moyes isn't incompetent. His work with everton proves that. Consistently overachieving for a decade doesn't make you "incompetent."

When does the US finally start to play their best keeper guzan?

In my experience the louder more talkative and outgoing players off the court say c'mon more in juniors.

This made me think of Marinko Matosevic this summer. Got to the quarters of DC one week this summer by winning three matches tuesday wednesday and thursday. Lost in a third set tiebreak to Tursunov because his hand cramped. Now had he made the semis (just a tiebreak away) he would've gotten a waiver through qualifying

Nah the pigs are happy the birds are angry

If you did do college football relegation, there would be a good way that would work, except it would only involve FBS. There's five main conferences right now, correst? Pac-12, SEC, Big 12, big 10, acc. You match each of them with five lower conferences, and the bottom two teams in each big conference goes to the

They got a middle group 3 team, a fairly weak group two team and the second hardest group 4 team. Not easy. I'd say it's the fourth or fifth toughest group

"There's a reason why he spent the last 2 years on a Europa League side in the Russian Premier League."

Ferguson, in recent years, didn't do such a great job in Europe. Basel can attest to that. yes they'd be favorites and still are, but it'd be a tough group for anyone and if they get through that wouldn't be a bad job from Moyes.

Most underrated group is a. Shakhtar Donetsk are very good and made it out of the group last year, sociedad finished fourth in Spain and smacked Lyon, man u are man u, and Bayer leverkusen finished third just behind Dortmund. No weak team in that group and all 4 will have legit aspirations of going through