temery
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Are you challenging yourself in the third person?
Future DSMRs will cover this.
Are you challenging yourself in the third person?
Does it really matter? We know his points or not! It's Chief being Chief, what's the problem?Again, you can say "I" or "me", like everyone else in the world.
And parish was on the receiving end of passes from bird. I remember watching bird in college. His passing was great. But ahead of some of his teammatesIf I recall correctly, Robert Parish used to smoke high-quality cannabis after tough games.
Perhaps the Boneyard's Chief00 does the same, which helps explain Chief00's sometimes confusion about the use of "I" or "me," and "Chief."
Calhoun would run an open tempo drill in practice where it would be one fast break after another back and forth, up and down the court at Gampel. Guys filling the wings, Pass after pass. If you made a bad one, you would really screw it up and it would be very noticeable……and that wouldn’t be a good thing for you. LOL
Maybe, we should bring that back? It teaches guys to be uptempo without the unhealthy hurry, unselfish and value the ball. Helps on endurance too and even more so if you mess up with a bad pass. LOL
Pay no attention to that man behind the curtain! LOLOk if the handle speaks for Chief then who speaks for the handle?
You're giving me Wizard vibes from Oz.
He idolizes Pistol Pete, and tries to model his game after him. Pete threw a lot of passes the target never saw coming, too. Until they learned to play with him, anyway. He'd be better off modeling his game after Elgin Baylor. Baylor's passes were just as uncanny as Maravich's but much more consistently catchable without reaching or breaking stride.The truth of it is that Jackson is not actually a good passer, yet. He certainly has the potential to be one. He has good vision and is unselfish, but he tries to make far too many difficult passes, puts too much heat on too many passes. The game still needs to slow down for him a bit more. He needs more finesse in his passing game and to understand what's a good pass and what is not.
I never directly give unsolicited advice to coaches. They hear enough of that, from enough of people. It’s a difficult job. If something naturally comes up in conversation, I sometimes share my opinion.Since you must be at every practice to factually make this comment at what is/isnt happening at practice, why don't you just have this conversation directly with the Coaches?
Are you an English Professor?Oh I think I get it now. You are using "I" here because you are talking about yourself outside of the forum. In real life. Talking with the coaches and stuff. Yep. Am I catching on?
Imo it doesn't matter who he idolizes, it's up to the coach/coaches to channel how he plays and how to separate idolizing and playing. When I played I idolized Walt Clyde Frazier and was pulled aside quite a few times to tone it down. Coach Hurley seems to be ok with AJ doing this because he brings other intangibles to the team.He idolizes Pistol Pete, and tries to model his game after him. Pete threw a lot of passes the target never saw coming, too. Until they learned to play with him, anyway. He'd be better off modeling his game after Elgin Baylor. Baylor's passes were just as uncanny as Maravich's but much more consistently catchable without reaching or breaking stride.
Chief thinks you are exactly right. No reason for the French Pastry when plain vanilla works for a hoop.Something I've noticed particularly when at games. Andre has the right idea with many of his bad passes. The thing he does wrong is make them harder than they need to be. Way too many no look passes that are close but are lacking the accuracy that a regular pass would have.
He is a great kid and his family is wonderful - he just needs to tighten up his game.Imo it doesn't matter who he idolizes, it's up to the coach/coaches to channel how he plays and how to separate idolizing and playing. When I played I idolized Walt Clyde Frazier and was pulled aside quite a few times to tone it down. Coach Hurley seems to be ok with AJ doing this because he brings other intangibles to the team.