I've always thought this. Switch it up for a possession or two now and then to keep them honest. Throw in a half court trap or a little zone for a bit. Maybe it forces them to burn a timeout, or forces them into a bad decision. Going to the 3-2 a few years ago against buffalo started a huge run for us that game.
Which is understandable since it's with all the Florida kids. But it's funny if you think of it from their side - like why the f are we competing with Akron for all these kids in our backyard?
Buffalo is big.
I hate when refs get suckered into calling games like this. Buffalo's playing very aggressive man to man and they aren't calling the little bumps and hand checks. We aren't and so are getting called for every little bit of contact. Cue ZN conspiracists
I'm pretty sure JWood's first three was in the last minute against Kent in 2008.
Call me crazy, but I think Tree > JWood. Would have loved to see a full senior year from Tree. I think we'd be hanging his jersey here in a few years.
Yep. Big Dog is a little better offensively but Zeke is maybe the best defender the conference has seen. He changed games singlehandedly and allowed our team to play a much more aggressive defense since he was there to clean up the mistakes.
Both losses came after the postage incident. Odds are they will drop one or probably two. But I think it's possible to run the table
You think Rodgers would give us permission to get these in blue and gold?
To bring this back on topic - per this link, the Celtics made $57MM last year. The quote was "something has to happen for the owners to be able to stay afloat."
They don't need to do this. But they can, and I don't blame them.
You're right. They do it because they have so much money that spending a few hundred million for a hobby is no biggie. Hence why I don't feel too bad for them. And any operating loss (not sure I believe that anyway) is most likely recouped and then some when they sell.
http://www.forbes.com/pictures/edik45flemf/the-nbas-billionaire-owners/#33bf2cca3f94
In case you don't feel like clicking - "The average NBA team is now worth $634 million, up 25% from last year"