Author Topic: The Book of Basketball  (Read 9130 times)

Greggulator

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Re: The Book of Basketball
« Reply #15 on: January 05, 2011, 09:08:15 AM »
I did a book report on that Bill Bradley book when I was a kid. I'd love to check that out again. Those 70s Knicks were definitely a colorful team. Thanks for the compliments on the podcast!

I forgot to add that I also checked out "Pacific Rims: Beermen Ballin' in Flip-Flops and the Philippines' Unlikely Love Affair with Basketball" which is about, uh, basketball in the Philippines. I cannot recommend this book enough to people who love basketball and have an outlook on life that makes them love The Best Show on WFMU.

There are so many anecdotes in this book that are just beyond bizarre. There's an entire chapter on these events which happen in backwater Philippino islands where midgets take on transvestites in the world's most surreal version of the Globetrotters vs. Washington Generals.
Listen to my basketball podcast! www.theholdingcourtpodcast.com

jbissell

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Re: The Book of Basketball
« Reply #16 on: January 05, 2011, 02:04:09 PM »
PS. Gregg, I'm a huge fan of the podcast.

I didn't realize it was the same Gregg. I've also been enjoying the podcast, started listening this year when Tom mentioned it on twitter.

jbissell

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Re: The Book of Basketball
« Reply #17 on: January 20, 2011, 10:06:19 AM »
Patton is on the BS Report this week. 2 parter.

leggala

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Re: The Book of Basketball
« Reply #18 on: January 20, 2011, 07:05:11 PM »
Patton is on the BS Report this week. 2 parter.

Nice! I will definitely give it a listen. Thanks for the heads up.

gravy boat

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Re: The Book of Basketball
« Reply #19 on: January 24, 2011, 02:11:04 PM »
Patton is on the BS Report this week. 2 parter.

I listened to this and liked it and I'm not a fan in general of Simmons. I hope Patton gets to remake The Warriors his way.

namethebats

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Re: The Book of Basketball
« Reply #20 on: January 24, 2011, 09:26:13 PM »
I forgot to add that I also checked out "Pacific Rims: Beermen Ballin' in Flip-Flops and the Philippines' Unlikely Love Affair with Basketball" which is about, uh, basketball in the Philippines. I cannot recommend this book enough to people who love basketball and have an outlook on life that makes them love The Best Show on WFMU.

There are so many anecdotes in this book that are just beyond bizarre. There's an entire chapter on these events which happen in backwater Philippino islands where midgets take on transvestites in the world's most surreal version of the Globetrotters vs. Washington Generals.

Is there much about Billy Ray Bates? "The Breaks of the Game" made him sound like an intriguing guy.

Greggulator

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Re: The Book of Basketball
« Reply #21 on: January 25, 2011, 10:02:48 AM »
There's an entire chapter dedicated to Billy Ray Bates and his impact on the PBA. And, not just that, there are tons of tales about his insane drinking and womanizing. He's one of the true tragedies in US sports history.

For those who aren't familiar, Billy Ray grew up in rural Mississippi as poor as possible in the US. He however was as close to being a natural at basketball as possible. He ended up at Kentucky State and played their but was allegedly completely illiterate. He played in the late, great Continental Basketball Association (One of the all-time amazing fly-by-night minor leagues. They had a dunk contest one year which I need to see if it's on YouTube. There was this one guy who did this dunk where he did a cartwheel with the ball in his hand, stumbled awkwardly and then failed a one hand dunk from two feet while paused. This was later repeated by JR Rider in the NBA dunk contest).

He led the CBA in scoring and ended up on that Portland team that's covered in Breaks of the Game and written about incessantly by Bill Simmons. He emerged out of nowhere as a terrific player and averaged over 25 a game in a playoff series which gave him the nickname as "The Legend." But he had a crazy drinking problem and ended up crashing out of the league until he bounced around international leagues (back before you could really do that) until he became arguably the best foreign player in Phillipines history, scoring over 60 points in his first game.

He ended up drinking his way out of that league. And then he ended up holding up a gas station in Camden with a knife and served 7 years. He now supposedly bounces between group homes and the like in Jersey's dicier neighborhoods.
Listen to my basketball podcast! www.theholdingcourtpodcast.com

Greggulator

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Re: The Book of Basketball
« Reply #22 on: January 25, 2011, 10:49:10 AM »
Also, fingers crossed, but I'm flying to Houston for work tomorrow. If all goes well I'll be headed to the Rockets/Clippers game to watch BLAKE SUPERIOR! in person.
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jbissell

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Re: The Book of Basketball
« Reply #23 on: January 25, 2011, 01:56:12 PM »
Also, fingers crossed, but I'm flying to Houston for work tomorrow. If all goes well I'll be headed to the Rockets/Clippers game to watch BLAKE SUPERIOR! in person.

I think I'm going to LA in late March and they're playing the Suns and Wizards. Definitely want to catch Blake in person.

Greggulator

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Re: The Book of Basketball
« Reply #24 on: January 26, 2011, 11:52:31 PM »
I managed to go to the Rockets/Clippers.

I didn't think I was going to be able to. My plane from Philly was delayed by four hours. And then my laptop completely broke last night so I had to run to a Best Buy somehwere near my hotel to get a new one. But I still managed to make it!

Is anyone from here from Houston? I kind of like the city. It definitely doesn't have the feel of the northeast -- the downtown's mostly empty after 5 and it's so spread out and there's literally no zoning codes so you can build whatever you want wherever you want -- but I like it more than South Florida which is pretty similar. I think you have a fine city, Houstonians.

Anyways, the Toyota Center's on the fringe of downtown. I got there a little before gametime. The ticket windows were a giant cluster -- the lines were huge and there weren't a lot of employees there to take tickets. I'm pretty sure that this is because of the Blake Griffin Effect -- the dude's selling tickets now. I scalped a ticket for $20 just to get in somewhat decently.

The Toyota Center is a dreadful arena. I sat on the upper tier and I felt like I had to scale down a cliff to get to my seat. I've never seen arena steps this steep at any arena or stadium anywhere. The Rockets also think it's a good idea to constantly blare music throughout the entire game. I mean the ENTIRE game. There was not more than three seconds where there was silence coming from the PA announcer. To make it worse, one of the songs that they played multiple times was some bass lick from an early Primus album. There are also all kinds of visual effects to go along with the noises, my favorite being a visual of Shane Battier holding a sign that says "LOUDER" which being electrocuted. They also have a graphic that says "TIME FOR BANGERS" which prompts people to bang those stupid thunder stick things.

 It felt like a mixture of that Wang Chung video and A Clockwork Orange.

Also -- this was probably Blake Griffin's worst game of the year. 14 points and 11 boards. He went up for one dunk but got ripped to the floor by Chase Budinger. I think the "Blake Griffin Has Alll of the Top 10 Highlights on SportsCenter" era has ended. The Clippers have no one who will bust a dude up on Blake's behalf.

Oh well. It was a fun enough night, despite going to a NBA game by myself. The arena's Three Meat special was pretty tasty.
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jbissell

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Re: The Book of Basketball
« Reply #25 on: January 27, 2011, 11:40:31 AM »
The Rockets also think it's a good idea to constantly blare music throughout the entire game. I mean the ENTIRE game. There was not more than three seconds where there was silence coming from the PA announcer. To make it worse, one of the songs that they played multiple times was some bass lick from an early Primus album. There are also all kinds of visual effects to go along with the noises, my favorite being a visual of Shane Battier holding a sign that says "LOUDER" which being electrocuted. They also have a graphic that says "TIME FOR BANGERS" which prompts people to bang those stupid thunder stick things.

In the last few years I've only gone to games at the United Center, but I get the impression that that kind of nonsense is the norm at most arenas. The most infuriating thing is the food promotions based on scoring x amount of points. When you hear "fans" booing in the last few seconds of a close game that their team is winning, just because they're not going to get a free Big Mac, it's a sad state of affairs.

Greggulator

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Re: The Book of Basketball
« Reply #26 on: January 29, 2011, 12:36:22 PM »
I saw my first Knicks game in person last year (no idea how that happened). That was a really good time. They were a crappy team playing the Charlotte Bobcats but there was a close to sell-out crowd and it felt like Game 2 in the first round of the playoffs. Not a Game 7 crowd but a crowd that had some excitement and buzz to it. I don't remember any ridiculous noises.

Sixers games are pretty awful in person because of all the sound effects but it was nowhere near as bad as the Rockets. There's a lot of ridiculous noise at these games but there's at least some silence or just a general "DE-FENSE" prompt. The Rockets game was non-stop.

The Sixers are dissapointing because games during Allen's big years were AWESOME. The year they made the finals was Phillies-esque in love for that team. They had to shut down the corner of Broad and Walnut after winning Game 1 against The Lakers. My friends actually took a road trip to Indianapolis to see a Sixers playoff game. They ran into ex-team president Pat Croce there (who was oddly like Hank Scorpio in retrospect) who gave them fifth row seats for their next home game. There's no way the Sixers organization would do anything like that these days. They couldn't fan unfriendlier.

Chants of "CHALUPA" for 100 points are absurdly annoying.
Listen to my basketball podcast! www.theholdingcourtpodcast.com

jbissell

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Re: The Book of Basketball
« Reply #27 on: April 09, 2011, 05:13:51 PM »
I forgot to add that I also checked out "Pacific Rims: Beermen Ballin' in Flip-Flops and the Philippines' Unlikely Love Affair with Basketball" which is about, uh, basketball in the Philippines. I cannot recommend this book enough to people who love basketball and have an outlook on life that makes them love The Best Show on WFMU.

I checked out a Borders that had just about nothing but romance novels, Glenn Beck books and ___ for Dummies book left but was pleasantly surprised by the titles left in the sports section. Picked up Pacific Rims, along with Walt Frazier's Rockin' Steady, which I had no idea had been re-released but had heard about from Free Darko. They also had several copies of the new Free Darko book, but I already have a copy.

Chris L

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Re: The Book of Basketball
« Reply #28 on: April 09, 2011, 07:32:27 PM »
I forgot to add that I also checked out "Pacific Rims: Beermen Ballin' in Flip-Flops and the Philippines' Unlikely Love Affair with Basketball" which is about, uh, basketball in the Philippines. I cannot recommend this book enough to people who love basketball and have an outlook on life that makes them love The Best Show on WFMU.

I checked out a Borders that had just about nothing but romance novels, Glenn Beck books and ___ for Dummies book left but was pleasantly surprised by the titles left in the sports section. Picked up Pacific Rims, along with Walt Frazier's Rockin' Steady, which I had no idea had been re-released but had heard about from Free Darko. They also had several copies of the new Free Darko book, but I already have a copy.

Yeah, I picked up Free Darko today at Borders. lol jocks don't read