A list of puns related to "Personal foul (basketball)"
> I asked Trae Young why he picked up a technical foul with the Hawks up 2 late in the game. > > "Dre was getting hounded by CP in the post. I asked him, 'You didn't see that? You didn't see that?' He gave me a tech. I guess it's personal with some of these guys."
Trae had something to say on Twitter about the 'crΡ babΡ' motion: > π€β¦ Hmm Interesting. > > I get fined thoughππ€ #WhyIsItPersonal >
This is Amaroβs first episode and itβs one of my all time favorites. The ending makes me cry every time. The star basketball player taking off his sunglasses before talking to the press is so powerful. The mom of the other victim watching the press conference and the young kid crying with his mom get me every time. Some episodes hit me differently and that one is one of them.
Iβm not even going to discuss the dumb taunting rules, but every week seems to have a number of phantom βblindside blocks,β bizzare βroughing the passersβ, or something like those. Many of these are so obviously wrong even commentators struggle to defend. At this point itβs difficult to watch.
The year before his first all-star apparence he finished with some crazy stats : ONLY 7.6 ppg and 1.4 apg BUT he led the league in 2 categories (Blocks = 3.5 & Rebounds = 13.0)
I wasnβt able to watch the game today but did watch the recap, and in the 3rd quarter Josh was scrambling back to the line of scrimmage near the panthers sideline and was shoved out (was definitely still in bounds) and the ref called unnecessary roughness on #93. But #93 was standing on the sidelines doing nothing and #97 was the one who pushed him(?) was it mistaken identity or did something happen with #93 I didnβt see? Josh was pushed right in front of their bench and was lying down for a good few seconds before the recap cut to the ref making the call. Did one of the panthers do something to him on the ground?
Is that correct? Doesnβt it essentially penalize the defense for not having a penalty? Should someone keep an eye out for offensive penalties downfield and then purposely foul to offset the offense gaining yards like when Hopkins had the face mask against Green Bay last week?
Was he just mad? Did the other guy push him and piss him off? Was he giving herbert cpr?
Bertans did record 2 rebounds and attempt 4 threes in his 23 minutes of cardio.
The Latvian Laser, who actually didn't look terrible last game (14 points on 5-10 shooting, 4-8 from three), didn't have his finest outing. He fouled out at the beginning of the fourth quarter.
Last offseason, the Wizards signed Bertans to a 5-year, $80 million extension.
It just seems backwards to me that with how much coverage every play gets in today's NFL, officials don't seem to be able to penalize instigators on personal fouls. You have all of this technology, officials in the booth in direct communication with the on-field crew, dozens of cameras pointed at the field and yet the players who are actually the root of the problem get off scott-free.
I'm not saying Tavon is blameless, but I think at the very least there should have been 2 penalties on that play that would've ultimately offset. You've got video proof that Doyle instigated that altercation which should be just as good as an official's eyes and ears but somehow is inadmissible.
Penalizing and punishing guys who retaliate does absolutely nothing to stem what the league is supposedly trying to diminish. It's the equivalent of the school principal suspending the kid who fought back instead of the bully himself.
https://www.basketball-reference.com/leagues/NBA_stats_per_game.html
This season, teams are shooting the 2nd lowest number of free throws and committing the 3rd lowest number of fouls ever. Why does the average /r/nba user perceive that the number of fouls and free throws have gone up? Is this a byproduct of fans seeing clips of bad calls and jumping to conclusions? Do the never-ending replays play into this?
Safe to say the NBA reversed its timeline 10 years back. The Phoenix Suns grind out a huge win as they go up 3-1 in the Conference Finals, but it was perhaps the ugliest win of the entire season for any team, with dreadful offenses and elite defenses making an appearance.
EDIT: UNLESS I'M READING THIS WRONG, CITADEL WAS PISSY PANTS THAT RETAIL WOULD HAVE MORE PROTECTION OVER UNFAVORABLE PRICE MOVES:
"The D-Limit is designed to give traders a way to buy or sell stocks at the exchange while protecting them against unfavorable price moves"
It would be one thing if they made a stink for fair reasons if they were a MM that was totally on the level. But since evidence suggests they may not be - They not only made a stink, but did so in a hypocritical manner.
Really? Cry not fair when you're fucking the system?
If I was an oversight agency, I'd be motivated to look VERY closely at your fuckery.
This article may reveal a bit more but I'm into the brewskis and bananas and clearly don't possess enough wrinkles to figure this shit out so PLEASE! IF YOU HAVE WRINKLES share any insight this article brings.
Love you apes.
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