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| Тема |
Re: Охайо е с ОКС :) [re: bulby] |
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| Автор |
Balleta (Gaucho) |
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| Публикувано | 12.06.12 18:54 |
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LeBron James is still nowhere to be found…The ‘Former’ King had one of the most pedestrian NBA Finals of all time…Post game, LeBron could have chosen to take the high road, but once again made the ‘decision’ to reveal his true character…LeBron is right about one thing, we will all wake up tomorrow and have the same problems, but we will also all wake up tomorrow and have the same amount of Championship rings
И една книга:
Scott Raab sat in the lower bowl of Cleveland Stadium on December 27, 1964, when the Browns defeated the Colts for the NFL World Championship—the last sports title the declining city has won. He still carries his ticket stub wherever he goes, safely tucked within a Ziploc bag. The glory of that triumph is an easy thing to forget—each generation born in Cleveland is another generation removed from that victory; an entire fan base "whose daily bread has forever tasted of ash."
LeBron James was supposed to change all that. A native son of Akron, he was already world famous by the age of seventeen, had already graced the cover of Sports Illustrated, was already worth $90 million to Nike. He seemed like a miracle heaven-sent by God to transform Cleveland's losing ways. That the Cavaliers drafted him, the hometown prodigy, with the first pick of the 2003 draft, seemed nothing short of destiny. But after seven years—and still no parade down Euclid Avenue—he left. And he left in a way that seemed designed to twist the knife: announcing his move to South Beach on a nationally televised ESPN production with a sly title ("The Decision") that echoed fifty years of Cleveland sports futility.
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