MY Pain!!!! (re: Bill Lambeer)

Pqster

G-League
MY Pain!!!!!!!

I don't know how you guy's saw the game in there! But I got stuck hearing Bill "freaken" Lambier on the ticket. I can not stand that guy!

a few comments:

"run the kings into the ground they don't want to be here"
"very disapointed, I thought the Kings were a good team"
"Corliss is probably not happy he's stuck with the Kings again"

The play by play guy even commented that I don't know why you are so down on the Kings!

Too many more, I wish someone had some tape on Barkly kicking his azzzz, that would make me feel better.
 
he should check out his own team without their starting center. they are pretty bad too without Big Ben much like us without Brad or Skinner.
 
The worst was how in the second half he kept saying "I have no respect for the Kings now". He made it sound like we were responsible for Chauncey being thrown out.
 
Bill Lambier was classless goon when he palyed. No one hired him for his knowlage ofthe game. Now he is classlessgoon as an announcer and no one hired him for his basketball knowlage.
 
ha well i didn't here him say that last comment about Corliss...that would have definetly ticked me off...i did here him say the thing about how he has no respect for the kings...but what i didn't understand was how hard he was riding the Pistons like the were currently the best team in the NBA as if the Pistons didn't just win 1 out of their last 5 thats what really got me...and actually our records are exactly the same...so i didn't understand some of the things he said but i had to tell myself this is Bill Laimbeer for gosh sakes...last year when he was working for ESPN he did defend us a lot when Stephen A and Greg Anthony just was flat out disrespecting us...
 
IMHO, they should never hire former players as anylists. I perfer (I can't belive I am saying this) guys like Bob Costas, Marv Albert (by himself) and even Musberger over Magic, Kerr, Elliot, or Lambieer. Uhh, and Walton goes without mention... We all love Walton...
 
jacobdrj said:
IMHO, they should never hire former players as anylists. I perfer (I can't belive I am saying this) guys like Bob Costas, Marv Albert (by himself) and even Musberger over Magic, Kerr, Elliot, or Lambieer. Uhh, and Walton goes without mention... We all love Walton...

Of course the difference being those guys are all play by play, while the former player tools are all color guys. But I MUCH prefer former coaches as color guys ratehr than former players. Only former player color guy that I like off the top of my head is Tom Tolbert. The rest...well, sound like washed up former professional athletes. They made a living with their bodies, not their brains or mouths.
 
Bricklayer said:
Of course the difference being those guys are all play by play, while the former player tools are all color guys. But I MUCH prefer former coaches as color guys ratehr than former players. Only former player color guy that I like off the top of my head is Tom Tolbert. The rest...well, sound like washed up former professional athletes. They made a living with their bodies, not their brains or mouths.

I agree 100% Brick.
 
me too Brick

though i am one of the few people to find BW hilarious...though he has no idea what he's talking about what i constantly find myself laughing out loud at some of the things he says during games
 
Bricklayer said:
Of course the difference being those guys are all play by play, while the former player tools are all color guys. But I MUCH prefer former coaches as color guys ratehr than former players. Only former player color guy that I like off the top of my head is Tom Tolbert. The rest...well, sound like washed up former professional athletes. They made a living with their bodies, not their brains or mouths.

i agree. gotta love tolbert. he's fun. i like listening to him on KNBR ( well i did when i actually could listen to the razor and mr T, i'm in school when its on now :( )

i like hubie on ABC now. i love the old stories coaches have to say. it's much better then these journeyman type players who never won squat saying what it takes to win. ANNOYING!!! then theres scum like screaming A smith.... i still don't get how some of these biased morons get and keep their jobs.
 
Yeah Tolbert is fun, I actualy like Isiah when he was doing color comentary as well. But it does seem to be true that most of the smart ex-players go into coaching while the obnoxious loud mouths go in to announcing.
 
Evenstar said:
then theres scum like screaming A smith.... i still don't get how some of these biased morons get and keep their jobs.

i COMPLETELY agree evenstar...i hate Stephen A, and i dont see how he or Walton or any amazingly biased analyst/color/playbyplay guys on ESPN/ABC/TNT can keep their jobs....their not supposed to like one team or another. leave that to the regional broadcast guys.
(more thought on stephen a - he looks like an absolutely moron when he is 100% bias for the Lakers yet writes for the Philadelphia Inquirer...how the HELL does taht work?ok, so you dont have to like the teams of the city you write for, but you dont go running around loving another team...he angers me)
 
I hate/love Stephen A. He's a bigger jackass than Walton...and where did he play ball again? Oh, right...DIDN'T. LOL!

I do like to hear the color from former coaches more than from players although I have to admit I do enjoy Kenny and Charles on TNT...I just don't always listen to what they say. :D

Maybe Screamin' Stephan A. is better in print than he is on TV (although it's hard to read his words without hearing his on-air personality):

http://www.philly.com/mld/philly/sports/columnists/stephen_a_smith/11241949.htm
Posted on Sun, Mar. 27, 2005
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Stephen A. Smith | Big question about Iverson: Can he win title?

By Stephen A. Smith
Inquirer Columnist

Alone, Allen Iverson seems smaller than he is. He is quiet, not fiery. Introspective instead of extroverted. Still aching for affection that comes only periodically. Still longing for a championship that slips further away with each passing season, for that parade on Broad Street in which he will stand before the masses screaming, "I love you," to all of his supporters, while asking his critics, "How ya like me now?"

Iverson was supposed to be beyond that by now, of course. It shouldn't take nine seasons to capture a title, after all. At least not in his mind. But it has been nine long years.

They are years filled with bad press, three scoring titles, a most valuable player award, more bad press, more than a few bad moves by the 76ers organization, and a litany of questions about a man known as "The Answer."

Will Iverson and Chris Webber ever coexist? Are any problems concerning them legitimate, or do they simply revolve around coach Jim O'Brien?

Are the Sixers a gimmick now? Just a bunch of parts surrounding a mercurial star incapable of capturing that one glorious prize, but teasing us into believing it's possible? Will Philadelphia ever win an NBA crown with Iverson as its star? Or even make the playoffs this season?

"Wait and see," Iverson said before the 76ers headed to Los Angeles for tonight's game against the Lakers.

Iverson has scored 30 or more points in six straight games for the first time since the 2001-02 season.

"Critics are just critics," Iverson said. "When you have Michael Jordan saying that, or Magic Johnson and Larry Bird... when you've got guys like Isiah Thomas saying that about me, then it's like... 'That's real serious.' It might be a chance that this might not happen."

Nobody has heard the word never from such notable names when "Iverson" and "championship" are mentioned in the same breath. That's the good news. The bad news is, they never mention him at all.

The Sixers have plunged into mediocrity since the departure of coach Larry Brown two seasons ago. With first-year coach Jim O'Brien, there's been talk of everything from his arrogance to his unwillingness to listen to his players to his not adapting to the skills of the players on his roster.

But even if O'Brien was the problem before, he certainly is not the problem now.

The Sixers are 5-2 over the last seven games and have won four of their last five.

They hold the eighth spot in the Eastern Conference playoff race and have elevated their record to .500 (34-34) for the first time since Feb. 14.

Webber has averaged 17.5 points on 47.5 percent shooting in the last seven games (he sat out one). The Sixers have averaged 103 points while holding opponents to 94.1 points on 39.6 percent shooting in that span.

And from everything I'm hearing, O'Brien has made a concerted effort to improve his relationship with practically everyone around him. He's listening more. Smiling more. Not being nearly as aloof or distant, no longer resembling a stranger.

"He's smiling more now than I've seen him smile since he's been here," Iverson said.

Iverson started smiling, too, in recognition of the positive effect a relaxed O'Brien could have on this team.

Then he stopped suddenly, as if he had realized the obvious: One less finger pointing at others usually leaves more fingers pointing in his direction.

Suddenly, it becomes more conspicuous that he's shooting too early and too often. That he's not passing the ball as much as he should. That he's turning the ball over entirely too much because he's trying, unnecessarily, to be all things all too often. And these are the reasons why he won't win with Webber as his teammate and O'Brien as his coach as much as anything else.

"I don't have a choice but to believe," Iverson said, after being asked whether the Sixers can win with Webber and O'Brien. "If we started off next season 0-10, on that 11th game, I'd think we'd win that game and I think we'd win a championship because I don't have any other choice.

"Once my teammates feel that I don't think we have a chance to win it all, that I don't think we have a chance of going to the playoffs, then we don't have a chance."

He would later say that he was dead serious - as if his true feelings were ever in question.

Before exhaling, he shook his head and said: "I'm not young anymore, man! I'm not young!"

Then he walked away.

Removed from the court, away from his self-proclaimed haven, Iverson was left with his own thoughts, pondering the tumultuous road he must travel.

It is an arduous task, destined for him alone.

P.S. Love Tobert!
 
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