How come Greg Popovich does not get his proper respect.

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I want you to do the same thing Doug (and many others) want you to do, issue a real, unequivocal apology. Not some half assed "if I offended you" crap. You know you offended him, you intentionally did so and your "apology" to Doug shows you simply don't care.


Which is LEAVE THIS SITE FOR GOOD..

^^^ This is what should of followed that :lolBIG:


Choptalk is a bitch
 

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i find this post very funny.

you stalked choptalk for god knows how long (and running), passive aggressively insulted me in all threads excluding ones i created, had sex with a 15 year old girl when you were 23, now are involved in a 3-forum buttraping of 5starbomb (somewhat warranted b/c 5starbomb is a bitch) that includes you thanking posters for insulting 5starbomb in every thread and saying you like them (even though some of them have openly insulted you in the past and even as recently as this week), which i don't find warranted, but rather lame, and you also tried a referral business that ended up with stiffing $100 for a longass time because you 'didn't like' that person and he was pissing you off. ah i forgot the whole forging of your NBA record when you first came on the site as well, not counting posted playsbecause you were starting over. oh and you claimed you were a professional gambler back in the day and it has been claimed across the street that you've bet as little as $1 on plays

oh and the kicker, a thread dedicated to you saying you were never going to post here again. wonder if that came true.

just to clarify since you'll undoubtedly cry again, this isn't me having an agenda. this is me finding it highly ironic and wildly entertaining that you are calling Choptalk a bitch (which I don't disagree with b/t/w).

I've given Chop more shit about the 5dimes wager than anyone on here most likely. But I'm sure you and him could have a field day going to town on each other given your collective histories.

i couldn't restrain myself.


I was thinking the same thing when I read his post. I have been ignoring him again like I try to do. I have not responded to any of his post since that agenda thread he made a few months ago. But even though I have ignored him 100%, I could bump up at least 20 post in the last month where he makes smart remarks against me. I have ignored all 20+ of them because I frankly dont feel like hes worth the effort. But yet im the one with an agenda against him.

There is not a person on this forum who has less of right to call someone out on this forum than him. If I were him I would just keep my mouth shut.

The funny thing is I made a $40 bet that he laughes about, but yet he makes $1 wagers lol. Oh the irony of that.

I dont mind that he makes $1 wagers, but dont laugh at my $40 bets.


Dsethi, you said I am a bitch, and you are entitled to believe that if you want. I respect your thoughts even though I dont agree with it if you understand where I am coming from.

I had no idea I would be bashed to this extent for what I did.
But thats life I guess. Did not think that would make me a bitch.
 

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Happy 67th gregg

Gregg PopovichCOACH



BIRTHDAYJanuary 28,*1949*

BIRTHPLACEEast Chicago,*I
 

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Spurs keep rolling at home:

Whatever lineup Popovich trots out Wednesday night in an attempt to win a 47th straight home game likely will look better than the Pelicans', which won't include Jrue Holiday after he was lost for the season.
 

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Damn I was JC back in the day I guess. Lol
 
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still have a very valid point, choptalk.

Pop might be the greatest coach in the history of basketball, but it sure doesn't seem like he's treated as such. it's probably one of those "you'll appreciate him more when he's retired" deals, but right now he deserves so, so, so much more credit for everything he has done, especially in today's day and age. think about it: been around since the late-90's when good coaches these days are getting fired just weeks into a new season.

i always give Pop his due and i wish the rest of the world would acknowledge him for who he is: maybe the single greatest coach in NBA history, and definitely right there in the top-5 for greatest coaches in sports history
 
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</figure>7:00 AM CT
  • i

    Brian WindhorstESPN Senior Writer


CLEVELAND -- LeBron James has faced Gregg Popovich in three NBA Finals, and on Saturday night he will play his 24th regular-season game against him, not to mention the uncountable number of San Antonio Spurs games he's watched.
In other words, the Cavaliers star has had plenty of time to form an opinion.
"I think he's the greatest coach of all time," James said Thursday, echoing comments he made last summer.
"You have to be sharp, mentally and physically, when you go against his ballclub. If you were an NFL player, it's probably the same as going against a [Bill] Belichick team," James said after scoring 21 points with 15 assists and nine rebounds in a 118-103 win over the Phoenix Suns. "What they're going to do, they're going to do and you have to try to figure it out."
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James first got to know Popovich in 2004, after his rookie season, when the Spurs coach was an assistant for Team USA. James was part of the team that took Olympic bronze in Athens that summer. James has been studying Popovich ever since.
"To be able to do what he's done where the basketball has changed so much and he's been able to have a growth mindset and change with the game [is impressive]," James said. "We went from a league where it was inside out, where every time you came down it was throw it to the big, and then it goes to every time down pick-and-roll, and then it goes to every time down shoot a 3.
"Pop has been able to adjust every single time and still, for some odd reason, keep those guys under the radar. I don't understand it."
 

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pop is a literal savant. wayyyy under the radar coach,,
 

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Can't stand him

A lot of it has to do with playing fantasy and his disinformation bs but he's a smug surly prick who's also a demented liberal.
 
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Can't stand him

A lot of it has to do with playing fantasy and his disinformation bs but he's a smug surly prick who's also a demented liberal.

I don't like his politics, but that doesn't take away from his coaching ability... He runs a class organization.
 

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because people learned not too over hype people like pat riley and phil jackson
 

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i respect his players over time more than the coach, his politics are a little on the crazy side to me
 

Gunga galunga... gunga, gunga-galunga.
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one of my college roommates worked for him as an assistant video coordinator in San Antonio. Says he is 100% class. Used to give my buddy his gift certificates to nice steakhouses that pop would get for radio appearances or whatever (my buddy wasn't making much...then again he lived at Malik Rose's house for free so luckily didn't need much money)...

i have a ton ton of respect for pop. You can tell he is a genuine person with the way he handled Sager's illness and how he talked about Timmy D. Plus you can just tell players respect him and buy in.

 
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[ Popovich has owned D'Antoni ]

[COLOR=rgba(0, 0, 0, 0.8)][h=1]A Brief History of Pop vs. D’Antoni[/h][h=2]The Rockets-Spurs series rekindles one of the underrated playoff rivalries of the 21st century — the coaching clash between Gregg Popovich and Mike D’Antoni[/h][/COLOR]
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</figure>One coach has embedded himself so deeply in one franchise that his name is synonymous with San Antonio basketball, despite the line of Hall of Fame players that have played for him. The other has been a basketball nomad, a door-to-door salesman hell-bent on implementing a style of play that is only now being recognized as successful. Though merit can and should be holistic, sometimes success is as simple as counting the rings on a hand. Gregg Popovich has titles. Mike D’Antoni does not — and Pop is one of the reasons.
A quick perusal through history will show that in this quasi-rivalry between the two, there is an alternate reality beyond the woods of basketball fantasies where D’Antoni parlays his methods into success and becomes what Gregg Popovich now is. Instead, it’s Pop who has eliminated D’Antoni’s teams four times in the playoffs, beating him soundly at his own game and even turning his own team into a pace-and-space powerhouse capable of taking down LeBron-led teams after losing the 2013 Finals.
With these two coaches facing off again, this time in the Western Conference semifinals, the duel is back on. In Game 1, we saw a glimpse of how D’Antoni must have imagined beating those mid-2000s Spurs: outpacing and outscoring them thanks to making 22 of 50 3s and winning by 27. But in Game 2, we were reminded that Popovich is the king of adjustments, as the Spurs kept pace with the Rockets and outshot them from the field and 3-point land on their way to a 25-point win.
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</figure>[h=3]2005 Conference Finals: Spurs (4) vs. Suns (1)[/h]After winning a league-high 62 games, the Suns had reached the conference finals for the first time in 12 years. In classic D’Antoni fashion, Phoenix was the best offensive team in the league and dead last defensively. NBA MVP Steve Nash, in his first year on the team, and Amar’e Stoudemire were picking and rolling everyone to death, while Quentin Richardson, Joe Johnson, and Shawn Marion were shooting more than 15 combined 3s per game. The first iteration of the Seven Seconds or Less Suns that made it into the postseason ran at a rampant pace and swept the Grizzlies in the first round before defeating the Mavericks in six games. Then, they faced the second-seeded Spurs in the conference finals. It was the perfect matchup. ABC even had the perfect intro.
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</figure>From Game 1, Popovich’s team adjusted to Phoenix’s pace, scoring 100 or more in all five games in a series where all but one game was decided by seven points or less. It was as evenly matched as evenly matched could get, but in the end, Tony Parker, Tim Duncan, and Manu Ginobili — then still possessing a luscious head of hair — all averaged more than 20 points and collectively outgunned Stoudemire, who averaged 37 in the series, and the rest of the Suns on their way to a Finals berth and eventually, an NBA title. D’Antoni thought he had the winning recipe, but Popovich simply used his better ingredients and beat him with it.
[h=3]2007 Conference Semifinals: Spurs (4) vs. Suns (2)[/h]The same story played itself out, when the two teams met in the 2007 conference semis. The Suns won 61 regular-season games, finished second in the West, and were ready for revenge against the Spurs, who were coming off a 58-win campaign of their own. This was another rendezvous between the league’s best offense and the best defense, and the series had a little bit of everything. There was Nash’s bloody nose late in the fourth quarter of Game 1, which kept Nash out for most of the last minute after he had hit a game-tying shot with just over two minutes left.
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</figure>Then, there was Robert Horry hip-checking Nash into the side paneling hard during Game 4. A hold-me-back pseudo fight broke out and both Boris Diaw and Stoudemire made the mistake of exiting the bench area. The Suns won the game, but both players were suspended for Game 5. The Spurs would win Games 5 and 6, one a grind-it-out contest in the 80s, the other an avalanche in the 110s. Luck didn’t seem to be on D’Antoni’s side, and once again the ability to win any type of game, whether low- or high-scoring, gave Popovich the edge. He also had Tim Duncan, who averaged nearly 27–14 during the series and would lead the Spurs to a sweep of the Cavs in the Finals a few weeks later.
[h=3]2008 First-Round Series: Spurs (4) vs. Suns (1)[/h]By 2008, the meeting between Popovich’s Spurs and D’Antoni’s Suns in the playoffs had become a ritual, if not part of a rivalry, and it provided an opportunity to contrast their styles. This time, the teams met in the first round of the playoffs — the Spurs as the 3-seed, the Suns as the 6-seed. Phoenix again had a top-three offense, while San Antonio boasted a top-three defense. The defending champs largely retained their core from the year prior, but then–Phoenix GM Steve Kerr changed the direction of the franchise when he made a move against their patented modus operandi and acquired Shaquille O’Neal from the Heat in a February deal. D’Antoni was reportedly OK with the deviation, telling reporters, “It just makes us better.” If what had kept them from the mountaintop had been a bonafide superstar, they now had one. In theory, at least.
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</figure>The 2008 first-round series truly began and ended in Game 1, where the Suns, who led the game for the first 44 minutes, squandered away all of the following: an eight-point lead at halftime, three-point lead with 20 seconds left in regulation, a five-point with 1:08 left in overtime, and a three-point overtime lead with 12 seconds left. In double overtime, a fadeaway 3 from Nash would tie the game with just over 10 seconds left before a now-much-balder Ginobili would drive to the hoop and end the thriller with a running layup. The Suns would steal Game 4, but the series was already lost. Phoenix thought Shaq could get them over the hump. But in the end, the larger obstacle remained Pop’s Spurs, who would fittingly be the final team D’Antoni played before leaving Phoenix for New York.
[h=3]2013 First-Round Series: Spurs (4) vs. Lakers (0)[/h]In 2008, D’Antoni left the desert for Manhattan. There is no factual evidence that he wanted to get away from facing Pop in the playoffs, but that certainly couldn’t have hurt. Instead of benefiting from a change of scenery, D’Antoni flopped in New York, never truly implementing his system enough to guide the Knicks to real success. After two losing seasons and a third that featured new arrivals Carmelo Anthony and Stoudemire, and most of a strike-shortened fourth. D’Antoni resigned from his post, in part due to reported clashes with Melo.
A season later, the Lakers fired Mike Brown five games into the season, and the Buss family chose D’Antoni over Phil Jackson to take over as coach. With Kobe Bryant, Pau Gasol, and new acquisitions Dwight Howard — then still good — and Nash, it would have seemed like the perfect place for D’Antoni to thrive. This was supposed to be fun and work out.
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</figure>But after D’Antoni’s Lakers won 45 games in the regular season, who awaited them in the first round? Pop’s Spurs, of course. The Lakers, without Kobe due to his Achilles injury, never stood a chance and were outscored by 75 points over the course of the sweep. D’Antoni returned for a second season in L.A., but the team never bought into his methodology and won only 27 games before he stepped away from a messy situation once again.
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</figure>In 2010, after the Suns — then without D’Antoni but still abiding by his unique style — finally outlasted San Antonio in a playoff series, Popovich knew he had to make a change. After years of using players as spokes around the big man, Popovich told his coaches, “We can’t win like this anymore. We have to get faster.” So they did. After landing near the bottom of the league in pace repeatedly, the Spurs from 2011 to 2014 were in the top 15 fastest teams in the league. D’Antoni was gone from Phoenix, but his influence was felt across the league.
It’s easy to portray Pop as the ghost that has haunted D’Antoni throughout his coaching career. But D’Antoni has been chasing far more than the Spurs sideline staple. His run-and-gun approach, offense-over-defense philosophy (which Pop once defended him for) had never truly found an apt home until this season in Houston. Paired with Daryl Morey and this decade’s more dynamic version of Nash in James Harden, D’Antoni’s style of play has been vindicated. All he needs now are the results, and in another evenly matched series with his pseudo-nemesis, this may be his best chance for a breakthrough.
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