richtree
Rotation player
Firstly,
You tried to copy the way I responded to you and you did a bad job.
Secondly, you just re-wrote everything that is un-factual. Just because you write something down doesn't make it true.
Then you actually defended Larry Brown, Q-Rich, and Isiah Thomas. In your response you listed mostly opinions and false statements.
Here they are:
Marbury refused to play in the system Brown had installed. (False)
You wanted him to get along with Isiah, who will probably go down as the worst coach in NBA history. (crazyness)
It was evidenced when he said that he basically did not want to play for Mike D'Antoni. (never said that/and he played in the PRE_SEASON)
He feuded with him, Malik Rose, Tim Thomas, Jamal Crawford. (Losers that never lived up to any of their potential, never lifted a weight, never did anything positive, Scrubs!)
No, he said BEFORE THE SEASON that he was going to collect the $20 mil due to him. (Find me the Quote, plus he was playing in the PRE-Season)
Sources are coming out now from people not named Mike D'Antoni and Donnie Walsh that Steph asked to talk to the Celtics before training camp began. Read something. (Show me -- you are lying here / and you don't think the NY Media would have found this ? )
You got ethered, you are wack, you are wrong....deal with it.
(You need to through that in there to make you look tuff because you written word is weak).
Bottom line in Steph was a good player, many of the Knicks didn't get along with him because Steph wanted to win more than they did. Steph loved the Knicks more than they did. Steph couldn't stand by quietly and watch Larry Brown, Isiah, and the management ruin the team he loved.
Why did it take a new coach for all these players to realize this ?
All the good players in the league respect Steph.
You like every other weak-minded Knick fan are looking for someone to blame for the last 8 years....
Your owner, GM, and weak supporting cast were the problem.
Its very easy to say Marbury because you don't want to accept that he was a really good palyer on a bad team, in the worst situation.
You tried to copy the way I responded to you and you did a bad job.
Secondly, you just re-wrote everything that is un-factual. Just because you write something down doesn't make it true.
Then you actually defended Larry Brown, Q-Rich, and Isiah Thomas. In your response you listed mostly opinions and false statements.
Here they are:
Marbury refused to play in the system Brown had installed. (False)
You wanted him to get along with Isiah, who will probably go down as the worst coach in NBA history. (crazyness)
It was evidenced when he said that he basically did not want to play for Mike D'Antoni. (never said that/and he played in the PRE_SEASON)
He feuded with him, Malik Rose, Tim Thomas, Jamal Crawford. (Losers that never lived up to any of their potential, never lifted a weight, never did anything positive, Scrubs!)
No, he said BEFORE THE SEASON that he was going to collect the $20 mil due to him. (Find me the Quote, plus he was playing in the PRE-Season)
Sources are coming out now from people not named Mike D'Antoni and Donnie Walsh that Steph asked to talk to the Celtics before training camp began. Read something. (Show me -- you are lying here / and you don't think the NY Media would have found this ? )
You got ethered, you are wack, you are wrong....deal with it.
(You need to through that in there to make you look tuff because you written word is weak).
Bottom line in Steph was a good player, many of the Knicks didn't get along with him because Steph wanted to win more than they did. Steph loved the Knicks more than they did. Steph couldn't stand by quietly and watch Larry Brown, Isiah, and the management ruin the team he loved.
Why did it take a new coach for all these players to realize this ?
All the good players in the league respect Steph.
You like every other weak-minded Knick fan are looking for someone to blame for the last 8 years....
Your owner, GM, and weak supporting cast were the problem.
Its very easy to say Marbury because you don't want to accept that he was a really good palyer on a bad team, in the worst situation.