- May 13, 2013
- 7,339
- 12,146
Hope them scrubs (sans Kuz) don't get washed by Spain tonight.
Kuz the odd man out and gonna be the final cut
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Hope them scrubs (sans Kuz) don't get washed by Spain tonight.
As if this thread wasn't already **** already
But most would expect this to happen as knowledge of sports medicine & rehabilitation has become better. not to mention the NBA has took strides in limiting the physicality of the game. As time goes on guys should last longer.
Man **** you
Now I’m stuck in a conversation I want no parts of.
AryeEruptham
Plumlee, Kuzma, Harris.Who do ya’ll think the final cuts will be?
Plumlee is the only lock to be cut tbh
I’ve read he’s been one of the worst shooters in camp. But yeah, theoretically if he’s shooting Iike normal, he should be in there.Harris gotta be a lock for shooting, right?
I wanna see team USA vs this man....
Everyone on NT seems to believe that they’ll still wash everyone though. Fox and Mitchell ain’t leading this team anywhere.
nba season thread always full of petty shop boisPpl take this **** too serious
Rooting for guys to get cut petty af
In 2009, Mikhail Prokhorov, a swaggering Russian minerals oligarch out of favor with the Vladimir Putin regime, spent less than $400 million buying control of the moribund New Jersey Nets and a large share of Barclays Center, the new arena in the heart of Brooklyn that would be home to the NBA franchise. Based on the cost and value of the arena, we can probably consider Prokhorov’s purchase price for the Nets to be south of $200 million, maybe even cheaper.
Almost exactly a decade out from that purchase, the New York Post reports Prokhorov is completing his sale of the Nets franchise to junior partner Joseph Tsai for a total price of $2.35 billion.
We don’t know how much money Prokhorov invested in annual losses along the way, but the oligarch flipped an NBA franchise over the course of a decade for a net profit of more than $2 billion. Even if you assume he lost $100 million a year running the team — which is absurdly high, there’s basically no way he lost that much even with famously high player payrolls — he’d still be sitting on better than $1 billion in profit from the sale.