GQ's 10 Most Hated Athletes
emynd
830 Posts
Y???all see GQ???s 10 Most Hated Athletes yet? Shit is funny. Kobe is on there (duh) and, not surprisingly, TO takes #1. Some of the others are interesting, too. The best part though is from the ???5 Who Just Missed the Cut??? segment about Rasheed Wallace. Peep the blurb:
I???ve been laughing hysterically in my cubicle for three minutes now.In Portland, Rasheed, the Blazers??? best player, pissed off teammates by getting kicked out of games so often. Along with Bonzi Wells, he would at times engage in less-than-professional behavior as well, making headlines on one occasion for playfully firing a basketball across a practice court and directly into the nuts of Blazers center Ruben Boumtje Boumtje. ???Bonzi and Rasheed ran off the court laughing. They thought that was the funniest thing,??? says Jason Quick, of the Portland Oregonian. Freed of Bonzi???s influence, Wallace won a ring in Detroit.
Comments
Man, crotch and poop humor. Really going for the gold on this Friday.
classic!
Dood, the Praying Mantis deserves your pity, not your hate.
Luckily he retired to the delight of Mavericks fans worldwide.
When I was 12 yrs. old, the Sixers came to Atlantic City for training camp. Our local P.A.L coordinated a meet and greet with the players. The two players that I had met were Tim Perry and Shawn Bradley. Mr. Perry was mad cool. He signed my basketball and was very polite.
On the other hand, dickface (Shawn Bradley) was acting really cocky. This was the same year he was a no. 1 pick in the draft. He was being real corny that day. Plus his girl was wack. Skinny and pasty-faced, looking like she was on the verge of the death.
So, I have nothing but hatt for that dickhead.
Shaquille O???Neal was the focal point in Phil Jackson???s vaunted triangle offense, but Kobe???s refusal to take a backseat to the Diesel sunk what could???ve been the most dominant basketball dynasty ever. ???I???ve talked to Scottie Pippen and Michael,??? says Anthony, ???and if Michael Jordan played with Shaq, he would have found a way to let Shaq be the man.???
what kind of biased, dumbass speculation is that?!
?
We give you America???s biggest basshole. As one rival puts it, Iaconelli, a loud, brash New Jerseyite, has ???disgraced??? the predominantly southern, rural, Christian sport of angling. ???When he catches one,??? says celebrated fisherman Denny Brauer, ???you???ve got the fist pumps, the running around the boat, the lying flat on the boat. He???ll stare at the fish, yell at it, point at it. He???ll shake his finger at it.???
...
???Iaconelli is a big-city angler and a product of the street," Schultz adds. ???Our sport should be portrayed more like golf or tennis or sports of that nature."
I can't believe there are fishing jerseys. What sport could possibly have less use for specialised shirts than fishing? Waiders, ok, and those vests with pockets for your lures, that makes sense too. But jersyes? ::liljohn::
BINGO.
"The most telling of the many, many (seriously, you wouldn???t believe how willing people were to talk about this guy) Pierzynski anecdotes we heard took place during spring training in 2004. Pierzynski, crouched behind the plate, took a pitch to the groin. Rushing to his aid, trainer Stan Conte asked him how he felt. ???Like this!??? Pierzynski grunted, then savagely kneed Conte in the balls. "
I also love the uncensored nature of GQ in this site
Jesus. I know the guy can be a jerk, but he fucking pitched
a game with a rubber band holding his tendons in place, and now
they are already trying to smear it?? Say all you want about his
off-field camera hogging actions, but how anybody can question his guts
is beyond me.
dude, im with you. that punk needs to have his name wiped out of any nba stat book. a stain on the game and a complete low point in philadelphia basketball. if he ever sets foot in philly in anything other than a carnival cage he deserves to be tarred and feathered
Is this the same guy that's bringing "extreme" to the game of fishing? I saw on ESPN one guy who, after catching a fish, actually try to break dance on the boat in front of a crowd of people. It was a disgrace.
oh "truth hurts" i get it now......
Batmon, plaese to refrain from your cheapshots. thank you.
and tim perry is the man. he was part of our beloved #1 ranked temple team that featured howie evans, mark macon, ramon rivas, and mike vreeswyk. good times.
Off the subject but when is AEIOU 3 dropping?
Hence the southern expression, "holler at a bigmouth".
James "Fly" Williams - Fly made headlines as a High School phenom in Brooklyn and then played at Austin Peay(pronounced Pee)University where he was the recipient of the greatest cheer in College Basketball history "Fly is open, Let's Go Peay!!". Fly also received free room and board from New York state after he robbed a bank on an off day from the ABA!!
John Brisker - Brisker played for the Pittsburgh Pipers and was one of the most feared players in the league for both his scoring ability and unpredictable temper. Brisker helped his reputation by pulling a gun on his team mates in the locker room at half time of a game demanding that they pass him the ball more.
"Early during the 1971-72 season, John Brisker of the Pittsburgh Condors promised to lead the ABA in scoring, or knock out all opponents who guarded him if he didn't finish first in the scoring race."
"Brisker had a feathery jump shot and used finesse to get many of his points. But he also had a nasty court personality, and loved to fight. During the 1970-71 season, Brisker was involved in bloody confrontations with Joe Caldwell of Carolina, Wendell Ladner of Memphis, and Ron Boone of Texas. Around the league, Brisker became known as the "heavyweight champion of the ABA." Appropriately, the Condors' press guide pictured Brisker as an ill-tempered hombre - ready to draw a pair of six-shooters."(see below)
Many of Brisker's teammates were wary of practicing hard against him, as he was perfectly happy to fight them at the slightest provocation. Condors guard Walt Szczerbiak recalls: "The only problem I had in Pittsburgh was I had to guard John Brisker in practice every day. And he wasn't a very nice person the day after a game, in practice. And he didn't want some rookie who was trying to do his job competing and trying to win some playing time. Even getting within ten feet of him."