
or since everybody on this board knows how you feel about Lavar do you have to beat a dead horse?

....or will you continue to contradict yourself with all of your hate post being easily accesible?



REDEEMEDSKIN wrote:EasyMoney musta been countin' his bills when he wrote:Name a master of anything in the sports world.
Peyton Manning, Michael Jordan, Lennox Lewis, Muhammad Ali....should I continue???
redskincity wrote:....and now that you are out of breathe, will you continue to toot your own whistle concerning Lavar?
or since everybody on this board knows how you feel about Lavar do you have to beat a dead horse?![]()
....or will you continue to contradict yourself with all of your hate post being easily accesible?![]()
![]()
EasyMoney wrote:REDEEMEDSKIN wrote:EasyMoney musta been countin' his bills when he wrote:Name a master of anything in the sports world.
Peyton Manning, Michael Jordan, Lennox Lewis, Muhammad Ali....should I continue???
I knew you were going to go this route and this statement right here explains perfectly what is going on in your brain. I'm glad you did, so I can prove you wrong... yet again.
Peyton Manning broke the TD record because of a RULE CHANGE. Peyton Manning cannot play in COLD WEATHER. Peyton Manning can't beat Bill Belechick. Master? I think not.
Michael Jordan came to our lovely basketball franchise here in D.C. and RAN IT INTO THE GROUND. A master of the game wouldn't have left on the terms he did. A master of the game would've left some type of mark on his last team. A master of the game would've turned the team around. It was Eddie Jordan who turned it around. Not Michael.
Ali was smashed so many times in the face by Foreman and Frazier that he can't even function as a normal human being anymore. Greatest fighter ever? Yes. Master? No.
Lennox Lewis is about the closest thing to a master that you have mentioned. Who was the guy from Bmore that beat him? I can't for the life of me remember and I don't care to look it up.
A master is a flawless competitor with a flawless record. Which is the most unattainable goal you can ever set. A master of anything does not exist.
REDEEMEDSKIN wrote:redskincity wrote:....and now that you are out of breathe, will you continue to toot your own whistle concerning Lavar?
or since everybody on this board knows how you feel about Lavar do you have to beat a dead horse?![]()
....or will you continue to contradict yourself with all of your hate post being easily accesible?![]()
![]()
So long as this or any other subject keeps coming up, I will continue to post, thank you very much. I will post until the end.
REDEEMEDSKIN wrote:I think it's safe to say that Peyton has mastered the QB position.
Ali mastered the sweet science.
Jordan mastered the fade-away jumper, especially late in his career, his real one, I mean.
Lewis mastered the art of pummeling the competition.
While these guys are not perfect in their records, they are certainly masters of their sport.
But, if I must find proof without a reasonable doubt that mastery DOES exist in sports...
Vijay Singh, Tiger Woods, and Phil Mickelson have all recently won the...gulp... Masters.
I get it, Lavar ain't perfect. Nobody's perfect, etc.
General Failure wrote:There's got to be a cutoff point measured in years where a player no longer has potential and has reached all of it that he's going to.
tcwest10 wrote:I think the operative word with Arrington is "potential". The question is, is the possibility that his health and exuberance will always stand in the way of reaching that "potential" something that you can overlook while you throw millions in cap space at him to stand and watch ?
I don't think that what most of us do can be called "bashing" LaVar. I think what we're doing is finally becoming acclimated to the cap era.
General Failure wrote:There's got to be a cutoff point measured in years where a player no longer has potential and has reached all of it that he's going to.
BossHog wrote:You guys are arguing with a guy who put lennox lewis and muhammad Ali in the same sentence and category.
I'm Canadian... I probably have A LITTLE more knowledge of Lewis than most, he trained less than 100 miles from me in Kitchener. If you saw my boxing collection, you'd know that i know a thing or two about the sport.
If Lennox Lewis is a master... then so is every heavyweight champion that ever walked the planet. He was 30+ years old before he entered a fight that his handlers knew there MIGHT be a chance he would be defeated.
... and a quarterback who has never been to the super bowl DESPITE his obvious prowess has MASTERED the position? Not even ARCHIE manning himself would concede that. Wouldn't a master have been able to DISSECT the same defense that has destroyed him on numerous occasions? he hasn't masterd the Patriots yet, how the hell could he be a master of the position.
... and if you take into account that REDEEMED obviously doesn't know what a master is, or understand that Lavar doesn't need to be the best linebacker to ever play the game to justify his presence on the team, you'll all realize that giving it any lip service is akin to trying to argue with the pope about abortion.
... the only true MASTER of any sport to walk the planet in my opiniion IS Ali... and that's why he's probably the most recognized face in the world. And to be fair, he was stripped of the time when he truly was masterful. Ever want to read a good boxing book -- read Muhammad Ali by Thomas Hauser.
... cause Ali the person is more of a master than Ali the boxer ever will be. Most people just don't understand how large a role he played in the liberation of not only black athletes but people in general.
... and to hear him compared to some poncy, primped up, wanna-be-brit is just the epitome of exaggeration to prove a point.
... a common tactic of the supposedly redeemed one.
Texas Hog wrote:I'd throw Pete Sampras in that category!
Ever hear him speak?
...it's unfair to hold LeVar accountable for those early years...he played relly well when Marty was here. The other coaches we had didn't focus on defense. Edwards was not ready (may never be) to be a d-cord in the NFL. ...I think LeVar felt the need to do it all. He won't need to do that now. He knows that...