Font Size
15px

This might be the most arrogant "acknowledgnt of mistakes" in NBA history.

Roger expressed the most proud words with the humblest attitude.

Erik Spoelstra, who attended the press conference with Roger, felt this was an interview worthy of being written into history, and many basketball docuntaries in the future would feature this scene.

Roger’s series of statents could be sumd up in one sentence: "As the idol of the Knicks players, I have the responsibility to tell them what real success requires and correct their mistakes."

The most brilliant aspect of this interview was that Roger didn’t even ntion his single-ga 53 points.

You know, when people talk about Magic, Michael Jordan, and Roger, these superstars, they recall Magic leading his team to a championship in his rookie season playing center, Michael Jordan’s first modern basketball dynasty, and Roger’s dynastic reign spanning two eras, rather than so inexplicable Excel data.

Players like Roger don’t need to deliberately ntion their stats to highlight their prowess.

The star players of the Knicks have been trying hard to shed the "Roger’s little brother" label, to shake off this ingrained impression.

Because when people say "so-and-so is soone’s little brother," the implication is that their status is not equal.

However, Roger’s victory and interview made their efforts worthless, solidifying their subordinate status.

Bill Simmons stayed up late to update his column with: "If Roger’s performance on the court is 100 points, then his performance at the press conference is 200 points! This is the coolest interview mont I’ve ever seen. It’s the first ti a player has evaluated his Finals opponent in such a paternalistic tone, and none of us question Roger saying it because he indeed qualifies."

With a single-ga 53-point victory and a thrilling post-ga interview, Roger reminded both New York fans and New York players of those old tis. They were always filled with hope, only to have it killed by Roger.

The Knicks players now seem like a disgraceful pile of minced at, trampled by Roger’s iron army, just as the Knicks had previously trampled other teams.

They were just as arrogant before the playoff rounds, scorning their opponents and trampling on the self-esteem of other teams.

They weren’t good people either. When Kevin Garnett arrogantly claid after crushing the Pistons in the last round, "If I ca to the East earlier, I could’ve played in the Finals often," New York dia lauded his arrogance as "confidence of the strong," making KG’s insult to the Pistons seem justified, like soldiers from the United States carrying the flags of "civilization" and "democracy" making the Middle East into ruins.

And now, the definition of "confidence of the strong" belongs to Roger. He can unabashedly display his pride, disdain his opponents, without worrying about any moral condemnation.

The bullet ultimately hit New Yorkers right between the eyes.

Competitive sports are like this; winners have all privileges. People praise the virtues of humility, but when Roger appeared so arrogant at the press conference, countless dia people like Bill Simmons even composed hymns for him just because he won.

Winning can even place you above morality.

At practice the day after losing the ga, the Knicks players were not in high spirits.

Before the ga, everyone on the Knicks had high expectations. They were unstoppable in the regular season, and didn’t even face a decent opponent in the playoffs. The blue-collar heroes who once dominated the East barely lasted six gas against the Knicks, and if not for Chauncey Billups’ clutch play in Ga 5, the Knicks might have swept the Pistons Gentlen.

They were accustod to victory, accustod to crushing opponents, and always proud to leave the court.

Yet, in the most crucial ga, their proud heads were suddenly dealt a blow, leaving everyone deeply disappointed.

Disappointnt is the most destructive weapon in the world; it can quash a person’s will.

At the tactical eting after practice, when Lenny Wilkens decided to adjust the defensive strategy, announcing double teaming and pressing defense against Roger in the next ga, the Knicks players rely nodded blankly.

They all harbored a doubt in their hearts: Is this really effective?

If Roger could be so freakishly effective to score 53 points relying on jump shots from mid to long range, is there anything this greatest offensive player in history can’t do?

If it were a "man" standing in front of the Knicks players, they would surely fight heroically to the very last mont. But a god stood before them, and no matter how hard they tried, that god seed to remain unscathed, making all efforts to defeat Roger seem pointless.

The Knicks are a young team, and the common problem with young people is often being uncontrollable, so the flas of passion burn brightly and also extinguish quickly.

When passion blazes, it seems it can lt everything, but just a bucket of cold water can extinguish the fla.

At this ti, a veteran needs to step up and stabilize the situation, which is why players like Udonis Haslem are particularly important.

Gary Payton is the team’s oldest player, yet even he remained silent at this mont, for he too doubted his resolve.

You are reading Champion Creed Chapter 1246 - 395: We May Grow Weary, But We Will Never Fad on novel69. Use the chapter navigation above or below to continue reading the latest translated chapters.
Share with your friends
Library saves books to your account. Reading History saves recent chapters in this browser.
Continuous reading

You may also like

Data-Driven Daoist cover
Similar genre

Data-Driven Daoist

CatVI ·Action

Theycalledhimtrash—untilhestartedtreatingtheDaolikeaDataset.Whendemonsslaughterhisnewfamily,computerscientistJohan—nowrebornasYuHan—survivesbypurew...

Top-tier Unruly Master cover
Trending now

Top-tier Unruly Master

Be Qin Sanchi ·Other

WhenDingFanopenedhiseyesagain,everythingbeforehimhadchanged.ACultivatorrebornonEarth,hefoundhimselfinthedespisedbodyofadisgracedheir.Fistsstrikinga...

No reviews yet. Be the first reader to leave one.
Please create an account or sign in to post a comment.