| | | | It is too laugh:
LAS VEGAS, July 25, 2008 -- With two men who symbolize what the American dream is all about – Bill Gates and Warren Buffett – sitting courtside, the latest incarnation of the U.S. Men’s Senior National “Dream Team” kicked off its quest for the gold with a dominant 120-65 rout of the Canadian Men’s Senior National Team at the Thomas & Mack Center on Friday.
U.S.A. only led by six points after the first quarter but used a 90-41 extended spurt the rest of the way to blow the game wide open.
A 55-point win against a team that featured only one NBA player, Joel Anthony (a D-League call-up by the Heat last season), wasn’t about to excite head coach Mike Krzyzewski too much, however.
In fact, Krzyzewski didn’t even refer to Friday night as a game.
“For our fifth day of practice, we showed a lot of energy,” Krzyzewski said to open up his postgame comments.
And to think, a Canadian invented this instrument of embarassment...
http://www.renewamerica.us
The depravity of man is at once the most unpopular of the Christian doctrines and yet the most empirically verifiable. - Malcolm Muggeridge |
| | | | | You have this oh-so-continental way of continually missing the point. Did you leave America because of your reading comprehension disability?
Was he born in Canada? Was he a Canadian citizen?
Naismith was a star gymnast, lacrosse player and Canadian football player at McGill University where he earned a BA in Physical Education (1888) and a Diploma at the Presbyterian College in Montreal (1890). In 1885-86 he won the Wicksteed Silver Medal as the gymnastics champion of the school's junior class. In his graduating year, he lost the Medal as the top athlete of the university's senior class. Sounds like a Canadian to me.
The fact that he did it in the US is not the point, idiot. I said a Canadian invented it. I didn't say it was invented in Canada. The point of the post, scumbuckette, was that the Canadian basketball team sucks. Like you.
http://www.renewamerica.us
The depravity of man is at once the most unpopular of the Christian doctrines and yet the most empirically verifiable. - Malcolm Muggeridge |
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