oly posted odds on the slam dunk contest

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  • bigboydan
    SBR Aristocracy
    • 08-10-05
    • 55420

    #1
    oly posted odds on the slam dunk contest
    NBA All Star Props Saturday February 18, 2006 - Sprite Rising Stars Slam Dunk

    Josh Smith (Atl) +125
    Andre Iguodala (Phi) +250
    Nate Robinson (NYK) +280
    Hakim Warrick (Mem) +350
  • rm18
    SBR Posting Legend
    • 09-20-05
    • 22291

    #2
    smith should repeat, I can't believe I was stupid enough to take the Birdman last year
    Comment
    • datek23
      SBR Wise Guy
      • 01-08-06
      • 667

      #3
      Originally posted by bigboydan
      NBA All Star Props Saturday February 18, 2006 - Sprite Rising Stars Slam Dunk

      Josh Smith (Atl) +125
      Andre Iguodala (Phi) +250
      Nate Robinson (NYK) +280
      Hakim Warrick (Mem) +350

      Only player I really seen or heard of is Josh Smith.
      Comment
      • rm18
        SBR Posting Legend
        • 09-20-05
        • 22291

        #4
        Nate Robinson is 5'8 but I doubt he can anything that good, he does not have SPud Webb hops

        Warrick is a power forward, most big guys do not have very good showings in the dunk contest

        Iguadola is the only guy I would really be worried about picking Smith, you should know him he is the best player amond these guys, although it is probably a good idea to watch the rookie all star game and see if any of the other three do soething crazy before betting on Smith
        Comment
        • onlooker
          BARRELED IN @ SBR!
          • 08-10-05
          • 36572

          #5
          Originally posted by rm18
          I can't believe I was stupid enough to take the Birdman last year
          He is now out of the NBA for at least 2 years for failing the drug policy.

          By the time Chris Andersen is eligible to return to the NBA, his arms should be as colorful as those alternate road uniforms he used to wear for the Hornets.

          There's a fascinating human interest story behind the first player banned from the league for a major drug policy violation since Stanley Roberts in 1999.

          Andersen is the son of a second-generation Motor Maid, a woman who grew up on Harley-Davidson motorcycles. His mother, Linda, could probably tell you where Sturgis is before she could tell you who Stockton was. She brought young Chris along when she went for her first orchid tattoo, later adding hummingbirds and butterflies, and Andersen returned the favor the first time he had ink injected under his skin.

          But Andersen spent 3½ of his formative years without his mother. His father, an artist, put him and his sister, Tamie, into a group home when he was 11. It was either that or a military school, because dad was heading off to New York to try to sell his paintings.

          Linda regained custody after initially being unable to find them and brought them back to rural east Texas, where she would pick 14-year-old Chris up from school on her chopper. Andersen's mom took her Harleys seriously, mind you, because it ran in the family. She says her mother (Andersen's grandmother) was riding the back of a Harley when pregnant with her.

          Andersen eventually became one of 34 members of the Class of '97 at Iola High School, and after a year and a half of community college, he ditched his letter of commitment to Clyde Drexler's University of Houston Cougars and decided to go for the money by playing professionally in China, where he faced Yao Ming before hardly anyone in America had heard of him.

          Andersen eventually played minor league ball in North Dakota and New Mexico before the Nuggets saw him in a summer league tryout. Known as "The Birdman," he was a hit with the free-spirited home fans in Denver and later New Orleans and Oklahoma City, and gained some national fame (or shame), by missing his first seven attempts at the dunk contest in Denver last year. (A year earlier, he spiked his hair for the dunk contest in L.A.)

          Andersen apparently failed a drug test last week, testing positive for one of the so-called "drugs of abuse" (including heroin, cocaine, amphetamines, LSD and PCP) that bring an automatic two-year banishment.

          No one has said exactly which substance Andersen tested positive for, but the players' union has filed a grievance on his behalf. Citing strict confidentiality rules that have cost high-ranking people their jobs when breached in the past, the union has not even disclosed the grounds for Andersen's appeal.

          Under league rules, the four-year, $14 million contract Andersen signed over the summer is now null and void. If his dismissal is upheld and he misses two seasons, the Hornets will have first dibs on Andersen should he be reinstated. If they were to want to bring him back, they'd have to tender him a contract at his old salary of $3.5 million.

          Not to be trite, but it really is a shame that Andersen just threw away more than $12 million. He seemed like a good guy every time I spoke to him. We once discussed the specifics of his tattoos, how one arm was tattooed with the Chinese symbols for good, the other with the symbols for bad. He also had the outlines of a few new tattoos on his arms and shoulders, explaining that it was an ongoing process to have all of the colors filled in. He expected it to take years, but I guess he'll have the extra time for it now.
          Comment
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