Can't Knock the Hustle: Inside the Season with Brooklyn Nets Superstars of the Future
Posted: Mon Sep 13, 2021 7:26 pm
"Can't Knock the Hustle: Inside the Season of Protest, Pandemic, and Progress with the Brooklyn Nets' Superstars of Tomorrow" by Matt Sullivan.
Anyone read this? I like many others saw the excerpts and headlines and media spin off of interviews... but I hadn't yet read the book. I just picked up the knidle version and read the first few chapters and its outstanding.
It talks about so much more and focuses on stuff much deeper then the trash headlines "KD's dad told him to go to the knicks" and junk like that. Its a great insite into the players, but also the franchise, the inner working of the sport, and it has a great grasp on nets history. it fills in alot of the business blanks from ratner to prok to tsai hat is really interesting. talks alot about how players think now, with regards to racism and empowerment.
also stands out... KD, Kyrie and others... winning and rings is a part, but there are much bigger things to them basketball and otherwise. and that those things don't detract but help them with their on court success. its great to get a non-sensationalized narrative behind the senses of KD/Kyrie, where everything they say and do is turned into a hit piece or headline
anyhow, would love feedback from anyone who read it, and encourage those who havent to pick it up. it was (pleseantly) alot different then i anticipated
Anyone read this? I like many others saw the excerpts and headlines and media spin off of interviews... but I hadn't yet read the book. I just picked up the knidle version and read the first few chapters and its outstanding.
It talks about so much more and focuses on stuff much deeper then the trash headlines "KD's dad told him to go to the knicks" and junk like that. Its a great insite into the players, but also the franchise, the inner working of the sport, and it has a great grasp on nets history. it fills in alot of the business blanks from ratner to prok to tsai hat is really interesting. talks alot about how players think now, with regards to racism and empowerment.
also stands out... KD, Kyrie and others... winning and rings is a part, but there are much bigger things to them basketball and otherwise. and that those things don't detract but help them with their on court success. its great to get a non-sensationalized narrative behind the senses of KD/Kyrie, where everything they say and do is turned into a hit piece or headline
anyhow, would love feedback from anyone who read it, and encourage those who havent to pick it up. it was (pleseantly) alot different then i anticipated