Ruzious wrote:Chocolate City Jordanaire wrote:JWizmentality wrote:I don't think anyone here is proclaiming we've turned around. We're most likely headed for a reality check but for the time being they are fun to watch. And Parker and Portis are decent players. Live a little. It's not like we have much to be excited about.
WE HAVE TURNED AROUND
It's ludicrous to expect instant chemisty, instant favor with refs, and wins over teams that are even more talented.
I also hate that people are afraid to risk looking dumb or being wrong. I'm not afraid. This team is already 50% better than it was to start the season.
--NO TROY BROWN? How about thank goodness NO MORE AUSTIN RIVERS.
--NO DWIGHT HOWARD? How about no drama. How about Portis on the offensive boards. How about Bryant being a fluid athlete and positive teammate. How about putting Jabari Parker at 5? Or, when Portis plays C the Wizards have a pick-and-pop threat who can also dribble, drive, and dunk. A CENTER WITH THREE POINT RANGE? Finally.
--Worried about Jabari Parker returning to form? RECALL MARKIEFF MORRIS. Did he play with the same energy, dunk with the same ferocity, or pass HALF AS WELL as Jabari Parker? NO.
Porter is JUST 24 years old, today. Parker is still 23. Won't be 24 until March 15th. THESE GUYS ARE BOTH ALMOST TWO YEARS YOUNGER THAN OTTO PORTER.
This team HAS turned a corner....at least the rest of THIS REGULAR SEASON
Yeah, Otto is 25 and almost 2 years older than Parker and Portis. That surprised me. But I do think having their 1st 3 games against lousy teams is leading to overly optimistic expectations. But if they do well in game 4 against Toronto, that'll be something to be impressed about. If not, people will focus more on no PT for Brown, Dekker, and McRae - who was terrific in the 5 games before the trade.
Remember Charlie Brown, Ruz? The protagonist of the Peanuts cartoon was prone to believe almost to the point of gullibility. Nevertheless, Charlie approached things with great zeal.
--He went all out trying to kick that football. Then ...."Ah, ratz!" (Lucy kept snatching away each time.)
--Charlie Brown spent all kinds of time in a pumpkin patch. As far as I can recall, he never did see The Great Pumpkin. (There never was a great pumpkin.)
I am trying to reverse a lifetime of NOT LIVING LARGE AND IN CHARGE. I've seen message board traffic die out to almost a faint pulse of life (except on the Raptors' board. Canadiens, eh?) So, sometimes I flat out bull. I over hype. AT OTHER TIMES GOOD OLE Mental ... health ... might cause my rational to be IRRATIONAL to most. Hyperbolic thinking? I dunno.
Every true genius has detractors and haters.
https://www.psychologytoday.com/us/blog/the-power-prime/201310/the-real-genius-genius-isn-t-the-geniusGenius doesn’t usually interest or impress me. My work in performance psychology has frequently exposed me to child prodigies and assorted other geniuses in academia, sports, and the performing arts, so perhaps I have become inured to the experience of people born with special talents.
Also, I think genius is often overrated. I have known people who reached extraordinary heights despite seeming quite ordinary. They obviously had something special, but it wasn’t any innate propensity toward greatness in their chosen area.
I have also met unfulfilled genius, people who had tremendous gifts, yet failed to fully realize those gifts. Why? Some didn’t know they had exceptional talent in time to develop it fully because they weren’t exposed to the area in which their genius lay until later in life.
Others never really connected with their gift, thus had no sense of ownership of it. That’s one problem with genius; geniuses often feel like it’s not truly theirs because they didn’t do anything to get it. Without this ownership, there is often no passion for the genius and there is little interest or incentive to take advantage of the genius.
Still others found that genius was more a cross to bear than a gift. For example, it caused them social ostracism by their peers or their parents turned the genius into “weighted shackles” of expectation in which nothing was ever good enough. And they spent their lives trying to exorcise the genius from their souls.
Hey, JWiz, I'm gonna go masturbate to the sound of my own voice now. I DO have a pretty good voice.

Tre Johnson is the future of the Wizards.