HeatFanLifer wrote:IggieCC wrote:HeatFanLifer wrote:
WutSpoiler:
I’ve never heard you. Do you have a Hank Hill Oklahoma accent.
I grew up in North East Asia so NO. I'm only replying to your post to get this GT to page 11
Moderators: KingDavid, IggieCC, QUIZ, BFRESH44, heat4life, MettaWorldPanda, Wiltside
HeatFanLifer wrote:IggieCC wrote:HeatFanLifer wrote:
WutSpoiler:
I’ve never heard you. Do you have a Hank Hill Oklahoma accent.
IggieCC wrote:OKC is playing a guy named Dort
HerroBalls wrote:IggieCC wrote:OKC is playing a guy named Dort
I think his first name is more embarrassing
IggieCC wrote:HeatFanLifer wrote:IggieCC wrote:Spoiler:
I’ve never heard you. Do you have a Hank Hill Oklahoma accent.
I grew up in North East Asia so NO. I'm only replying to your post to get this GT to page 11
HerroBalls wrote:Anyone knew where Iggie grew up?
Bishop45 wrote:"Let Iggie start the season brehs, was the wors that could happen"
HerroBalls wrote:Anyone knew where Iggie grew up?
Iguodala was born in Springfield, Illinois. He is the son of Linda Shanklin. His older brother, Frank, played for Lake Land College in Mattoon, Illinois, and Dayton. His mother is African American, while his father is Nigerian. Growing up, Iguodala rooted for the Chicago Bulls, and he cites Michael Jordan as the player he looked up to.
Iguodala attended high school at Lanphier High School in Springfield, Illinois, a school that produced other notable athletes, including baseball Hall of Famer Robin Roberts and basketball guard Kevin Gamble. At Lanphier he did well academically and athletically; he won All-Conference academic honors, was on the National Honor Roll, was a State Journal Student-Athlete of the Week several times, and gained three letters in track for the high jump. As a senior in 2002, Iguodala led Lanphier's basketball team to a runner-up finish at the Illinois High School Association Class AA state tournament. That season, he averaged 23.5 points, 7.8 rebounds and 4.1 assists per game. He was named Chicago Sun-Times Player of the Year as well as a second-team Parade All-American and Nike All-American. Iguodala was also a finalist for the Illinois Mr. Basketball award, which was awarded to Dee Brown. His Lanphier jersey is now retired.
During the summer of 2000, Iguodala captured the attention of coaches around the nation as he was named the AAU national tournament Most Valuable Player after hitting the game-winning shot at the final buzzer to give his team the 17-and-under national title. In 2002, he played in the Jordan Brand Classic in Washington, D.C. In 22 minutes of play, Iguodala put up six points on 3–6 shooting, five rebounds, two assists, three steals and a block. Iguodala played AAU basketball under Larry Butler and the Illinois Warriors, the team that has featured other professional players such as Dwyane Wade, Quentin Richardson, and Jon Scheyer.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Andre_Iguodala#Early_life_and_high_school_career
HerroBalls wrote:Anyone knew where Iggie grew up?
The first time Iggie, 26, spent a night at the internet cafe, other people’s snoring and footsteps kept him awake throughout the night. Since that sleepless night, ten months have passed and a little noises like that no longer bother him. Once he got used to sleeping with a blanket over his face to block out the fluorescent lights that stay on through the night, he says living in an internet cafe is “not so bad.”
IggieCC wrote:Ofc Dort is a Canadian. smh
al bondiga wrote:Give It Up for Riley, getting igoudala was pure genius... and even though small ball I thought was a mistake by spo... going small has given us identity... leonard, unless it's an emergency, you are not seeing time in the playoffs
Bishop45 wrote:Ennis's handle came a long way