F' EVAN TURNER

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I really think Turner gets too bad a rap in here. I'm really trying to imagine our 2nd unit functioning without him.
Hahaha.

I stated a fact. It was a stat. How is stating a stat about Turner "giving him a bad rap"?

He sucks at everything except for defense, where hes inconsistent and struggles against elite size or speed. That's giving him a bad rap, but it's also true. One good defensive game doesnt mean anything.
 
Hahaha.

I stated a fact. It was a stat. How is stating a stat about Turner "giving him a bad rap"?

He sucks at everything except for defense, where hes inconsistent and struggles against elite size or speed. That's giving him a bad rap, but it's also true. One good defensive game doesnt mean anything.

I know lol.

I just like Turner more than most in here. I recognize his strengths and weaknesses. I love when he gets a little guard down low and abuses them. He also has DIMES. If he shot 36% from 3 people would probably lay off of him.
 
I know lol.

I just like Turner more than most in here. I recognize his strengths and weaknesses. I love when he gets a little guard down low and abuses them. He also has DIMES. If he shot 36% from 3 people would probably lay off of him.
He’s shooting 12% from 3 this year. I actually think he could be ok in the right system but the one that we play isnt that system.
 
I know lol.

I just like Turner more than most in here. I recognize his strengths and weaknesses. I love when he gets a little guard down low and abuses them. He also has DIMES. If he shot 36% from 3 people would probably lay off of him.
If he took less stupid contested mid-range shots, if he didn't have so many silly turnovers, if he didnt have so many silly fouls, if he shot efficiently from somewhere....

Yeah, if he didnt suck as much as he sucks, he wouldnt be so disliked.
 
Hey bro, I believe he had some sort of accident when he was a child and that's why his voice is like that.

Good look bro...

HEY!!!! I want all you MFs making fun of Evan Turner's voice to understand some shit!!:

Evan Turner: “I Didn’t Have Any Disabilities When it Came to Basketball”

The insecurities disappeared once Evan Turner stepped on the court. Between the lines he was just like everyone else. The setbacks, health conditions, learning challenges and speech impediment were left out of bounds while he learned to dominate with the ball in his hand.

“I didn’t have any disabilities when it came to basketball,” Turner told Basketball Insiders. “That’s why I liked it so much.”

Turner described himself as being a “sickly kid” for as long as he could remember. His mother often fretted when her young son wanted to do the the simplest of childhood activities. Leaving their Chicago home became a worrisome afternoon.

“She was like, ‘Oh Lord, he’s going outside. Make sure you have a scarf! Make sure you don’t play in grass!’” Turner recalled. “I would always come back with some type of rash or something. I just had a background of being sick.”

Turner was always headstrong. Even as a toddler he wanted to do things on his terms, which led to a dangerous childhood accident at the age of three. Turner and his family rode the bus to visit his grandparents. He remembers throwing a hissy fit once he got off the bus and pulling away from his older brother.

“Somebody did something and I got mad,” the Boston Celtics swingman said. “I let my brother’s hand go, walked into the street. A car hit me and my mom said I landed on my head.”

As luck would have it, an ambulance was driving down the street near the time of the accident and Turner was rushed into the vehicle. Two memories stand out from the chaos: the glare of bright lights shining on him to keep him awake and alert, and him calling out in fear of being administered a shot. In spite of everything he endured, Turner was fearful of shots.

The tenacious toddler walked away with only a concussion, stitches and a limp for three days.

Once Turner entered elementary school, the differences between him and other students began to rise to the surface. Turner had an overbite and issues with his tonsils and adenoids. He struggled with a speech impediment, unable to say words with “err” sounds such as “theater” and “funeral.”

He met with a speech therapist from the ages of five to 11, often going three times a week during recess. While other students were playing, Turner was putting in hard work.

“When you’re a kid, kids make fun of you,” Turner said. “That, along with my overbite, drew a lot of insecurities. For the longest time, if I didn’t know you I would speak in a low tone so people couldn’t hear me or make fun of me.”

When Turner turned 11, he got braces to fix his dental problems. He wore them for five years and came out feeling like a new person once they were removed.

“Thank the Lord for braces,” he said. “They used to call me ‘The Four Horsemen.’ Life changed, girls started saying I had a cute smile (laughs).”

In the classroom, Turner had trouble keeping up with the lessons. He wanted to blend in with the rest of the students, so he spent extra time studying at home. His mother stayed up “as long as it took” to help him, re-teaching topics for sometimes two or three hours a night.

There were no easy tricks or shortcuts, just a routine of focus, patience and commitment to stay on pace. Turner credits his family for their role in the process, especially his mother – who began teaching him about the value of books and education when he was five.

“I learned slower than most,” Turner said. “Every subject was hard. I just process stuff at a different speed than other people. That was definitely tough. A lot of stuff comes with confidence. Once you know you do bad in certain situations, I would lose confidence in it. But my mom helped and my brothers helped and I had great mentors in my life to help me to keep learning.”

Throughout his obstacles, Turner began to thrive on the basketball court. He considered himself to be a bit of a loner growing up and spent hours by himself, dribbling up and down an alley, shooting on the awning of a garage imagining a rim. He felt that while he was behind kids his age in certain aspects of his life, with hard work he could be just as good, if not better, in basketball.

Turner became a standout on the St. Joseph High School basketball team. He drew attention from several Division I colleges, including The Ohio State University where he eventually attended.

Yet even as his numbers soared, he still encountered health issues. He would get “severely” sick each winter. During his freshman year, he caught a viral infection and lost over 15 pounds. Seasonal asthma followed. Turner battled through these obstacles.

“My senior year I got so sick,” Turner recalled. “I would get really, really cold where I was shaking and really, really hot where I was sweating. I had to go to the hospital and get steroids just to get everything back. That was probably the worst one I remember. I was there overnight. I got out around 4 a.m., went to school and played that night. That’s just how I was. I got allergic to everything.”

As a junior in college he broke two vertebrae after he fell attempting a dunk in a game. He missed a month of basketball. Celtics teammate Jared Sullinger, who also attended The Ohio State University after Turner, watched his first game back from injury.

“He feels like he can conquer anything,” Sullinger said of Turner. “I remember him coming back a week or two early. The first play he went to the basket. I wouldn’t think that was the first thing he’d do. He showed no fear.”

Following Turner’s return, a woman approached him at a restaurant. She worked in the medical field and told him she thought he was going to become one of her patients. The fall looked so serious at the time she believed he had been paralyzed.

“A lot of things could have gone the opposite way,” Turner said.

The Philadelphia 76ers drafted Turner second overall in 2010. He was traded to the Indiana Pacers halfway through last season and faced scrutiny for the lack of playing time on his new team. Last summer, he signed with the Celtics as a free agent. The change in scenery has been a resurgence for Turner, who is averaging 9.5 points, 5.1 rebounds and 5.5 assists. He has hit game-winning shots, posted triple-doubles and emerged as a leader on a hungry playoff team ready to battle against the Cleveland Cavaliers in the first round of the playoffs.

He considers himself lucky to be in his situation. Whenever a moment seems tough, he reflects on his previous hardships for perspective. He says fighting and overcoming has always been in his background, which has kept him moving forward.

“When I tell stories it’s pretty crazy,” Turner said. “Sometimes I wake up and am like, this stuff is hard, but I’m really blessed. … Larry Bird said life always balances itself out. I always felt like I had a rough few years when I first got into the league, but I feel like it just can’t end like that because I’ve overcome so much.”
 
WTH was that? ^

Some clown earlier in this thread posted videos mocking ET's voice. I called him out saying that Turner had an accident as a youth that caused that. Didn't think it was cool to be mocked about. @dviss1 just posted a story mentioning the accident.

It's just HCP tossin' left hand, no look Alley-Oops. I'm catchin' em' and throwin' down reverse.

:dunno:

You know, shit we do round here all the time.

Nothing to see here.
 
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Good look bro...

HEY!!!! I want all you MFs making fun of Evan Turner's voice to understand some shit!!:

Evan Turner: “I Didn’t Have Any Disabilities When it Came to Basketball”

The insecurities disappeared once Evan Turner stepped on the court. Between the lines he was just like everyone else. The setbacks, health conditions, learning challenges and speech impediment were left out of bounds while he learned to dominate with the ball in his hand.

“I didn’t have any disabilities when it came to basketball,” Turner told Basketball Insiders. “That’s why I liked it so much.”

Turner described himself as being a “sickly kid” for as long as he could remember. His mother often fretted when her young son wanted to do the the simplest of childhood activities. Leaving their Chicago home became a worrisome afternoon.

“She was like, ‘Oh Lord, he’s going outside. Make sure you have a scarf! Make sure you don’t play in grass!’” Turner recalled. “I would always come back with some type of rash or something. I just had a background of being sick.”

Turner was always headstrong. Even as a toddler he wanted to do things on his terms, which led to a dangerous childhood accident at the age of three. Turner and his family rode the bus to visit his grandparents. He remembers throwing a hissy fit once he got off the bus and pulling away from his older brother.

“Somebody did something and I got mad,” the Boston Celtics swingman said. “I let my brother’s hand go, walked into the street. A car hit me and my mom said I landed on my head.”

As luck would have it, an ambulance was driving down the street near the time of the accident and Turner was rushed into the vehicle. Two memories stand out from the chaos: the glare of bright lights shining on him to keep him awake and alert, and him calling out in fear of being administered a shot. In spite of everything he endured, Turner was fearful of shots.

The tenacious toddler walked away with only a concussion, stitches and a limp for three days.

Once Turner entered elementary school, the differences between him and other students began to rise to the surface. Turner had an overbite and issues with his tonsils and adenoids. He struggled with a speech impediment, unable to say words with “err” sounds such as “theater” and “funeral.”

He met with a speech therapist from the ages of five to 11, often going three times a week during recess. While other students were playing, Turner was putting in hard work.

“When you’re a kid, kids make fun of you,” Turner said. “That, along with my overbite, drew a lot of insecurities. For the longest time, if I didn’t know you I would speak in a low tone so people couldn’t hear me or make fun of me.”

When Turner turned 11, he got braces to fix his dental problems. He wore them for five years and came out feeling like a new person once they were removed.

“Thank the Lord for braces,” he said. “They used to call me ‘The Four Horsemen.’ Life changed, girls started saying I had a cute smile (laughs).”

In the classroom, Turner had trouble keeping up with the lessons. He wanted to blend in with the rest of the students, so he spent extra time studying at home. His mother stayed up “as long as it took” to help him, re-teaching topics for sometimes two or three hours a night.

There were no easy tricks or shortcuts, just a routine of focus, patience and commitment to stay on pace. Turner credits his family for their role in the process, especially his mother – who began teaching him about the value of books and education when he was five.

“I learned slower than most,” Turner said. “Every subject was hard. I just process stuff at a different speed than other people. That was definitely tough. A lot of stuff comes with confidence. Once you know you do bad in certain situations, I would lose confidence in it. But my mom helped and my brothers helped and I had great mentors in my life to help me to keep learning.”

Throughout his obstacles, Turner began to thrive on the basketball court. He considered himself to be a bit of a loner growing up and spent hours by himself, dribbling up and down an alley, shooting on the awning of a garage imagining a rim. He felt that while he was behind kids his age in certain aspects of his life, with hard work he could be just as good, if not better, in basketball.

Turner became a standout on the St. Joseph High School basketball team. He drew attention from several Division I colleges, including The Ohio State University where he eventually attended.

Yet even as his numbers soared, he still encountered health issues. He would get “severely” sick each winter. During his freshman year, he caught a viral infection and lost over 15 pounds. Seasonal asthma followed. Turner battled through these obstacles.

“My senior year I got so sick,” Turner recalled. “I would get really, really cold where I was shaking and really, really hot where I was sweating. I had to go to the hospital and get steroids just to get everything back. That was probably the worst one I remember. I was there overnight. I got out around 4 a.m., went to school and played that night. That’s just how I was. I got allergic to everything.”

As a junior in college he broke two vertebrae after he fell attempting a dunk in a game. He missed a month of basketball. Celtics teammate Jared Sullinger, who also attended The Ohio State University after Turner, watched his first game back from injury.

“He feels like he can conquer anything,” Sullinger said of Turner. “I remember him coming back a week or two early. The first play he went to the basket. I wouldn’t think that was the first thing he’d do. He showed no fear.”

Following Turner’s return, a woman approached him at a restaurant. She worked in the medical field and told him she thought he was going to become one of her patients. The fall looked so serious at the time she believed he had been paralyzed.

“A lot of things could have gone the opposite way,” Turner said.

The Philadelphia 76ers drafted Turner second overall in 2010. He was traded to the Indiana Pacers halfway through last season and faced scrutiny for the lack of playing time on his new team. Last summer, he signed with the Celtics as a free agent. The change in scenery has been a resurgence for Turner, who is averaging 9.5 points, 5.1 rebounds and 5.5 assists. He has hit game-winning shots, posted triple-doubles and emerged as a leader on a hungry playoff team ready to battle against the Cleveland Cavaliers in the first round of the playoffs.

He considers himself lucky to be in his situation. Whenever a moment seems tough, he reflects on his previous hardships for perspective. He says fighting and overcoming has always been in his background, which has kept him moving forward.

“When I tell stories it’s pretty crazy,” Turner said. “Sometimes I wake up and am like, this stuff is hard, but I’m really blessed. … Larry Bird said life always balances itself out. I always felt like I had a rough few years when I first got into the league, but I feel like it just can’t end like that because I’ve overcome so much.”
Thanks for posting this bro....awesome insight that I had no idea about. I like to hear him in interviews and never would have thought he had speech issues in his past
 
He’s got a unique voice, but in terms of his basketball playing Im not sure his voice matters...
Off the court I find ET funny most of the time.

On the court a ball handling guard that cant shoot just doesnt fit in this system. ET does a few things well, and in a system that utilized those skills better maybe he’d be ok.

He’s a classic role player to me.
 
Good look bro...

HEY!!!! I want all you MFs making fun of Evan Turner's voice to understand some shit!!:

Evan Turner: “I Didn’t Have Any Disabilities When it Came to Basketball”

The insecurities disappeared once Evan Turner stepped on the court. Between the lines he was just like everyone else. The setbacks, health conditions, learning challenges and speech impediment were left out of bounds while he learned to dominate with the ball in his hand.

“I didn’t have any disabilities when it came to basketball,” Turner told Basketball Insiders. “That’s why I liked it so much.”

Turner described himself as being a “sickly kid” for as long as he could remember. His mother often fretted when her young son wanted to do the the simplest of childhood activities. Leaving their Chicago home became a worrisome afternoon.

“She was like, ‘Oh Lord, he’s going outside. Make sure you have a scarf! Make sure you don’t play in grass!’” Turner recalled. “I would always come back with some type of rash or something. I just had a background of being sick.”

Turner was always headstrong. Even as a toddler he wanted to do things on his terms, which led to a dangerous childhood accident at the age of three. Turner and his family rode the bus to visit his grandparents. He remembers throwing a hissy fit once he got off the bus and pulling away from his older brother.

“Somebody did something and I got mad,” the Boston Celtics swingman said. “I let my brother’s hand go, walked into the street. A car hit me and my mom said I landed on my head.”

As luck would have it, an ambulance was driving down the street near the time of the accident and Turner was rushed into the vehicle. Two memories stand out from the chaos: the glare of bright lights shining on him to keep him awake and alert, and him calling out in fear of being administered a shot. In spite of everything he endured, Turner was fearful of shots.

The tenacious toddler walked away with only a concussion, stitches and a limp for three days.

Once Turner entered elementary school, the differences between him and other students began to rise to the surface. Turner had an overbite and issues with his tonsils and adenoids. He struggled with a speech impediment, unable to say words with “err” sounds such as “theater” and “funeral.”

He met with a speech therapist from the ages of five to 11, often going three times a week during recess. While other students were playing, Turner was putting in hard work.

“When you’re a kid, kids make fun of you,” Turner said. “That, along with my overbite, drew a lot of insecurities. For the longest time, if I didn’t know you I would speak in a low tone so people couldn’t hear me or make fun of me.”

When Turner turned 11, he got braces to fix his dental problems. He wore them for five years and came out feeling like a new person once they were removed.

“Thank the Lord for braces,” he said. “They used to call me ‘The Four Horsemen.’ Life changed, girls started saying I had a cute smile (laughs).”

In the classroom, Turner had trouble keeping up with the lessons. He wanted to blend in with the rest of the students, so he spent extra time studying at home. His mother stayed up “as long as it took” to help him, re-teaching topics for sometimes two or three hours a night.

There were no easy tricks or shortcuts, just a routine of focus, patience and commitment to stay on pace. Turner credits his family for their role in the process, especially his mother – who began teaching him about the value of books and education when he was five.

“I learned slower than most,” Turner said. “Every subject was hard. I just process stuff at a different speed than other people. That was definitely tough. A lot of stuff comes with confidence. Once you know you do bad in certain situations, I would lose confidence in it. But my mom helped and my brothers helped and I had great mentors in my life to help me to keep learning.”

Throughout his obstacles, Turner began to thrive on the basketball court. He considered himself to be a bit of a loner growing up and spent hours by himself, dribbling up and down an alley, shooting on the awning of a garage imagining a rim. He felt that while he was behind kids his age in certain aspects of his life, with hard work he could be just as good, if not better, in basketball.

Turner became a standout on the St. Joseph High School basketball team. He drew attention from several Division I colleges, including The Ohio State University where he eventually attended.

Yet even as his numbers soared, he still encountered health issues. He would get “severely” sick each winter. During his freshman year, he caught a viral infection and lost over 15 pounds. Seasonal asthma followed. Turner battled through these obstacles.

“My senior year I got so sick,” Turner recalled. “I would get really, really cold where I was shaking and really, really hot where I was sweating. I had to go to the hospital and get steroids just to get everything back. That was probably the worst one I remember. I was there overnight. I got out around 4 a.m., went to school and played that night. That’s just how I was. I got allergic to everything.”

As a junior in college he broke two vertebrae after he fell attempting a dunk in a game. He missed a month of basketball. Celtics teammate Jared Sullinger, who also attended The Ohio State University after Turner, watched his first game back from injury.

“He feels like he can conquer anything,” Sullinger said of Turner. “I remember him coming back a week or two early. The first play he went to the basket. I wouldn’t think that was the first thing he’d do. He showed no fear.”

Following Turner’s return, a woman approached him at a restaurant. She worked in the medical field and told him she thought he was going to become one of her patients. The fall looked so serious at the time she believed he had been paralyzed.

“A lot of things could have gone the opposite way,” Turner said.

The Philadelphia 76ers drafted Turner second overall in 2010. He was traded to the Indiana Pacers halfway through last season and faced scrutiny for the lack of playing time on his new team. Last summer, he signed with the Celtics as a free agent. The change in scenery has been a resurgence for Turner, who is averaging 9.5 points, 5.1 rebounds and 5.5 assists. He has hit game-winning shots, posted triple-doubles and emerged as a leader on a hungry playoff team ready to battle against the Cleveland Cavaliers in the first round of the playoffs.

He considers himself lucky to be in his situation. Whenever a moment seems tough, he reflects on his previous hardships for perspective. He says fighting and overcoming has always been in his background, which has kept him moving forward.

“When I tell stories it’s pretty crazy,” Turner said. “Sometimes I wake up and am like, this stuff is hard, but I’m really blessed. … Larry Bird said life always balances itself out. I always felt like I had a rough few years when I first got into the league, but I feel like it just can’t end like that because I’ve overcome so much.”
His voice seems a bit strange from that one video. Nothing to make a big deal over.

This story reminded me of Drexler and as I remember it (this could be way wrong after all these years) he shot hoops as a kid out a sliding door or some such thing where he shot flat to make the ball come back to him.

In this story Turner shot at a pretend hoop growing up.

I had a 10 foot hoop in my gramma's back yard and always had a real net.

I was a better shooter than those two and it has nothing to do with natural talent. It was equipment.

I would lay flat on the ground and shoot at the ceiling in my mom's double wide. I'd aim for a square and try and make the ball just touch the ceiling.

I would watch inner city hoops videos and think I'd kill myself if I had to play with no net. The sound of the net when the ball goes clean through is music to my ears.

Even better was when the net would wrap around the rim after a perfect shot.
 
So with about 3 minutes left in the Sixers game, the TV announcers were chatting with a woman who I assume was the sideline reporter and seemed to be talking about pot, and that Turner had never tried it. And one of them said something along the lines of 'well, that leaves more for the rest of us'. Did I hear that right? I know it's legal now but it was a little more upfront than I expected.

It was pie. Not pot. The dude hasn’t had pie.

Turner hates pie? It would give him a crustier voice.
 
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Good look bro...

HEY!!!! I want all you MFs making fun of Evan Turner's voice to understand some shit!!:

Evan Turner: “I Didn’t Have Any Disabilities When it Came to Basketball”

The insecurities disappeared once Evan Turner stepped on the court. Between the lines he was just like everyone else. The setbacks, health conditions, learning challenges and speech impediment were left out of bounds while he learned to dominate with the ball in his hand.

“I didn’t have any disabilities when it came to basketball,” Turner told Basketball Insiders. “That’s why I liked it so much.”

Turner described himself as being a “sickly kid” for as long as he could remember. His mother often fretted when her young son wanted to do the the simplest of childhood activities. Leaving their Chicago home became a worrisome afternoon.

“She was like, ‘Oh Lord, he’s going outside. Make sure you have a scarf! Make sure you don’t play in grass!’” Turner recalled. “I would always come back with some type of rash or something. I just had a background of being sick.”

Turner was always headstrong. Even as a toddler he wanted to do things on his terms, which led to a dangerous childhood accident at the age of three. Turner and his family rode the bus to visit his grandparents. He remembers throwing a hissy fit once he got off the bus and pulling away from his older brother.

“Somebody did something and I got mad,” the Boston Celtics swingman said. “I let my brother’s hand go, walked into the street. A car hit me and my mom said I landed on my head.”

As luck would have it, an ambulance was driving down the street near the time of the accident and Turner was rushed into the vehicle. Two memories stand out from the chaos: the glare of bright lights shining on him to keep him awake and alert, and him calling out in fear of being administered a shot. In spite of everything he endured, Turner was fearful of shots.

The tenacious toddler walked away with only a concussion, stitches and a limp for three days.

Once Turner entered elementary school, the differences between him and other students began to rise to the surface. Turner had an overbite and issues with his tonsils and adenoids. He struggled with a speech impediment, unable to say words with “err” sounds such as “theater” and “funeral.”

He met with a speech therapist from the ages of five to 11, often going three times a week during recess. While other students were playing, Turner was putting in hard work.

“When you’re a kid, kids make fun of you,” Turner said. “That, along with my overbite, drew a lot of insecurities. For the longest time, if I didn’t know you I would speak in a low tone so people couldn’t hear me or make fun of me.”

When Turner turned 11, he got braces to fix his dental problems. He wore them for five years and came out feeling like a new person once they were removed.

“Thank the Lord for braces,” he said. “They used to call me ‘The Four Horsemen.’ Life changed, girls started saying I had a cute smile (laughs).”

In the classroom, Turner had trouble keeping up with the lessons. He wanted to blend in with the rest of the students, so he spent extra time studying at home. His mother stayed up “as long as it took” to help him, re-teaching topics for sometimes two or three hours a night.

There were no easy tricks or shortcuts, just a routine of focus, patience and commitment to stay on pace. Turner credits his family for their role in the process, especially his mother – who began teaching him about the value of books and education when he was five.

“I learned slower than most,” Turner said. “Every subject was hard. I just process stuff at a different speed than other people. That was definitely tough. A lot of stuff comes with confidence. Once you know you do bad in certain situations, I would lose confidence in it. But my mom helped and my brothers helped and I had great mentors in my life to help me to keep learning.”

Throughout his obstacles, Turner began to thrive on the basketball court. He considered himself to be a bit of a loner growing up and spent hours by himself, dribbling up and down an alley, shooting on the awning of a garage imagining a rim. He felt that while he was behind kids his age in certain aspects of his life, with hard work he could be just as good, if not better, in basketball.

Turner became a standout on the St. Joseph High School basketball team. He drew attention from several Division I colleges, including The Ohio State University where he eventually attended.

Yet even as his numbers soared, he still encountered health issues. He would get “severely” sick each winter. During his freshman year, he caught a viral infection and lost over 15 pounds. Seasonal asthma followed. Turner battled through these obstacles.

“My senior year I got so sick,” Turner recalled. “I would get really, really cold where I was shaking and really, really hot where I was sweating. I had to go to the hospital and get steroids just to get everything back. That was probably the worst one I remember. I was there overnight. I got out around 4 a.m., went to school and played that night. That’s just how I was. I got allergic to everything.”

As a junior in college he broke two vertebrae after he fell attempting a dunk in a game. He missed a month of basketball. Celtics teammate Jared Sullinger, who also attended The Ohio State University after Turner, watched his first game back from injury.

“He feels like he can conquer anything,” Sullinger said of Turner. “I remember him coming back a week or two early. The first play he went to the basket. I wouldn’t think that was the first thing he’d do. He showed no fear.”

Following Turner’s return, a woman approached him at a restaurant. She worked in the medical field and told him she thought he was going to become one of her patients. The fall looked so serious at the time she believed he had been paralyzed.

“A lot of things could have gone the opposite way,” Turner said.

The Philadelphia 76ers drafted Turner second overall in 2010. He was traded to the Indiana Pacers halfway through last season and faced scrutiny for the lack of playing time on his new team. Last summer, he signed with the Celtics as a free agent. The change in scenery has been a resurgence for Turner, who is averaging 9.5 points, 5.1 rebounds and 5.5 assists. He has hit game-winning shots, posted triple-doubles and emerged as a leader on a hungry playoff team ready to battle against the Cleveland Cavaliers in the first round of the playoffs.

He considers himself lucky to be in his situation. Whenever a moment seems tough, he reflects on his previous hardships for perspective. He says fighting and overcoming has always been in his background, which has kept him moving forward.

“When I tell stories it’s pretty crazy,” Turner said. “Sometimes I wake up and am like, this stuff is hard, but I’m really blessed. … Larry Bird said life always balances itself out. I always felt like I had a rough few years when I first got into the league, but I feel like it just can’t end like that because I’ve overcome so much.”
Now let's contact this with him talking about finishing on someone's mom's face on Instagram.
 
Now let's contact this with him talking about finishing on someone's mom's face on Instagram.

I'm confused where this comes from. I'm simply saying that we shouldn't make fun of disabilities.

What relevance would his Instagram have to that?
 
ET looked more like the ET we need the other night. I really feel he was hurting physically, because he missed so many lowpost looks the last few weeks.. Those are his bread and butter. If he's hitting those shot down low, he's an incredible asset. Like D, I just don't have any problems with him. He seems pretty cool, and a good teammate. Go ET, and Go Blazers!!
 
The sound of the net when the ball goes clean through is music to my ears.

There are times when the kids are at the line in the game and the gym is kinda quiet. If he swishes, touching no rim, I'll say, "SWAP!"

and smile at the shooter. He always smiles back and I tell him:

"Do it again. That's my favorite sound."
 
ET looked more like the ET we need the other night. I really feel he was hurting physically, because he missed so many lowpost looks the last few weeks.. Those are his bread and butter. If he's hitting those shot down low, he's an incredible asset. Like D, I just don't have any problems with him. He seems pretty cool, and a good teammate. Go ET, and Go Blazers!!

oh c'mon now...Turner has never been and will never be an "incredible asset"

as for his low post. maybe there's something going on but I doubt it's an injury

his FG% in the 3'-10' zone:

2014-15 .309 2015-16 .418 2016-17 .536 2017-18 .443 2018-19 .302

he is way down from his high but he has been this bad before. I'd be willing to consider he's hurt or something if it wasn't for this:

FG% in the 10'-16' zone:

2014-15 .449 2015-16 .427 2016-17 .421 2017-18 .451 2018-19 .492

he's shooting a career high in this zone and I really doubt there's an injury explanation. He's just bricking those shorter shots, IMO
 
10.8 PER- Among rotation players, only Curry’s is worse.

.46 WS/48- Worst among rotation players.

-2.9 OBPM- Worst among rotation players.

0.6 DBPM- 5th among rotation players.

-0.1 VORP- Worst among rotation players.

Unfortunately for the Blazers, he’s also one of the only three playmakers on the team, and the only one on the second unit, so his rotation spot is probably still safe. The roster is full, and it’s too late to upgrade or integrate a rookie, but if Turner is still in the rotation next season, we’ve got problems.
 
ET looked more like the ET we need the other night. I really feel he was hurting physically, because he missed so many lowpost looks the last few weeks.. Those are his bread and butter. If he's hitting those shot down low, he's an incredible asset. Like D, I just don't have any problems with him. He seems pretty cool, and a good teammate. Go ET, and Go Blazers!!
I think ET will be a key player in the playoffs. His on ball D is good and he can get the players that can score the ball.
Without many vocal guys on the team, ET does bring some leadership too.
Remember Team - TOgether EVeryone ACcomplishes MOre.
 
I'm confused where this comes from. I'm simply saying that we shouldn't make fun of disabilities.

What relevance would his Instagram have to that?
I forgot to reply to this I guess. The story is about how he got bullied growing up, but now that he's an NBA player I've seen him some nasty, bullyish things.
 

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