SI: Brandon Roy feature

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alex42083

Thanks Brandon
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Get your SI this week! A big Brandon Roy feature inside.

http://vault.sportsillustrated.cnn.com/vault/article/magazine/MAG1151486/index.htm

Young Star, Old Soul
By Ian Thomsen
Sports Illustrated

DEEP IN the fourth quarter of any tight game in Portland, shooting guard Brandon Roy sets the rhythm. As the sold-out Rose Garden urges its young Trail Blazers to go-go-go, Roy peacefully decelerates his dribble, making his way across half-court like a senior citizen oblivious to surrounding traffic, puttering along while an impatient defender swats futilely at the ball until, at last, he is ready to make his move, cross-stepping abruptly into the lane ...

... And then the ball is descending high off the glass through the net, and he is heading upcourt, his blank expression unchanged. When Kobe Bryant, LeBron James and Dwyane Wade attack the basket, they lurch, lunge and leap with enough g-force to lift spectators out of their seats. When Roy drives, fans' mouths drop open as they sit, dumbfounded. How did he make it there? "He's very deceptive," says Blazers center Joel Przybilla, who has been Roy's teammate for three years. "I don't know if it's how he plays the angles or what. It's amazing, because it looks like he's not even asserting himself, but he gets to the spot where he wants to get to and then, man, you're in trouble."

...

"HE'S ONE of my favorite players in the league," says Boston Celtics coach Doc Rivers, who asks his staff to make highlight videos of Roy as teaching tools for his sons Jeremiah, a junior redshirting at Indiana, and Austin, a high school sophomore in Winter Park, Fla.—both guards.
 
I liked this part


"So where does Roy go from here? The answer goes against everything he believes in. "I need to make some mistakes," he says. "I need to make that tight pass, because I'm always trying to make the right pass. Even this year I've learned to shoot shots I wouldn't shoot in the past. Let go a little bit, don't try to play so under control. And I think that's where my potential lies—taking more risks, trying to play with more flair and having more fun out there."

His scoring and postering dunks have gone up this year
 
Roy the anti-star ... god I hope he retires a Blazer (in ten years+).
 
me too. I don't see why he would want to leave though. He's like a God in Portland

And he likes being in Portland, since he's from the Pacific Northwest. So, he seems like a long-time fixture as a Trail Blazer.
 
"HE'S ONE of my favorite players in the league," says Boston Celtics coach Doc Rivers, who asks his staff to make highlight videos of Roy as teaching tools for his sons Jeremiah, a junior redshirting at Indiana, and Austin, a high school sophomore in Winter Park, Fla.—both guards.

Holy misuse of company resources, batman.

barfo
 
Holy misuse of company resources, batman.

Maybe the Celtics view Rivers' family as a sort of farm system. Therefore, training videos for his children is simply an investment in player development.
 
"He has a pace about him that is calming for me and the players," says Portland coach Nate McMillan, who, when he was in Seattle, used to watch Roy play for Garfield High. "He's better than I thought he would be."

Sounds like he was KP's pick. :)

Local department stores didn't bother to carry Blazers T-shirts and other team gear, and commissioner David Stern had to personally intervene to keep disaffected owner Paul Allen from selling the franchise.

Huh? I thought Stern tried to help find buyers?
 
I see people in here sometimes complain that Roy doesn't look like he's trying hard. Roy sets the record in this article. He IS playing hard.
 
can roy get this team to the playoffs first? maybe he can get us a win vs good teams like dallas before we talk about him retiring as a blazer
 
I see people in here sometimes complain that Roy doesn't look like he's trying hard. Roy sets the record in this article. He IS playing hard.

Like you can't notice by just watching him play? 20, 5 and 5 is playing hard I don't care how effortless he makes it look.
 
What a pleasant surprise it was to see this 4 page spread when I was reading my latest SI last night. I love the comments that Doc Rivers made about how his assistants capture film of Roy to use for teaching Doc's sons how to play the right way. I also thought it was a good sign to have Roy say that Portland was his #1 choice. Let's hope it stays that way, but I don't see why it would not.
 
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I hope all Blazers players stay away from the Sports Illustrated Cover Jinx.
 
the Tim Duncan of scoring guards

STOMP

Totally. He's not flashy. He's fundamentally sound at both ends. He's all about winning. And when the game is over and his filled up the box score and his team has won, opposing players and fans are left wondering - when did he score all those points, grab those boards, nab those steals, and dish those assists?

B-Roy might be my favorite Blazer of the last ten years.
 
Really good article. It's obvious the rest of the league respects Brandon, and the proof is in his two All-Star selections.
 

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