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@1Devion_

Ig Devion1_

Houston, TX Joined Ağustos 2011
768 Following2.3K Followers
Him
Him@1Devion_·
@BreidenFehoko Come on you fatass piece of sardine speak up
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Breiden Fehoko
Breiden Fehoko@BreidenFehoko·
Lebron James…No Luka and No Reaves. You wanna get into Kobe and Mike goat convos? Go win.
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Fullcourtpass
Fullcourtpass@Fullcourtpass·
Ime Udoka shaking his head at the Rockets performance in an elimination game (h/t @PurpGoldLakers)
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Him@1Devion_·
@WorldWideWob No it’s not all yall mfs stupid and Shay asf🤣🤣🤣 YALL THIUGHT WE WAS FINNA LOSE A 3-0 lead bird brains
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Rob Perez
Rob Perez@WorldWideWob·
Rockets fans therapy session. Let it all out. This is a safe place.
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Him@1Devion_·
@Kenlovehoops Speak up slow ass bird brain bitch
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Kenlovehoops
Kenlovehoops@Kenlovehoops·
Michael Jordan would NEVER blow a 3-0 lead.
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Apex Jones
Apex Jones@apexjones22·
LeBron, who has been on PEDs for 17 years, was feeling himself when asked about Father Time after needing 3 chances to close out the baby Rockets “I’m kicking his ass… He can go to somebody else at this point. He already lost to me. It’s over with.” This will age greatly - pun intended
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AirJordans23
AirJordans23@AirJordans2323·
Nobody in @NBA history won more rings as a primary scoring superstar with less All-Star and HOF help than Michael Jordan. All during the best defensive decade ever, without a single elite scoring teammate or big man. Perfect 16-0 in playoff series as a defending champion. 🐐
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Him
Him@1Devion_·
@TheTruth8240 You ain’t got no shame Use your real picture as the profile 🤣 gay boy. Another complaint getting submitted rn 🤣
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TheTruth
TheTruth@TheTruth8240·
Lebron doesn't even get hit and he flops to try to get a foul call This fraud has no shame SMH
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NBA Shane
NBA Shane@Shane00·
Not gonna lie, this is the best block on LeBron I've ever seen
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Vincent Hanna
Vincent Hanna@JPalmer98_·
Dicksucking ass niggas were having wet dreams about Bron blowing a 3-0 lead
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Ry
Ry@JustRyCole·
First 3-0 lead blown saxophones creeping @KingJames
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Hater Report
Hater Report@HaterReport·
Life comes at you fast 😂🤣
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Him@1Devion_·
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Him@1Devion_·
@game7__ Entire story just to get fucked yiu stupid bitch 🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣
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Game 7
Game 7@game7__·
The Lakers are about to become the first team to blow a 3-0 series lead. It'll be Rockets in 7. And LeBron James' legacy will be ruined forever. The Houston Rockets are blowing out the Los Angeles Lakers in Game 4 at Toyota Center, leading by double digits in the fourth quarter with Kevin Durant in street clothes. Durant has not played since spraining his ankle in Game 2. He was not on the bench for Game 3. He has not been a factor in this series since the first half of Game 2, when he scored 23 points before disappearing with three points and nine turnovers in the second half. The Rockets are winning this game without the player who was supposed to be the reason they could compete with anyone in the Western Conference. And they are not just winning. They are dominating. This is the same Rockets team that the world expected to be swept by the Lakers when the series started. Houston was the fifth seed. They had just watched their best player get exposed in the KD Files during All-Star Weekend. Their locker room was reportedly fractured. And then the Lakers went up 3-0, and it looked like the series was going to end exactly the way everyone predicted, just in the wrong direction. But the Lakers were always playing on borrowed time. They have not had Luka Doncic for a single minute of this series. Doncic, who was supposed to be their co-star next to LeBron James, has been out with a hamstring injury since before the playoffs started. Austin Reaves has not played either, still recovering from an oblique strain he suffered on April 2. The Lakers' two best perimeter scorers have been unavailable for the entire first round, and the reason Los Angeles went up 3-0 was not because they were the better team. It was because LeBron James is LeBron James, Marcus Smart played out of his mind, and the Rockets kept finding ways to lose games they should have won. Game 1, the Lakers won 107-98 while Durant sat out with a knee contusion. Game 2, the Lakers won 101-94 after Durant collapsed in the second half. Game 3, the Lakers trailed by six points with 25.4 seconds left in regulation and somehow won in overtime, 112-108, on a LeBron three-pointer and a Marcus Smart takeover in the extra period. None of those wins were comfortable. None of those wins suggested the Lakers were the better team. Every single one of them required something improbable to happen, and improbable things do not keep happening forever. Now the Rockets are playing the way everyone expected them to play before the series started. They are the team with the deeper roster, the better defense, and the younger legs. They finished the regular season 52-30. They have Alperen Sengun, Jabari Smith Jr., and Amen Thompson, three players who are all 24 or younger and who have all shown they can carry a scoring load in this series. They do not need Kevin Durant to beat a Lakers team that is running on LeBron James, a 41-year-old man who has played every minute of every game like it might be his last, and a supporting cast that was never built to carry a playoff series without its two best wings. There is a reason the Rockets were favored in this series before it started. There is a reason the betting lines had Houston advancing. The basketball world looked at these two rosters and saw a fifth-seeded team with a top-five scorer and a roster full of young talent on one side, and a fourth-seeded team missing its two best perimeter players on the other. The consensus was clear. Houston was supposed to win this series. The first three games made people forget that. Game 4 is a reminder. LeBron James is 41 years old. He is in his 23rd NBA season. He has played in more playoff games than any player in history. He carried the Lakers to a 3-0 lead against a team that, on paper, should have been better, and he did it without his two best teammates. That is one of the most impressive stretches of basketball anyone has played at that age. But carrying a team that is not good enough to win without you being superhuman is not sustainable. LeBron was superhuman for three games. He cannot be superhuman for seven. The Rockets figured that out tonight. They played with the confidence of a team that knows it is more talented, more athletic, and more equipped for a seven-game series than the team across from it. They played like a team that is not afraid of a 3-0 deficit, because they have looked at the Lakers and seen a roster that cannot maintain what it has been doing. No team in NBA history has ever come back from 3-0 down. It has happened zero times in 156 opportunities. The Lakers are about to hand Houston the chance to be the first, and the Rockets are going to take it. Houston is the better team. Houston has been the better team the entire time. The first three games were an illusion held together by LeBron James' refusal to age and Marcus Smart playing the best basketball of his career at exactly the right time. That illusion broke tonight at Toyota Center, and it is not coming back. If the Rockets complete this comeback, it will be the most historic collapse in NBA playoff history, and it will be the defining moment of LeBron James' final chapter. Not the championships. Not the scoring record. Not the longevity. The 3-0 lead he could not close. That is what people will remember. That is what will follow him into retirement. And tonight is the night it started. The Lakers are going down. Houston is the better team. And LeBron James is about to learn what happens when you ask a 41-year-old body to do something it simply cannot do for four more games.
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Game 7@game7__

Nikola Jokic and his thug brothers are the biggest examples of white privilege in NBA history. Just gross, disgusting people who run around starting chaos with no real punishment. I'm glad someone stole his underwear. The Nuggets lost Game 4 to the Timberwolves on Friday night, 112-96, at Target Center. Denver is now down 3-1 in the series. Jokic finished with 24 points on 8-of-22 shooting, zero threes on three attempts, 15 rebounds, and nine assists. That line looks passable until you remember he is a three-time MVP who is supposed to be the best player in the world, and his team is about to get bounced in the first round for the second time in three years. But the stat line is not even the story. The story is what happened in the final seconds. Jaden McDaniels scored a layup with about three seconds left and the Timberwolves already up 16. The game was over. Every player on the floor knew it was over. McDaniels scored anyway. Jokic did not like that. He ran the length of the floor, got in McDaniels' face, grabbed his jersey, and started a confrontation that emptied both benches. Jokic and Julius Randle were both ejected. After the game, Jokic said he did not regret it. "Because he scored after everybody stopped playing," Jokic told reporters. That is the reigning three-time MVP starting a physical altercation in a game his team was losing by 16 because a 24-year-old forward made a layup. McDaniels' response was simple: "The clock's still running, so I'm about to go score." He was right. The clock was running. Jokic was wrong. And nobody in a position of authority seems interested in saying that out loud. Then, according to Basketnews, Jokic dealt with a bizarre incident in the visiting locker room after the game, where his underwear was reportedly stolen. On any other night, that would be the strangest story in the NBA. On this night, it was an afterthought, because Jokic had already made a bigger scene on the court. But this is not just about Game 4. This is about a pattern that has been building for years, and the pattern is not limited to Nikola. Nikola Jokic has been involved in on-court altercations that would have drawn much harsher consequences for most players. In November 2021, after Markieff Morris committed a hard foul on him in a game against the Miami Heat, Jokic retaliated by shoving Morris from behind with enough force to cause whiplash. Morris missed 58 games. Jokic was suspended one game and fined. Morris was fined $50,000 for the initial foul. The NBA treated it as a mutual exchange. It was not mutual. Morris fouled him. Jokic injured him. One game. After that incident, Jokic's brothers Strahinja and Nemanja got on social media and threatened Marcus Morris, Markieff's twin brother, writing: "You better stay on this side... we don't play like that." That same postseason, the brothers were seen in the stands at a Nuggets playoff game against the Phoenix Suns, jawing and pointing at opposing players after a hard foul on Nikola. That behavior has never stopped. It has only escalated. In April 2024, during a Nuggets playoff game at Ball Arena, Strahinja Jokic punched a fan in the face. Video of the incident went viral on TikTok. The fan suffered cuts and bruising near his left eye and was diagnosed with a concussion. He described it as an unprovoked attack. Strahinja claimed he was defending someone he knew. He was charged, and the case dragged on for over a year before he pleaded guilty to trespassing and disorderly conduct in 2025. A judge sentenced him to one year of probation. One year of probation for punching a man in the face at a basketball game and giving him a concussion. That was not even the first time Strahinja had been in legal trouble. In 2019, he was arrested for allegedly choking and pushing a woman during a domestic dispute. Police reported he prevented her from calling 911. He pleaded guilty to a lesser misdemeanor count and felony trespassing. The remaining charges were dismissed. That is the track record. Domestic violence arrest. Social media threats against NBA players. Confrontations with fans from the stands. A fan punched in the face during a playoff game. And a one-year probation sentence that did not interrupt anyone's life in any meaningful way. Nikola Jokic is a generational talent. He has won three MVPs and a championship. He is the best passing big man the sport has ever produced. Nobody is disputing any of that. But the idea that he and his family operate under a different set of rules than the rest of the league is not a perception problem. It is a documentation problem. The evidence is all there. The shove on Morris that cost a player 58 games and cost Jokic one. The brothers threatening players on social media with no league response. A fan punched in the face at Ball Arena with a sentence that amounted to a slap on the wrist. And now a three-time MVP starting a physical confrontation in a blowout loss because he was upset about a layup, telling reporters afterward he does not regret it, and facing no immediate additional discipline beyond the ejection. The NBA fined Draymond Green $25,000 for flipping off fans in Memphis. The NBA suspended Ja Morant for 25 games for displaying firearms on social media. The NBA has shown repeatedly that it will act quickly and decisively when it wants to protect its image. When it comes to Nikola Jokic and the people around him, the league has been strikingly lenient, and at some point that leniency stops looking like discretion and starts looking like a choice. Jokic is 31 years old. He has a $50-million-a-year contract. He is one of the most marketable players in the sport. None of that should matter when it comes to accountability. If a role player on a lottery team had charged an opponent after a blowout loss and started a confrontation in front of both benches, the conversation would already be about a suspension. When Jokic does it, the conversation is about whether McDaniels broke an unwritten rule. His brothers sit in the stands at games and have a documented history of threatening players and assaulting fans. That is not a family being passionate. That is a pattern of behavior that the league has chosen not to address. And every time the consequences are light or nonexistent, the pattern continues. I am tired of watching it. The NBA should be tired of it too. Nikola Jokic is one of the greatest basketball players alive, and the circus that surrounds him and his family has become impossible to ignore. At some point, the league has to decide whether the rules apply to everyone, or whether there is a separate standard for three-time MVPs and the people who sit behind their bench. Right now, the answer to that question is obvious. And that is the problem.

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PlayoffLAL
PlayoffLAL@PlayoffLAL·
LeBron did his part. Time to step up Luka
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Davie〽️
Davie〽️@_SayHeyKid·
Ngl, I see why people hate LeBron. Imagining hating a guy for 23 YEARS & he still dominating for 23 YEARS after you’ve told yourself year after year he would be washed up 🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣
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