Philip Lanier

2.2K posts

Philip Lanier

Philip Lanier

@LanierPhil7350

가입일 Ocak 2025
439 팔로잉100 팔로워
Philip Lanier
Philip Lanier@LanierPhil7350·
@sophaller The fact you said dog and donkey!!! Could you be more awesome.
English
0
0
0
221
Sophie Cunningham
Sophie Cunningham@sophaller·
I’m gonna shut this down right now. I’m not mad about the money…. I just wanted more years because I love it here. I wanted to get a house so I could bring my dog and donkey to Indy with me. That’s it. That’s the truth. I think we have something very special here in Indiana!!
Yahoo Sports@YahooSports

Sophie Cunningham was not thrilled about the contract she signed with the Fever coming off of her MCL injury 😬 (via @Showme_Pod)

English
1.6K
1.5K
34.9K
3.9M
Game 7
Game 7@game7__·
Victor Wembanyama winning DPOY is gross. We're now just rewarding players for being unnaturally tall at this point. What a joke. Wembanyama just became the first unanimous Defensive Player of the Year in the history of the award. One hundred out of one hundred media voters gave him the first-place nod. Not a single voter looked at the rest of the NBA and thought someone else deserved it more. Not one. In the 44-year history of the DPOY award, nobody had ever achieved that. Not Ben Wallace, who came closest at 116 of 120 votes in 2002. Not Hakeem Olajuwon. Not Dikembe Mutombo. Not any of the truly transformative defenders who have won this award over four decades. And the reason Wembanyama got it unanimously is the same reason he should not have gotten it at all: the NBA cannot stop rewarding a player for being 7-foot-4 with an 8-foot wingspan. Wembanyama's defensive numbers this season were impressive on the surface. He led the league in blocks at 3.1 per game, which was 1.2 blocks ahead of the next closest player. He finished with 197 total blocks. He maintained a low foul rate relative to his block totals, meaning he was not recklessly chasing blocks. According to tracking data, the Spurs were significantly better defensively with Wembanyama on the court than off it, with his on-off differential estimated around 10 points per 100 possessions. Those are elite numbers. Nobody is pretending they are not. But here is what those numbers do not tell you: the San Antonio Spurs were not the best defensive team in basketball. They were not even the second best. The Defensive Player of the Year did not play on the top-ranked defense, and he got 100 percent of the first-place votes. Chet Holmgren, who anchored what multiple analysts called the best defense in the tracking era for the Oklahoma City Thunder, the team with the actual best defensive rating in the league, received zero first-place votes. Zero. That tells you everything about what this award actually was. It was not a defensive award. It was a Wembanyama award. Holmgren averaged 1.9 blocks per game this season on the team with the best defensive rating in basketball. The Thunder were the number one seed. Their defense was historically elite. Multiple analysts noted that in any other year, Holmgren would have been the runaway DPOY favorite. Instead, he finished second in voting with 76 second-place votes and not a single first-place vote, because the media had already decided this was Wembanyama's award before the season was over. The case for Bam Adebayo is even more damning to the narrative. By multiple on-off metrics, the Heat were a dramatically better defensive team with Adebayo on the court than without him. His on-off defensive impact was widely reported as one of the largest in the league this season, and by several estimates it exceeded Wembanyama's by a significant margin. Adebayo does it with versatility that Wembanyama cannot match. He switches onto guards, hedges ball screens, recovers to the rim, and plays passing lanes. He averaged over a steal per game while also being one of the best help defenders in basketball. Wembanyama had 1.0 steals per game. Adebayo's defense has no physical cheat code. He is 6-foot-9. He does it with footwork, positioning, and basketball IQ. He did not make the final three in DPOY voting. Ausar Thompson of the Detroit Pistons averaged 2.0 steals and 0.9 blocks per game on one of the top defensive teams in the NBA. He was a DPOY finalist and finished third. Thompson is a wing defender who disrupts offenses from the perimeter, which is arguably more valuable in the modern NBA than rim protection, because the league has shifted to a three-point-driven game where the ability to defend on the perimeter matters more than the ability to swat shots at the basket. But Thompson is 6-foot-7, so he does not get the same awe factor that Wembanyama does, and the voters treated him accordingly. The problem with Wembanyama's DPOY case is not that he is bad at defense. He is clearly an excellent defender. The problem is that the unanimous vote was driven by spectacle rather than substance. His blocks are spectacular. They go viral. They dominate highlight reels. A 7-foot-4 player with an 8-foot wingspan swatting a shot into the third row looks like the most dominant defensive player alive. But blocking shots is the most visible and most overvalued defensive statistic in basketball, because it measures one specific skill at the expense of everything else a defender does. The best defensive players in the modern NBA are not necessarily the best shot-blockers. They are the players who prevent shots from being taken in the first place. They are the players who funnel ball handlers into help, who rotate on time, who switch without getting cooked, who close out without fouling. Wembanyama does some of this. His length deters shots in ways that do not show up in the box score. But his perimeter defense is limited. His steal rate is average for a DPOY candidate. And when opposing teams adjusted to his tendencies during the season, they found ways to attack his aggressive shot-blocking style and force him into foul trouble and timing issues that were not part of the highlight reels. Then there is the offensive factor. Wembanyama averaged 25.0 points, 11.5 rebounds, and 3.1 assists this season. He was named an All-Star for the second time. He was in the MVP conversation. He is the most exciting player in basketball and the face of the league's future. The DPOY award is supposed to be about defense exclusively, but when you are the most famous player in the sport and you also happen to block more shots than anyone else, the voters are going to give you the award. The unanimous vote was not a reflection of unanimous defensive superiority. It was a reflection of how the NBA media has collectively decided that Wembanyama is the next transcendent superstar and every award he is eligible for should be his. This is the Rudy Gobert problem all over again, except bigger. Gobert won four DPOYs largely on the strength of rim protection and defensive rating, and he was criticized every single time for being a limited defender who benefited from his size and the Jazz's system. The difference is that Gobert at least played on teams that consistently had top-five defenses when he won. The Spurs were not even a top-two defense this year. If Gobert had won a unanimous DPOY on the third-best defensive team, the backlash would have been enormous. Wembanyama gets a pass because the narrative around him is bigger than the narrative around the award. The youngest DPOY in NBA history. The first unanimous selection. Those are the headlines, and they are designed to make you feel like you just witnessed something historic. You did. You witnessed 100 media voters collectively deciding that the tallest, longest, most physically gifted player in the league deserves the defensive award because he looks like a defensive player of the year rather than because he was clearly better than every other defender in the league. Chet Holmgren on the best defense in the tracking era says otherwise. Bam Adebayo's massive on-off defensive impact says otherwise. Ausar Thompson anchoring one of the best defenses in the league as a wing says otherwise. Wembanyama is a generational talent. He might win five DPOYs before his career is over. But this one was a coronation, not an evaluation. And the unanimous vote did not prove he was the best defender in basketball. It proved that the media had already made up its mind.
Game 7 tweet media
Game 7@game7__

Of course AJ Brown would rather play with Drake Maye than Jalen Hurts. Is there a single NFL player in the league who would rather play with Jalen Hurts than Aaron Rodgers? Not a player who would rather play in Philadelphia because of the roster. Not a player who would rather have Hurts' age on his side. A player who, given equal circumstances, would choose Jalen Hurts to throw him the football over Aaron Rodgers. That player does not exist. Aaron Rodgers is 42 years old. He tore his Achilles tendon on the fourth snap of the 2023 season. He came back and played all 17 games in 2024 on a Jets team that went 5-12 around him. He signed with the Pittsburgh Steelers for 2025, and according to multiple reports was the primary reason Pittsburgh reached the playoffs. He is closer to a senior citizen than he is to his athletic prime, and he is still a better quarterback than Jalen Hurts in every measurable way that matters. Start with the numbers that define a career. Rodgers has four MVP awards. Four. He won them in 2011, 2014, 2020, and 2021, including back-to-back MVPs in his late thirties. Hurts has zero. His best MVP finish was second place in 2022, when he lost the award to Patrick Mahomes. Rodgers has four First-Team All-Pro selections. Hurts has one Second-Team All-Pro. Rodgers has 10 Pro Bowl selections. Hurts has three. Rodgers has a career passer rating of 102.3. Hurts has never sustained anything close to that over the course of a career. Rodgers' career touchdown-to-interception ratio is 4.56 to 1, the best in NFL history. He once threw 402 consecutive passes without an interception, an NFL record. Hurts threw four interceptions and fumbled in a single game against the Los Angeles Chargers in December 2024 and became the first player since 1978 to turn the ball over twice on the same play. Those are not comparable resumes. Those are not even in the same conversation. But the argument people will make for Hurts is the ring. Hurts won Super Bowl LIX in February 2025, beating the Kansas City Chiefs 40-22 and earning Super Bowl MVP with 17 completions on 22 attempts, 221 passing yards, two touchdown passes, and 72 rushing yards. That is a real accomplishment. Nobody should take that from him. He also lost Super Bowl LVII two years earlier, 38-35 to those same Chiefs, despite putting up 304 passing yards and three rushing touchdowns, because a fumble in the second quarter was returned for a touchdown by Nick Bolton and shifted the momentum of the game. Rodgers won Super Bowl XLV after the 2010 season, beating the Pittsburgh Steelers 31-25. He went 24 of 39 for 304 yards, three touchdowns, zero interceptions, and a 111.5 passer rating. He won Super Bowl MVP. One ring each. The difference is what comes after. What came after for Rodgers was four more MVP awards, a decade of elite play, and a career that put him in the conversation for the most talented quarterback to ever throw a football. What came after for Hurts was the 2025 season. Hurts' 2025 was a regression by every measure. According to reports, he posted a career-low 7.1 yards per attempt and a 65 percent completion rate, his worst in four years. His rushing production dropped to 421 yards after putting up 630 the year before. ESPN reported that Hurts "continually fights against under-center play" because he does not like turning his back on the defense, and that the Eagles have "catered to Hurts by playing to his strengths and subsequently limiting how diverse the offense can be." His relationship with offensive coordinator Kellen Moore was described as tense. The locker room frustrations that had been whispered about in prior seasons became louder. And in the Wild Card round of the 2025 playoffs, Hurts and the Eagles were eliminated 23-19 by the San Francisco 49ers. He went 20 of 35 for 168 yards in a game that looked nothing like a Super Bowl champion. Eight months after winning it all, Philadelphia was one and done. That is who Jalen Hurts is. He is a quarterback who can look transcendent when everything around him is working, when Saquon Barkley is averaging five yards a carry, when the offensive line is giving him clean pockets, when the defense is holding leads. And he is a quarterback who falls apart when the infrastructure cracks. His arm does not save him. His processing does not save him. His legs are not enough. Rodgers is the opposite. Rodgers has spent the last two decades elevating whatever was around him. The 2024 Jets went 5-12 with one of the worst rosters in football, and Rodgers still threw 28 touchdowns with 11 interceptions and a 90.5 passer rating at age 40 coming off a torn Achilles. The 2025 Steelers won the AFC North and made the playoffs with Rodgers, at 41, throwing 24 touchdowns and just 7 interceptions across a 10-7 season. He does not need the infrastructure. He is the infrastructure. The arm talent gap is not close. Rodgers has one of the strongest, most accurate arms in the history of the position. His ability to throw off-platform, change arm angles, and place the ball in windows that should not exist is something that cannot be taught and cannot be replicated. Hurts has improved his completion percentage from 52.9 percent as a rookie to the mid-60s, and his deep ball has gotten better, but nobody who watches both quarterbacks throw a football would confuse the two. Rodgers makes throws that Hurts cannot make. That is not an insult. It is a description of physical reality. The football IQ gap might be even wider. Jason Kelce, who has played with Hurts, has described Rodgers as being "on another level of intellectual ability" for the game. Rodgers scored a 35 on the Wonderlic, placing him in the 96th percentile. He reads defenses pre-snap and adjusts at the line of scrimmage in ways that Hurts, by ESPN's own reporting, resists doing. The report that Hurts "continually fights against under-center play" is not a minor detail. It means he is limiting his own offense because he is uncomfortable with a fundamental aspect of quarterback play. Rodgers has never needed to be catered to. He has always been the one dictating the offense, not the other way around. The contract makes it worse. Hurts signed a five-year, $255 million extension in April 2023, with $179.3 million fully guaranteed. That made him the highest-paid player in NFL history at the time. The first no-trade clause in Eagles franchise history. For that money, you are not paying for a quarterback who needs a perfect ecosystem to succeed. You are paying for a quarterback who creates the ecosystem. Hurts has not been that player consistently enough to justify the investment, and the 2025 season was the clearest evidence yet. Rodgers at 42 makes $13.65 million on a one-year deal with the Steelers. He costs a fraction of what Hurts costs and provides more from the quarterback position in the areas that actually matter: accuracy, decision-making, pre-snap reads, pocket presence, and the ability to elevate the players around him regardless of what the defense shows. The Super Bowl argument is the only card Hurts has that Rodgers cannot match right now, and even that argument is flawed. Rodgers won his Super Bowl as the clear best player on his team. He was the MVP of the game and the engine that drove the entire postseason. Hurts won his Super Bowl on a team that also had Saquon Barkley, one of the best offensive lines in football, and a defense that held the Chiefs to 22 points. His Super Bowl MVP performance was 17 of 22 for 221 yards. That is efficient. It is not carrying. There is not a receiver in the NFL who would rather catch passes from Jalen Hurts than Aaron Rodgers. There is not a running back who would rather have Hurts' arm keeping safeties honest than Rodgers' arm. There is not a coach who, given the choice, would rather build around Hurts' limitations than Rodgers' command of an offense. Hurts is a good quarterback on a great team. Rodgers is a great quarterback who has been great regardless of the team. The gap between them is not close. It has never been close. And the fact that one of them has a $255 million contract and the other is on a $13.65 million prove-it deal does not change the fact that the cheaper option is the better quarterback. It always has been.

English
130
31
146
62.9K
Philip Lanier 리트윗함
Grifty
Grifty@TheGriftReport·
THIS IS HORIFFIC 5-year-old Charlotte Buskey was starved to death by her own father in a house of horrors in Schenectady, New York. Robert Buskey Jr, 35, locked his daughter in her bedroom for months with an external lock and tape so she couldn’t escape. He gave her no food or water and left her to die curled in the fetal position inside a small pack n play crib. The little girl was found severely emaciated, dehydrated, with sunken eyes, her body completely devoid of food according to the autopsy. Her brother was drugged with cocaine and locked in a makeshift cage in the dining room. The father spent his days playing video games and using drugs while both children were completely cut off from the outside world. The house was stocked with food, yet the children were deliberately starved and neglected. Buskey pleaded guilty to second-degree murder and giving narcotics to a child. He was sentenced to 27 years to life. Sickening beyond words.
Grifty tweet mediaGrifty tweet media
English
2.9K
3.8K
12.9K
677.1K
Philip Lanier 리트윗함
Viktor
Viktor@ViktorKlopp·
Her grip strength is insane. This is peak artistry.
English
770
6.5K
43.2K
3.7M
Philip Lanier 리트윗함
MO
MO@Abu_Salah9·
يُعتبر هذا المشهد واحد من أكثر الجرائم رُعباً في كل تاريخ الحروب لحظة قيام جندي إسرائيلي بقنص سيدة مُسنة في غزة وهي تُمسك بيد حفيدها رافعين الراية البيضاء وبعد أن قام جيش الاحتلال بإعطائهم الأمان للمرور النسيان جريمة.
العربية
2.4K
53K
99.3K
2.3M
Philip Lanier 리트윗함
ℳ𝒾𝓇 ℬ𝑒𝓎
Ünlü İngiliz komedyen Bay Bean: “İsrail'in Gazze'de iki milyon insanı kuşatmasına, elektriklerini, sularını ve ilaçlarını kesmesine izin verdiği ve ardından insan haklarını savunduğunu iddia ettiği için Birleşik Krallık adına utanıyorum.”
Türkçe
293
15.7K
80.1K
3M
Philip Lanier 리트윗함
Kia 🧸ྀི
Kia 🧸ྀི@xevekiah·
Did you know the TV show “To Catch a Predator” was cancelled because they kept catching law enforcement, teachers, preachers, local officials, and other people meant to protect Children? The final straw? An Assistant District Attorney in TEXAS was courting who he thought was a 13yo boy. He didn’t show for the sting, so they sent law enforcement and camera crew to his home. The police entered, and Louis Conradt shot himself, taking his own life. Can’t make this shit up.
mei@euphemey

Hit me with the harshest reality truth.

English
1K
48.2K
390K
13.4M
Philip Lanier 리트윗함
Spitfire
Spitfire@RealSpitfire·
We’ve reached the point in the matrix where the government officials who are guilty of fraud are creating laws that will imprison the people investigating their crimes. Incredible.
English
882
21.1K
90.3K
735.5K
Philip Lanier 리트윗함
Jackson Hinkle 🇺🇸
Jackson Hinkle 🇺🇸@jacksonhinklle·
🇺🇸 NEW: Candace Owens says Washington is more opposed to Tucker Carlson than Jeffrey Epstein.
Jackson Hinkle 🇺🇸 tweet mediaJackson Hinkle 🇺🇸 tweet media
English
75
940
7.1K
82.4K
Philip Lanier 리트윗함
LibertyOrNothing
LibertyOrNothing@LibertyNut1·
Do you agree with this?
LibertyOrNothing tweet media
English
1.1K
631
12.3K
294.1K
Philip Lanier 리트윗함
Wide Awake Media
Wide Awake Media@wideawake_media·
A reporter asks Thomas Massie: "Why do you think [Trump] is working so hard not to get [the Epstein files] released?" Thomas Massie: "These files implicate billionaires and friends of his, and political donors that he's trying to protect." "Epstein also had close ties to our own intelligence agencies and Israel's intelligence agencies. That's why there's so much effort in trying to stop this." "And that's going to backfire on them."
English
128
1K
3.7K
78.7K
Philip Lanier 리트윗함
Will Carter
Will Carter@HogFanPage·
🚨 ARKANSAS JUST KNOCKED OFF #1 OKLAHOMA IN NORMAN 🚨 The 16 game win streak Oklahoma has on Arkansas, comes to an end!!!!! Last time we beat them (only 4 times now) was in 2009 And on top of that, we got it done without Golden Ticket and one of SEC’s best, Dekota Kennedy. This Arkansas team runs deep!! We needed that after today 😂
GIF
English
3
7
143
2.9K
Philip Lanier 리트윗함
Courtney Mims
Courtney Mims@MimsCourtney·
🚨THE HOGS TAKE DOWN NO. 1 OKLAHOMA TONIGHT!!! 🚨 It’s the Razorbacks first win over a No. 1 team since 2012 and third EVER in program history! #WPS
Courtney Mims tweet media
English
12
50
737
8.6K
Philip Lanier 리트윗함
Arkansas Softball
Arkansas Softball@RazorbackSB·
THAT'S A GRITTY HOGS WIN!!!
Arkansas Softball tweet media
English
20
125
947
48.3K