Trey

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Trey

@TreySanders5

Katılım Ekim 2012
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THA GREAT
THA GREAT@NipseyHussle·
Its in me not on me.
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Trey@TreySanders5·
@SamQuinnCBS If a player jumps after I pump fake how else could I take advantage of their mistake? It’s just high IQ basketball
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Sam Quinn
Sam Quinn@SamQuinnCBS·
I think I'm in the minority on this but the foul-baiting strategy I want to see removed the most is "get someone in the air, lean in and flail." Like yes, defenders who bite on fakes should be punished, but that's just the definition of "trying to get fouled."
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Trey@TreySanders5·
@Bucks_Breakdown “Never found out how to maximize other guys” Ryan Rollins having the best year of his career so how can that be true?
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Bucks Breakdown
Bucks Breakdown@Bucks_Breakdown·
Even going back to last season my biggest thing with Ryan after his initial breakout stretch was that he seemed like a scalable player and particularly someone that fit really well alongside Giannis. And when I talk about scalability I mean a few different things and mainly on the offensive side of the ball. Simply put, can you impact the game with the ball and can you impact the game without the ball. And more so, is there a role for you if you’re not option 1 or even 2 or 3. And if yes, can you also handle responsibilities as option 1 or option 2? Last year i thought Ryan flashed both of those and I think he carried that over into this year as well. Off ball or more specifically, playing off Giannis, i thought Ryan was solid. In their first stretch together (pre giannis first injury). I thought Ryan did a good job of being an initiator without having to be the focal point but still being a really reliable secondary option. I always like to use Khris as an example here because Khris was so good at being able to go from being option 2 with Giannis to being able to carry lineups himself or as the primary creator in non Giannis lineups; Here are some Khris numbers with Giannis On v Off; Khris w/ Giannis On -> Giannis Off (2021) TS%: 58.5% -> 59.1% 3Pr: 37.4% -> 29.9% MR FREQ: 44.7% -> 52.5% ASTD% (% of points assisted on): 50.7% -> 39.3% Again so I just like to use this as, this is what “I can play with you and be efficient in the areas needed to be and I can also change my game a bit and carry myself and the team without you” So now we can look at the same for Rollins; Rollins w/Giannis On -> Giannis Off TS%: 57.8% -> 56.5% 3Pr: 48% -> 41.3% MR FREQ: 24.8% -> 35.6% ASTD%: 52.7% -> 39.8% Not exactly the same but along the same lines. You like to see the efficiency hang up there even without Giannis and the less opportunities for you to get easier points (ASTD%). And this is all while your star still remaining himself with Rollins on the court. Giannis is +2 PTS per 75 poss w Rollins on and +1.5 TS% (67%). So for me it came down to, this guy just being able to wear so many different hats offensively while still being able to impact the game in whichever role you handed him. I think even though it’s been a somewhat up and down season as far as good reps go, I think we still got to see a ton of growth from Ryan too and even with everything that has gone on around him, he’s remained pretty efficient despite all that. @TiWindisch touched on something similar earlier but there are 3 guys in the league averaging 40%+ from 3 on 6 or more attempts + 3 or more rim attempts per game; Anthony Edwards Jamal Murray Ryan Rollins And funny enough we just seen both Ant and Murray pop up in the top 10 in both ISO PPP and PnR PPP. But that’s the type of versatility in scoring needed to reach that and I think Ryan has a chance at getting there. If you lower those filters to 4.5 attempts from 3 and 2+ rim attempts, the list is then Kon Cam Johnson Murray Ty Jerome Ryan Ant And I think even there that’s still a pretty damn solid list a players and I think you can even see in that, the different offensive roles each of those guys have for their teams. The KPJ part of this is I don’t see that same flexibility with his offensive role and I think we’ve gotten to a point with him where we’ve maximized KPJ and while making most other guys less than their sum. We made it a priority to maximize KPJ but never found out how to maximize other guys. I think a good bit of that has to do with this team just needed guys who could create and I can’t be too mad at that but I think a bit of it is also that he just doesn’t do much without the ball. So They just basically gave him the keys for an entire season when he was healthy and left everyone else out to dry. Of guys who have a 40%+ on ball percentage here is the list of those guys ordered by most points created to least; 1. Luka - 52.9 2. Cade - 47.7 3. Harden - 43.2 4. Brunson - 42.1 5. Ja - 38.6 6. LaMelo - 37.2 7. KPJ - 35.4 8. Collier - 29.2 9. McConnell - 22.1 10. Cole Anthony - 15.0 I think it says a ton that this is the entire list off guys. That are 40% or + on ball%. There’s one guy that I left out and that’s Dejounte Murray and that’s because he’s not even at half of the next lowest guy in minutes which is Cole Anthony who’s at 527 minutes. So to me this looks like you’re either an offensive engine or you’re just a fake PRA guy. I think there is a clear set of guys here that are obvious offensive engines and then there’s everyone else. And again like I don’t know how it gets much better for KPJ. He was able to keep his efficiency up by being able to get to the free throw line a good bit and hit tough mid range jumpers at an absurd clip. Jumping back to the original point, again we just feel like were maximizing KPJ at the expense of everyone else. Average Seconds per touch (min 25 mins) & PTS per touch; 1. Harden - .317 2. SGA - .469 3. Brunson - .286 4. Ja - .272 5. Luka - .378 6. J Murray - .333 7. KPJ - .219 8. Ant - .398 9. Cade - .272 10. DG - .283 To each their own but that’s where I’m at with that and why i value Ryan and his growth more than others.
Bucks Breakdown tweet mediaBucks Breakdown tweet media
BucksBallKnower🦌@BucksBallKnower

@Bucks_Breakdown Genuine question (I’m a big Rollins believer): when you look at advanced statistics, why is Ryan so much more promising/ “winning-player” than KPJ is?

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Bowser2Bowser
Bowser2Bowser@bowser2bowser·
If you want to credit me for anything, please don’t tell the world we got better because “we simplified it so he doesn’t have to think as much.”
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Jaylen Brown
Jaylen Brown@FCHWPO·
This the shit I be talking about
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College Basketball Content
College Basketball Content@CBBcontent·
MEECHIE JOHNSON WALKS IT OFF AGAINST OLE MISS 😳
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Trey@TreySanders5·
@LadePlatinum Ace was definitely a business man lmao
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Trey@TreySanders5·
@SaADM00D So why is Shai in MVP convo then based off this analysis..
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SaaAD
SaaAD@SaADM00D·
@TreySanders5 Harden has played great and bad and he was not all star anyway. We can talk about the rest of the roster if you want ? Do you wanna play with in the rockets or clippers this year 🤡 They are 3rd in the west cause the whole team is great, not only durant, celtics of the west lol..
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Trey
Trey@TreySanders5·
@SaADM00D Naw Kawhi was just playing wit somebody averaging 25 and 8 that’s all cut it out man.. while the Rockets been playing ball without a true PG all year and still 3rd in the west
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SaaAD
SaaAD@SaADM00D·
@TreySanders5 Lol, kawhi is not playing with another all star this year lmaooo, we not gonna compare this rockets squad and kawhi and his friends on the clippers i'm telling you 😂😂😂
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Trey
Trey@TreySanders5·
@SaADM00D What is it that KD doing? He carrying too
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SaaAD
SaaAD@SaADM00D·
@TreySanders5 They would be last without him, it's a hard carry job he's doing this year, but you need to watch clippers games to understand that.
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Trey
Trey@TreySanders5·
@SaADM00D Man they in 10th place 😂
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SaaAD
SaaAD@SaADM00D·
@TreySanders5 Cause without klaw, clippers have 10 wins 🤣🤣🤡
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Joshie
Joshie@Joshie_Sosa·
😭😭😭😭😭😭 @TreySanders5
GIF
SubX.News®@SubxNews

🙏 Rev. Jesse Jackson dies at 84 February 17, 2026 5:34 AM ET By Jaclyn Diaz, Cheryl Corley npr.org The Rev. Jesse Jackson, an American civil rights leader, minister, and politician, who was a protégé of Martin Luther King Jr. and in the 1980s reshaped Democratic politics with two galvanizing presidential campaigns, died Tuesday at the age of 84. "Our father was a servant leader — not only to our family, but to the oppressed, the voiceless, and the overlooked around the world," the Jackson family said in a statement. "We shared him with the world, and in return, the world became part of our extended family." According to the Jackson family, public commemorations will take place in Chicago. Jackson was born Oct. 8, 1941, in a tiny house in Greenville, S.C., where he began his lifelong work fighting for civil rights. While visiting home for Christmas break during his freshman year at University of Illinois, Jackson needed to borrow a book but couldn't get it from the town's white-only library. Six months later, on July 16, 1960, he and seven other students held a sit-in at the library and were arrested for protesting. After his experience as a member of the "Greenville Eight," Jackson transferred to North Carolina Agricultural & Technical College, a historically Black school in Greensboro, N.C. His burgeoning activism would bring him in 1965 to march alongside Martin Luther King, Jr. and others in Selma, Ala., answering King's call for supporters of a local voting rights campaign. Jackson became a close ally of King — eventually leaving his graduate studies at the Chicago Theological Seminary to join King's Southern Christian Leadership Conference. He became the Chicago coordinator and a year later, in 1967, the national leader of the SCLC's Operation Breadbasket, which was dedicated to improving the economic conditions of Black communities in the U.S. In April 1968, Jackson traveled with King to Memphis, Tenn., where he witnessed the civil rights leader's assassination. King's death marked the beginning of the end for Jackson's association with the SCLC. By 1971, he split with the group and formed his own organization called Operation PUSH. The group continued Jackson's work to increase Black Americans' political strength and political opportunities. Jackson later merged Operation PUSH with his National Rainbow Coalition to form the Rainbow PUSH Coalition, which became a prominent civil rights organization. Throughout the 1970s and 1980s, Jackson, who became an ordained Baptist minister in 1968, increasingly became an influential player on the national stage. In 1983, Jackson organized a voter registration drive in Chicago that is credited as being the key factor for the election of the city's first Black mayor, Harold Washington. Presidential bids In November 1983, he announced his first bid for president — becoming the second Black person to seek a major party's nomination after Congresswoman Shirley Chisholm in 1972. His rousing speech at the 1984 Democratic Convention in San Francisco appealed to a "Rainbow Coalition" of disenfranchised Americans and people of color. "This is not a perfect party. We're not a perfect people," Jackson said. "Yet, we are called to a perfect mission. Our mission to feed the hungry, to clothe the naked, to house the homeless, to teach the illiterate, to provide jobs for the jobless, and to choose the human race over the nuclear race." Though Jackson had significant support for his bid, with his campaign registering more than a million new voters and winning 3.5 million votes, his run for president was not without controversy. Jackson drew heated criticism for making a disparaging remark about New York's Jewish community and for his relationship with Nation of Islam leader Louis Farrakhan, who has said the Jewish community is to blame for Black oppression. Jackson would apologize for his comments and distance himself from Farrakhan, but those efforts were not enough to clinch the Democratic nomination. He placed third in the Democratic primary behind former Vice President Walter Mondale and Sen. Gary Hart. Still, it was a landmark achievement for Jackson and a growing Black political movement. In 1988, he ran again, expanding his outreach to more White Americans, and reached an emotional crescendo during an impassioned speech at that year's Democratic convention. Although Jackson won major presidential primaries, the first African-American to do so, he came in second to the Democratic Party nominee Massachusetts Gov. Michael Dukakis. Until Barack Obama's election in 2008, Jackson was the most successful Black U.S. presidential candidate. Though Jackson never ran for the presidency again he remained a powerful player in the Democratic Party, pushing for the leaders to adopt a platform that recognized issues important to Black voters. Later life Jackson traveled around the globe throughout his life using his voice to expose international problems and highlight civil rights abuses. In several instances, he negotiated and secured the release of American hostages held captive abroad — most notably from Syria, Cuba and Serbia. From 1992 to 2000 he also hosted a weekly discussion show on CNN, "Both Sides with Jesse Jackson," where he addressed current social and political issues. In 2000, Jackson received the Presidential Medal of Freedom, the highest honor a civilian in the U.S. can receive. But controversy was not far behind. A year later, news that Jackson fathered a daughter with a former member of his staff became public. When the scandal broke he said, "This is no time for evasions, denials or alibis. I fully accept responsibility and I am truly sorry for my actions." Jackson found himself apologizing again in 2008, this time to Obama, for crass remarks he made about the presidential candidate in an aside to a reporter on a Fox News program. Obama accepted the apology. And despite other comments critical of the tone of some of Obama's campaign speeches, Jackson was present at his victory party at Grant Park in Chicago and wept. "I knew that people in the villages of Kenya and Haiti, and mansions and palaces in Europe and China, were all watching this young African-American male assume the leadership to take our nation out of a pit to a higher place," Jackson told NPR after Obama's election night. Jackson saw the rise and painful fall of the promising political career of his oldest son, Jesse Jackson, Jr., who was elected to Congress from Illinois in 1995 and resigned in 2012 citing health issues. After leaving office, he was investigated for misuse of campaign funds and pleaded guilty in 2013 to spending $750,000 in campaign funds for personal use. He was sentenced to 30 months in prison. "I speak really today as a father," Jackson, Sr. said at the courthouse the day of the sentencing. "Most of my career has been spent outgoing - helping someone else on something I really understood socially and politically. But this one, of course, is home." In 2017, Jackson announced he had Parkinson's disease, a degenerative disorder that affects movement. In November, his organization revealed Jackson was diagnosed in April with progressive supranuclear palsy, a rare neurological disease similar but different from Parkinson's disease. Despite his illness, Jackson often showed up at protests against police brutality, calling for justice for victims of police shootings. In August 2020, Jackson spoke at a news conference in Kenosha, Wisc., where police shot Jacob Blake, a Black man, several times. "Today, there's a moral desert, top-down. The acid rain is coming, top-down," he said. "That kind of moral desert hurts all of America." He compared the demonstrations that summer to those that occurred during the Civil Rights Era, comments that echoed earlier remarks he made to NPR that June about the nationwide protests that erupted after another Black man, George Floyd, was murdered by a white police officer in Minneapolis. The marches were "hopeful signs," Jackson said. "The marchers are full of hope. They believe something can happen. On the move, we're not going backwards." In 2021, Jackson contracted COVID-19. He was hospitalized and spent several weeks in a rehabilitation facility. He stepped down as president of Rainbow Push Coalition in 2023. On Nov. 12, the coalition announced Jackson was hospitalized for PSP, which affects body movements, balance, vision, speech and swallowing. Jackson is survived by his wife, Jacqueline, and six children.

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NBA
NBA@NBA·
Keshad Johnson x Julius Erving 👀 @kj_showtime0 poses with the Julius “Dr. J” Erving trophy for winning @ATT Slam Dunk... with Dr. J himself!
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Trey@TreySanders5·
@Bucks_Breakdown They were on the floor together in the first for abt 3 mins,(from 6mins till abt the 3 min mark) but I actually thought Cam found a rhythm without KPJ on the floor
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Bucks Breakdown
Bucks Breakdown@Bucks_Breakdown·
@TreySanders5 Between the end of the 1st and the beginning of the 2nd, they weren’t on the floor together. I think they eventually were on the floor together after a few minutes in the 2nd
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Bucks Breakdown
Bucks Breakdown@Bucks_Breakdown·
What’s funny about the Cam Thomas game last night was that his first stretch where he was like terrible for a few minutes came in his few lone minutes without another guy to initiate offense.
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NHL Youngboy
NHL Youngboy@WBCYOUNGESTBOY·
Parries, pulls, pivots, rolls, slips, lateral shifts and weaves, a great fighter can use them all simultaneously...
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Pull up shoot
Pull up shoot@NElGHT_·
The Minsanity run was fun while it lasted
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