Bruce Weber looks like he’s lost in the mall but can smell Cinnabon. Confusion with a hint of determination.
×
Rock Chalk Talk: Basketball
Anything pertaining to basketball: college, pro, HS, recruiting, TV coverage
Anything pertaining to basketball: college, pro, HS, recruiting, TV coverage
Hilarious comment about Bruce Weber
- konza63
- Topic Author
- Offline
- Moderator
- c'85 Towering toward the Blue
Less
More
- Posts: 2201
- Thank you received: 1273
6 years 1 week ago - 6 years 1 week ago #17716
by konza63
“With kindest regards to Dr. Forrest C. Allen, the father of basketball coaching, from the father of the game.”
1936 inscription on the portrait of Dr. Naismith, displayed above Phog Allen's office desk at KU.
I tuned in to 810 sports radio in KC online this morning, just to hear the commentary about KU, K-State, and that crazy weekend of hoops.
In the midst of those discussions, Steven St. John (whom I love as a radio sports commentator) read a tweet from somebody that captured a moment in time from the K-State game against UMBC. It was so funny (and so true) that I about spit out my coffee:
In the midst of those discussions, Steven St. John (whom I love as a radio sports commentator) read a tweet from somebody that captured a moment in time from the K-State game against UMBC. It was so funny (and so true) that I about spit out my coffee:
Does that verbiage not completely capture how we've all seen Weber look?
Sometimes somebody just nails it.
PS: Congrats to the Purps. And to the Red Raiders and Mountaineers. 4 Big 12 teams in the Sweet 16, and it just so happens that they were the top 4 in the league to boot. Way to represent!
“With kindest regards to Dr. Forrest C. Allen, the father of basketball coaching, from the father of the game.”
1936 inscription on the portrait of Dr. Naismith, displayed above Phog Allen's office desk at KU.
Last Edit: 6 years 1 week ago by konza63.
The following user(s) said Thank You: HawkErrant, gorillahawk
Please Log in or Create an account to join the conversation.
Share this page:
- konza63
- Topic Author
- Offline
- Moderator
- c'85 Towering toward the Blue
Less
More
- Posts: 2201
- Thank you received: 1273
6 years 1 week ago #17717
by konza63
“With kindest regards to Dr. Forrest C. Allen, the father of basketball coaching, from the father of the game.”
1936 inscription on the portrait of Dr. Naismith, displayed above Phog Allen's office desk at KU.
PS: If you're a Twitter user, check out the whole thread for that one. It's hysterical.
“With kindest regards to Dr. Forrest C. Allen, the father of basketball coaching, from the father of the game.”
1936 inscription on the portrait of Dr. Naismith, displayed above Phog Allen's office desk at KU.
Please Log in or Create an account to join the conversation.
- HawkErrant
- Offline
- Moderator
- b82, g84 Lift the chorus...
Less
More
- Posts: 6757
- Thank you received: 5111
6 years 1 week ago #17719
by HawkErrant
"Travel is fatal to prejudice, bigotry and narrow-mindedness, and many of our people need it sorely on these accounts. Broad, wholesome, charitable views of men and things cannot be acquired by vegetating in one little corner of the earth all one's lifetime." - Mark Twain "Innocents Abroad"
Jus scanned the thread, here's my favorite after "Weber's Cinnabon" --
I have a theory that Virginia and Syracuse switched bodies in a "Vice Versa" or "Freaky Friday" scenario prior to the start of the tournament. Applying Occum's razor, this is the only explanation that makes any sense.
I have a theory that Virginia and Syracuse switched bodies in a "Vice Versa" or "Freaky Friday" scenario prior to the start of the tournament. Applying Occum's razor, this is the only explanation that makes any sense.
I have a theory that Virginia and Syracuse switched bodies in a "Vice Versa" or "Freaky Friday" scenario prior to t… twitter.com/i/web/status/9…
"Travel is fatal to prejudice, bigotry and narrow-mindedness, and many of our people need it sorely on these accounts. Broad, wholesome, charitable views of men and things cannot be acquired by vegetating in one little corner of the earth all one's lifetime." - Mark Twain "Innocents Abroad"
The following user(s) said Thank You: konza63
Please Log in or Create an account to join the conversation.