When I came home from West Germany in late August, 1985, I soon began noticing that more and more black players refused to follow the rules, especially regarding traveling and palming the ball. Announcers began joking about new york knicks center Patrick Ewing's "bunny hop," where he would walk from the foul line to the hoop.
Ewing is now in the basketball hall of fame. (Note that he played college ball at Georgetown for black supremacist coach John Thompson.)
Then came the black-on-White violence by racist players. Latrell Sprewell choked his coach, P.J. Carlesimo. Robert Horry threw a towel in the face of his coach, Danny Ainge, and Rasheed Wallace did likewise to teammate Arvydas Sabonis. By the time that nation of islam member Bobby Portis maimed his own teammate, Nikola Mirotic, breaking his jaw in a practice, for which the team rewarded Portis by giving him Mirotic's job, I had long since quit watching the league.
[A blogger swept Horry's attack under the rug as, "the towel thrown to Danny Ainge."]
When Jae Crowder and Lebron James teamed up to maim Gordon Hayward, and force his early retirement, fake sports journalists covered up the story, and their Gauleiterblocked the comments of observers who tried to fill the gaps.
Things are even worse in the wnba, where racist black lesbians seek, flagrantly, every night that Caitlin Clark is healthy enough to suit up, to maim her, the msm covers for them, and Clark, the ultimate white Aunt Jemima, has betrayed and condemned her own White fans.
Everything that I have noted about racist, black professional basketball players parallels black criminals in "America," where the criminal justice system has an unofficial 100-strikes-and-you're-out policy for blacks, hispanics, moslems, homosexuals and sexual psychopaths.
Was this a travel? 🤨
— Hoop Central (@TheHoopCentral) October 29, 2025
(h/t @NBA_NewYork)
pic.twitter.com/5X2uTSFQLw
2 comments:
It was a round trip from Milwaukee to Chicago.
--GRA
jerry pdx
There are rules for black guys on the court, and rules for White guys. When I played, I would try moves where you would flip the ball backward as you spin back against your body or execute a Eurostep. Invariably, someone would try to call me for travelling which sometimes resulted in a heated debate about what travelling is. The thing is, they're actually right about some of it, not necessarily the Eurostep because done properly, it's not travelling at all. But the move where you flip the basketball backwards as you spin is totally traveling and also palming. My issue on that was I've never once seen a black guy get called for traveling or palming doing any of those moves and when they do them, it's always blatant traveling, they barely try to camouflage it. They always do that extra step or nest the ball in their hands way longer than you are allowed to. Yet NOBODY calls them for it...ever. But if a White guy dares try to do those moves, there's always somebody ready to call him for traveling. The double standard used to piss me off. When I watch White guys in the NBA I see players that seem to know they can't get away with the same stuff a black player can so they are more careful, plus they grew up with that double standard and they haven't perfected those little cheating moves like the black players have.
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