When I was a kid I read a biography about the globe trotters, I remember one of the shorter members (I think it was Pablo) was so short in elementary school that he was always the last one picked for basketball and always ended up on the bench for the game where he’d practice his dribbling. He got so good at it that by high school he was a star player, dribbling circles around the taller players and leaving them so confused that they couldn’t block his shots. Those dribbling skills were what got him on the globe triggers.
danketaz Premium Member over 3 years ago
Wow, the kid has mellowed. Used to be he’d have double-dribbled the coach down the court and sink a slam dunk.
rekam Premium Member over 3 years ago
Love Broomie’s expression.
jagedlo over 3 years ago
How about being the mascot instead?
gammaguy over 3 years ago
“…by only inches!”
LOTS of inches.
David_the_CAD over 3 years ago
But think about his strike zone. The kid is a natural
Sisyphos over 3 years ago
Once upon a time, when I was in h.s., there was a separate division in the league for b-ballers 5’8" or under. Or course, Nerwin is way, way under!
DaleMiel over 3 years ago
When I was a kid I read a biography about the globe trotters, I remember one of the shorter members (I think it was Pablo) was so short in elementary school that he was always the last one picked for basketball and always ended up on the bench for the game where he’d practice his dribbling. He got so good at it that by high school he was a star player, dribbling circles around the taller players and leaving them so confused that they couldn’t block his shots. Those dribbling skills were what got him on the globe triggers.