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Post by nomar33 on Dec 10, 2020 15:35:44 GMT -5
Disagree - when it comes to Hart and Lewis - they were definitely 2 of the best (top 20) to ever play at Marist. I would have no problem subbing Hart for Davis in my initial post.
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Post by bjorkmaneb7 on Dec 11, 2020 0:24:26 GMT -5
I was watching the movie Coming to America w my kids and my heart dropped when I realized Rik Smits and Marist was playing at MSG. I've watched this movie a 100x as a kid and never realized. Wow! Awesome! Lol ๐๐๐ youtu.be/dh2weY3zYN8I was somewhere in that student section. Going to games at MSG was a great bonus. Not sure how many times we played there - but remember the double header Kansas (Danny Manning) vs Memphis (when it was still a state) and Marist vs St. John's. Marist students traveled to the city in droves for those games - now we can't get kids to walk 1000 ft to go. I was at those games too. I was 10. I remember Memphis had Elliot Perry.
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Post by bgredmchn on Dec 20, 2020 15:24:15 GMT -5
Sean James. Was explosive to the basket like Kareem Hill. Only played 2 years, but was one of the reasons Marist made the NEC Championship game on ESPN in his Jr year.
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Post by bgredmchn on Dec 20, 2020 15:30:09 GMT -5
To be great you have to win. Every team will score no matter what. Scoring titles and averages donโt mean anything on teams that canโt break .500 at the very least. How can you consider them a great that the very reason why they scored so much is to the detriment to the team and lose? Sometimes it was because they were the only ones on the roster who COULD score consistently. You can't take away from their talent just because everyone else on the team was sub-par. If we only counted players from winning seasons as a great at Marist, it would be a very short list of players.
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Post by flyingdutchman on Dec 20, 2020 18:15:46 GMT -5
Victor Enoh
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