Monday, April 28, 2008

New Songs- April 28

if any of ya are sports fans and even if your not you have probably heard about how heated the NBA playoffs are this year....in the first round!!! I suspect yall heard bout the heated rivalry between Cavs- Wiz (could care less bout dem cause the Heat and Warriors are my teams), but more between LeBron James (Jay-Z) and Deshawn Stevenson (Soulja Boy). Stevenson said King James is over rated and LeBron smoothly says that's is like comparing Jay-Z (questionably the face of rap) to Soulja Boy (one hit wonder). Then it gets to the clubs where Jay-Z makes a new song dissing Stevenson ass which to me is very comical cause i doubt any of you heard bout Stevenson before this season so chek it nd yeah im wit bron bron on dis one cause Stevenson suck period if it was Arenas sayin it then it would be much different

Jay-Z- Blow The Whistle (Deshawn Stevenson Diss)

MIMS- Energy Rock (ft. Mr. Vegas)

MIMS- Energy Rock (Snippet)

Red Cafe- Long Live Sean Bell

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in other news the greatest coach in NBA history Pat Riley has stepped down off of Miami Heat's bench but will remain general manager and long time assistant Erik Spolestra will replace Riley and be his succedor at coach. Spoelstra just completed his 13th season as a member of the HEAT staff and his seventh in the role of Assistant Coach/Director of Scouting where he had the primary role of developing game plans for upcoming opponents. To show how great Riley has been (tha best EVER) read these stats. Riley joined the HEAT as President and Head Coach on Sept. 2, 1995. In his two stints as head coach (1995-2003 and 2005-08) he guided the HEAT to a 454-395 (.535) record with one NBA title, one conference championship, six division championships and eight playoff berths in his 11 seasons on the bench. In addition to ranking as Miami’s all-time victory leader, Riley ranks third on the NBA’s all-time regular season list, compiling a 1,210-694 (.636) career mark in 24 seasons as an NBA head coach with the Los Angeles Lakers, New York Knicks and Miami HEAT. He also ranks second on the all-time postseason victory list amassing a 171-111 (.606) mark. Riley, who was elected into the Naismith Memorial Basketball Hall of Fame earlier this month, has led his teams to five NBA championships as a head coach, nine conference championships and a league-record 18 division championships. He is the only coach in league history to capture the NBA Coach of the Year Award with three different teams and his string of 19 consecutive playoff appearances as a head coach from 1982-2001 is a league record for consecutive postseason appearances. His 21 total postseason appearances are also the most by a head coach in NBA history. He has been named NBA Coach of the Month an NBA-record 11 times and has more 50-win (17) and 60-win (7) seasons than any coach in NBA history. Additionally, when he registered his 1,000th regular season victory on Nov. 1, 2000, he became the fastest coach or manager to reach 1,000 wins in the history of the four professional sports in North America, bettering the previous mark held by Fred Clarke of the Pittsburgh Pirates by 144 games. Riley recorded his 1,000th win in just his 1,434th game. On Feb. 29, 2008 he became the only coach in NBA history to record at least 450 wins with two franchises as he guided the HEAT to a 103-93 win in Seattle. Riley currently stands as the all-time leader in both regular season and postseason victories for both the Lakers and the HEAT and owns the highest winning percentage in Knicks history. HE IS A LEGEND AND THE GREATEST THE NBA HAS EVER SEEN AS A COACH. HANDS DOWN
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