เหตุผลว่า ทำไม NBA player ถึงเลือกเลขที่ใช้ใส่แข่งกันครับ
Grant Hill #33:
“My favorite player was always Magic Johnson,” Hill said. “I found out that he wore 32 when he was in high school, so I wore 32. When I went to college[Duke], of course Christian Laettner had 32. But I also found out that Magic wore 33 when he was in college, so I ended up wearing 33.”
“When I got to the NBA, I had the opportunity to go to the number 32 like Magic,” Hill explained. “But I had done well with 33 and kind of felt like it had done well for me up until
that point, so I stuck with it. That is pretty much why I am wearing 33 now.”
Mike Bibby #10:
Originally picked because the term “dime” is basketball slang for a nice pass, number 10 has been on Mike’s back through high school, college and into the NBA, eventually becoming the point guard’s trademark symbol.
"I’ve just always had that number. I wore it in high school and college, and I had a lot of people in my family before me wear it," said Mike, who had both his high school and college jerseys retired. "I plan to take it down from the rafters at Arizona and (my) high school so (my son) Michael can wear it when he comes and plays.”
Andrew Boguts #6:
“[Jersey No.6] was a jersey thrown to me as a kid,” said Bogut. “I was the last guy to show up basically and they threw me No. 6.
“That was the first jersey I wore competitively playing an all-around game of basketball. So I thought, ‘Why not go back to my roots?’ I actually have tried that jersey on an international level. I wore it in the Olympics, too."
Gilbert Arenas #0:
high-school player at Grant High School in Van Nuys, CA, a young Gilbert Arenas wore the number 25. But when he arrived at the University of Arizona in 2001, the rafters let him know that "25" was off limits.
“Zero is the number of minutes people predicted I would play my freshman year at Arizona,” said Arenas, who played ended up playing 32.1 minutes per game in his first season as a Wildcat. “I decided to go with it because I love proving people wrong.”
DIKEMBE MUTOMBO #55:
"I tried to wear 15 in college. For some reason Coach (John) Thompson didn’t want any of the big men to wear a low number. Everybody had to start at 30 and up. When I said 15 they said, okay, we’ll give you 55. They gave me 55, and I’ve worn it ever since."
Drew Gooden #90:
“So I chose 90 – because 9 was my second number in the NBA, with Orlando, and my first number was 0, in Memphis,” said the fourth-year forward. “I just put the two numbers together when I came to Cleveland.”
Pau Gasol #16:
“Sixteen was the number that they used to give to the young players becoming professionals back in Spain. Until a couple of years back you could only choose from number four to number 15, those 12 numbers, those were the only numbers you could choose between,” says Gasol. “The 16 and 17 were the additional numbers for the young players when somebody got hurt and they needed a young player to come in. They were the extra numbers, and they gave me the 16 in my first year with F.C. Barcelona. They just give it to you, you don’t have any choice whatsoever. If you’re new on the team and you’re also the youngest player, you don’t have any right to choose anything.”
“I kept it because I had a great year and a lot of success. They let me keep it because you could play with a 16 if you wanted to even though it was just an additional number, but I wanted to keep it.”
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basguru
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2 ธ.ค. 51 12:19:27
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