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Steve Nash announces retirement

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Blablurn

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Steve Nash Announces Retirement

After a 19-year NBA career in which he twice won MVP honors, tallied the third-most assists in league history and assured his place in the Hall of Fame as one of the greatest point guards ever to play the game, Steve Nash formally announced he is walking away from the game Saturday in a letter published on The Player's Tribune website.

"The greatest gift has been to be completely immersed in my passion and striving for something I loved so much -- visualizing a ladder, climbing up to my heroes," Nash wrote. "The obsession became my best friend. I talked to her, cherished her, fought with her and got knocked on my ass by her.

Steve Nash won back-to-back MVP awards in 2005 and '06 and finishes his career as the most accurate free-throw shooter in NBA history.

"And that is what I'm most thankful for in my career. In my entire life, in some ways. Obviously, I value my kids and my family more than the game, but in some ways having this friend -- this ever-present pursuit -- has made me who I am, taught me and tested me, and given me a mission that feels irreplaceable. I am so thankful. I've learned so many invaluable lessons about myself and about life. And of course I still have so much to learn. Another incredible gift."

Nash, who didn't play this season with the Los Angeles Lakers because of injuries, finishes his career with 10,335 assists, third-most in NBA history behind John Stockton and Jason Kidd.

"To now realize that it"s over, it's really difficult to put it into words," Nash told ESPN.com's Marc Stein in a "SportsCenter" sitdown that aired after Nash's announcement Saturday.

"It's just a weird transition‎. Every athlete goes through it. A lot of people say an athlete dies twice and in some ways, without being salacious, that' true. If you want to enjoy and be happy in life, you have in some ways to say goodbye to your former self. And that's not easy, especially for guys. We're not the most communicative of the species. So t's hard to kind of put it all in perspective."

Nash also is the most accurate free throw shooter in NBA history, edging Mark Price's career mark at 90.4 percent. And for nine straight seasons from 2001-02 in Dallas through 2008-09 in Phoenix, Nash quarterbacked squads that ranked No. 1 in the league in offense.

"When people ask me if I have a favorite game or play or moment on the court that stands out the most, I can't answer them," Nash wrote. "It all blends into one. What comes to mind are all the great teammates I've played with and the friends I've made through the years."

Nash Delivered Again And Again

Steve Nash finishes his career ranked third on the all-time assist list, trailing only John Stockton and Jason Kidd. The NBA's all-time leaders:

Players Assists
John Stockton 15,806
Jason Kidd 12,091
Steve Nash 10,335
Mark Jackson 10,334
Magic Johnson 10,141

Despite several health struggles late in his career with the Suns, the Lakers in 2012 gave Nash a three-year, $28 million deal and mortgaged their future by shipping four draft picks to Phoenix.

But Nash's tenure in Los Angeles was mostly miserable.

He broke a bone in his left leg in his second game and missed the next 24 in 2012-13. Last season, more health issues sidelined Nash for all but 15 games. And because of back, knee and hamstring issues, Nash played in just 65 of a possible 164 regular-season games the past two seasons with the Lakers.

"When I signed with the Lakers, I had big dreams of lifting the fans up and lighting this city on fire," Nash wrote. "I turned down more lucrative offers to come to L.A. because I wanted to be in the "fire," and play for high risk and high reward in my last NBA chapter. In my second game here, I broke my leg and nothing was the same.

"Last spring, when I returned to the court, I was given a standing ovation at Staples Center. It was a dark time in my career and that gesture will be one of my best memories. There's been a lot of negativity online, but in my nearly three years in L.A., I've never met anyone who didn't show me anything but love and support for my efforts."

The Lakers, according to Nash, have "for all intents and purposes" regarded him as retired since late October, when it was announced that ‎he would miss the entire 2014-15 season. The only reason Nash's retirement wasn't made official then, he said, was that Lakers general manager Mitch Kupchak asked him to delay the announcement until after the Feb. 19 trade deadline, so the Lakers could explore the trade market and see if they could acquire a future asset in exchange for Nash's expiring $9.7 million contract, which counts against the Lakers' cap.

‎"I could have medically retired," Nash told ESPN.com. "But they asked if I'd consider just being out for the year. ... Really it was about giving them an opportunity to move my salary and improve their team.

"For them to trade me to improve their team was something I was completely on board with‎. The organization's been unbelievable to me. ... How Mitch has treated me and the Buss family has been incredible. It was the least I could do."

The British Columbia product starred at Santa Clara before starting his NBA career with the Suns, who traded him to Dallas in 1998. He established himself as an elite point guard while playing for coach Don Nelson alongside Dirk Nowitzki and Michael Finley with Dallas.

"I remember when Dirk and I were nobodies," Nash wrote. "He used to say over dinner sometimes, 'How are us two stiffs gonna make it in this league?' Somehow we made something of ourselves. After all the wins and all the great times we've had around the world together, what really means the most to me are the late nights early in our careers when we'd go back to the Landry Center in Dallas, to play a few more games of HORSE and one-on-one."

Nash returned to Phoenix in 2004 on a lucrative free-agent deal.

The 6-foot-3 Nash won consecutive but unlikely MVP awards in 2005 and '06 -- one of just 10 players to win in back-to-back years -- as the catalyst for one of the most prolific offenses in NBA history under coach Mike D'Antoni. His playmaking and scoring earned him worldwide recognition and eight All-Star Game selections, including his final season with Phoenix in 2011-12.

"It will always hurt that Phoenix Suns fans didn't get the championship they deserved during our run," Nash wrote. "Yes, we had some bad luck but I always look back at it and think, I could've made one more shot, or not forced a turnover, or made a better pass. But I don't regret anything. The arena was always sold out and rocking. It was the time of my life. Thanks, Phoenix."

Nash said in his letter Saturday that he likely will never play basketball again.

"It's bittersweet," he said. "I already miss the game deeply, but I'm also really excited to learn to do something else."

Source: http://espn.go.com/los-angeles/nba/...-nash-los-angeles-lakers-announces-retirement

good night sweet prince
 

theWB27

Member
I love how both Steve Nash and Kobe basically fucked the Lakers for 2-3 years.

How? The Lakes didn't have to sign Kobe and they took on Steve's salary. I'm a Laker fan and I hate when people say this. Why the hell wouldn't a player take the money.
 

dream

Member
How? The Lakes didn't have to sign Kobe and they took on Steve's salary. I'm a Laker fan and I hate when people say this. Why the hell wouldn't a player take the money.
Steve was supposed to be different. He was supposed to be a class act. He's canadian, for fucks sake.
 

StudioTan

Hold on, friend! I'd love to share with you some swell news about the Windows 8 Metro UI! Wait, where are you going?
Way to steal one more year's worth of salary from the Lakers, Steve.

You would have given up all the money? It wasn't his fault he's injured.
 

DMczaf

Member
Despite several health struggles late in his career with the Suns, the Lakers in 2012 gave Nash a three-year, $28 million deal and mortgaged their future by shipping four draft picks to Phoenix.

I hope they build a statue for Nash outside of the Great Western Forum.
 

SaviorX

Member
Players have to stopped being blamed for not taking discounts while having good agents.

It's not up to them to refuse payment for their market value; without them there is no game worth paying for. Don't let greedy owners with plantation mentalities and media voices with no game experience sway you differently.

This is America, fuckin pay me. Blame the CBA not the Players of the NBA. Nash didn't make his body fail purposely, it's from giving everything he had for more than 2 decades to the sport.
 

FZZ

Banned
He should've retired earlier. I think he wore himself down the past 2-3 years more than he did in the first 16 all together.
 

Zekes!

Member
Steve Nash is like the only famous person I've ever met. I went to one of his basketball camps here in Victoria BC when I was 5-6ish. I was really nervous and he told me he'd be my friend. I ended up leaving though 😔
 

dream

Member
Cause you wouldn't do the same. And I don't understand how the terms of a contract is considered stealing but whatever...
You're probably right. On second thought, I think this whole "let's pretend you're not done so we can trade you" scheme just illuminates what an idiot Mitch truly is. I bet Jim Buss had a hand in this too.
 
Itreally sucks because the three ball era really took off during his injury years...the type of ball he basically pioneered with Mike D in PHX
 

overcast

Member
Dream, I'm pretty sure Nash was gonna retire last year but he stuck around because the Lakers wanted to keep him as trade bait for this year.
 

darkside31337

Tomodachi wa Mahou
Hilarious seeing people accuse Nash of stealing money that the Lakers were dumb enough to give him. Besides he got a ton of dudes paid, Amare should be writing him checks till the end of time.

Will miss Nash. Was easily the most entertaining player in basketball in those dark early 00s days. Honestly underrated if anything, him and D'Antoni revolutionized the game.
 
Thank god he didn't sign with the Raptors a few years back. We ended up getting Lowry instead.

Now it's time for the next Canadian MVP to shine.
 

xbhaskarx

Member
Do you have a life outside of hating on leagues people actually care about?

http://sports.espn.go.com/espn/page2/story?page=neumann/080611

Six years ago, consumer advocate Ralph Nader sent a letter to NBA commissioner David Stern asking him to review the officiating in the now-infamous Game 6 of the Western Conference finals between the Lakers and the Kings.

He was lampooned by some for his foray into the sports arena and skewered by Lakers fans, who questioned whether he's a Kings fan, which he's not.

The Lakers subsequently won Game 7 and their third consecutive championship, and the controversy gradually quieted.

Then came Tuesday's allegations, in a court filing by disgraced former referee Tim Donaghy, that two of the three referees who worked that Kings-Lakers game altered its outcome.

Now, Nader says he feels vindicated.
...
The Lakers shot 27 free throws in the fourth quarter to nine by the visiting Kings, and LA won by four.

kobe-bryant-game-6-2002.jpg


11127.jpg
 
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