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Marvin "Bad News" Barnes Insanity appreciation Thread
A while back Ahlzared did a thread on John Brisker, one of the many, shall we say, colorful personalities that made the ABA what it was.
[url]http://www.insidehoops.com/forum/showthread.php?t=189405[/url]
My personal favorite player in terms of all-out insanity is Marvin Barnes.
Barnes was a uber-talented 6'8" forward from Providence college who came to the ABA in 1974 with the Spirits of St. Louis. In the 1975 playoffs he outplayed Julius Erving leading St. Louis to a huge upset of defending Champion New York. Barnes averaged 24-16-3 and 2 blocks as a rookie and his numbers slide after year after. His lifestyle destroyed his body and his talent and ended his career before it ever hit the heights it should have.
In this thread, a few stories I've come across from various basketball personalities about Barnes and his infamous antics which including buying random kids Ice Cream, giving people hundred dollar bills and owing as many as 13 phones.
[B]Bob Costas,[/B] the now renowned broadcaster got his start in 1974 doing Radio for the Spirits. He recalls one of his first meetings with Barnes in the team.
[I]Late in November the Spirits had a game in Memphis, As usual I had no money and our checks were not available until noon. Consequently I didn't take the morning flight with the team. I had a 3pm flight to Memphis...but when I got to the airport there was fog in Memphis. Flights were delayed and we didn't take off until six o'clock. When it landed the game had already begun, I listened to the game on Memphis radio on my way in. Our station was playing dead air. I got to the game late in the first quarter and suffered through the rest. I thought I was going to be fired.
Back at the Hotel I told the guys what had happened and how I was in big trouble. Gus Gerard said, "So what can they do to you, they'll just fine you, you'll pay it and it's over." I told them they don't fine guys in radio, they fire them for missing games. Marvin Barnes pipped up and said; "Hey bro, don't worry about it, I've been lookin for a little white dude to drive me around in my Rolls-Royce" It was nice to know I had something to fall back on. [/I]
Harvey Weltman was the President of the Spirits during their two years of existence.
[I]
Look at what Marvin did for us a rookie. He averaged 24 points, 16 rebounds and shot 50%, and he did it with the worst shot selection I've ever seen from a pro player. He would get the ball turn and shoot it. He didn;t care where he was on the court. [/I]
Rod Thorn was the coach of the Nets in 1974-75 and the Spirits for part of 1975-76.
[I]Marvin showed up for (The 1974) playoffs. He showed a great talent he was. But even then before one of the playoff games, Marvin ate a huge plate of Nachos in the dressing room while he was changing. Most guys would throw up doing that, but he went out and played like King Kong against us.
[/I]
Costas Recalls:
[I]In game one he had 41 points. In game two we just killed them, 117-97. With 10 minutes to go, Julius had only six points, Marvin had 37 and 18 rebounds. [/I]
Barnes in his own words:
[I]"I'm a basketball player, not a monk. I play the women, I play the Clothes, I play the cars, I play everything I can play. There's players and there's playees. The playees are the ones who get played by the players. I am a player."[/I]
Don Chaney, the former Celtics and Laker guard and longtime NBA coach who played one year with Barnes.
[I]One day, Marvin came in the dressing room with a9-millimeter gun. He started pointing it at people and guys were hitting the floor. We figured he had finally freaked out, but he was just messing around. He didn't have a magazine in the gun. I don't know how many times I saw him stay out all night, get an hours sleep and then go out and score 35 points. His pregame meal was usually hamburgers, hot dogs and twinkees.[/I]
Steve Jones, another former team mate of Barnes and former TNT and NBA on NBC analyst:
[I]
"The classic Marvin Barnes story came when we played a game in New York and the next day we had a game in Norfolk. We had an early morning flight out of LaGuardia and naturally, Marvin wasn't there."[/I]
From there Spirits GM Rudy Martzke picks up the story...
[I]"I got a call about three in the afternoon from Bob MacKinnon who told me Marvin missed the 9am, 11am and 1 pm flights to Norfolk. He hadn't heard from Marvin and figured there was no way he'd make the game."[/I]
Costas picks up the story at it's turning point...
[I]"When he got the airport and found all the flights were gone, he cut a deal with a private plane to take him to Norfolk. About 10 minutes before the game, coach MacKinnon was talking strategy and Marvin burst through the doors wearing a huge grin and proclaimed "Boys, Gametime is on time."[/I]
Jones wraps up the episode...
[I]
"Marvin was wearing a big wide-brimmed hat and his floor length $100,000 mink coat. He had a bag of McDonalds hamburgers and fries with him. Then he proclaimed, "Have no fear, BB is here." He opened the coat and underneath he was wearing his Spirits uniform."[/I]
[B]
*As a side note Barnes went for 51 and 19 rebounds that game despite sitting the first 8 minutes.[/B]
Finally, Costas on Barnes fear of flying...sometimes...
It was a given that Marvin would miss the 11 a.m shoot around in Kentucky. Once we got the itinerary for that trip and noticed that the flight was exactly one hour. Because of the change of time zones our return flight would leave Louisville at 8 am and arrive in St. Louis at 7:59.
Marvin looked at it an announced "I ain't gettin' on no time machine. I ain't takin' no flight that takes me back in time. "
More to come...
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Re: Marvin "Bad News" Barnes Insanity appreciation Thread
Holy shit... this guy sounds amazing.
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Re: Marvin "Bad News" Barnes Insanity appreciation Thread
Great read, GOAT. It's hard to believe that a player like Barnes is an unknown now, despite apparently outplaying peak Julius Erving. I wish there was more footage available from before the 1980s, he sounds like he was an exciting player to watch.
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Re: Marvin "Bad News" Barnes Insanity appreciation Thread
[QUOTE=Alhazred]Great read, GOAT. It's hard to believe that a player like Barnes is an unknown now, despite apparently outplaying peak Julius Erving. I wish there was more footage available from before the 1980s, he sounds like he was an exciting player to watch.[/QUOTE]
I always get a kick out o fit when the kids look at say a Kevin Durrant ok the kid has 2 great years and the kids want to put him in the talk with all time greats. So many players have had short lived Great peeks, Marvin,Mcadoo,Spencer Haywood Tiny ect.... I would say it takes at least 8 years of peek performance to be a legit All TIme Great consideration. Not sure how Walton got a Pass.
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Re: Marvin "Bad News" Barnes Insanity appreciation Thread
[QUOTE=Alhazred]Great read, GOAT. It's hard to believe that a player like Barnes is an unknown now, despite apparently outplaying peak Julius Erving. I wish there was more footage available from before the 1980s, he sounds like he was an exciting player to watch.[/QUOTE]
Aside from the lack of footage to remember him from, he was only [I]really[/I] getting down for a year or two before coke derailed it all for him. Not much time to form memories.
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More Bad News
[B]A quick look at the absurdity of Barnes drug addiction:[/B]
A quick, powerful 6-9 forward, Barnes often described himself as "Superman" on the court. He didn't think there was a player alive who could stop him from doing anything he pleased, and Barnes certainly didn't think cocaine could, either.
But it did. Barnes' addiction grew to the point where, toward the end of his career, he was snorting cocaine during games.
[I]"Yeah, I was doing it on the bench," Barnes said. "I was playing for the Celtics, and I was sitting next to Nate Archibald and somebody else, and I was snorting cocaine right there on the bench while the game was going on.
"They all moved away from me. I had it under a towel. I guess I don't need to say that my career didn't last much longer after that." [/I]
[I]"Man, coke intensified everything," he said. "It intensified my sex drive, it heightened my awareness, it made me more outgoing and talkative, and I thought it made me better on the court.
"But like all drugs and like alcohol, it turns on you. It started diminishing everything. It turned me inside out. I used to be a snappy dresser, I had the gift of gab, I was into working out and eating well and living well.
"But when I started doing drugs I stopped dressing nice and I became withdrawn. My game really fell off. I prided myself on being one of the best players in basketball. When I was in the ABA, I was one of the top five players in basketball -- ABA or NBA. No question. But when I turned to cocaine, alcohol and marijuana, everything fell off -- my dress, my looks, my weight and my basketball game.
"I went from being social to being antisocial. I went from being loving, caring and giving to being selfish, dishonest and mistrustful." [/I]
"I would have been one of the 50 greatest players of all time,'' said Barnes, 57, who now works with at-risk teenagers in his Men to Men program in his hometown of Providence, R.I., telling them the pitfalls of drugs. "I was one of the five best players on the planet period (with St. Louis). Just ask anybody (from) back then ... I was kicking some butt. ... But I was going on a downhill spiral. I met drug traffickers in St. Louis and they showed me another way of life. And that was detrimental to my basketball career.''
[B]
Excerpt from Fanhouse: Barnes on what his legacy would have been.[/B]
[I]"I would have been one of the 50 greatest players of all time. ... But I was going on a downhill spiral.''
- Marvin Barnes Ask Larry Brown, now Charlotte's coach, who went against Barnes in the ABA while leading the Denver Nuggets. Did Barnes have the potential to be top 50, referring to the all-time NBA list revealed in 1996-97 on the NBA's 50th anniversary?
"Oh, no doubt,'' Brown said. "He was as good as anybody in the ABA.''
For years, the 6-foot-9 power forward and center, nicknamed "Bad News,'' was able to overcome many troubles and his general zaniness and put up big numbers.
Barnes was an All-American at Providence College, where he got into trouble for allegedly hitting teammate Larry Ketvirtis with a tire iron. Barnes claims the story isn't true, that he punched Ketvirtis after practice in response to an earlier elbow from his teammate. He said he later returned with a tire iron to prevent further trouble.
Nevertheless, Barnes, who said he paid Ketvirtis $10,000 for medical damages, eventually pleaded guilty. He said he did it to avoid the possibility of jail time, which cleared him to become a pro. He got three years probation.[/I]
[B]More Marvin being Marvin from SI 1975[/B]
[I]"They say, 'No, Marvin, you've got to grow up and be responsible for the whole franchise.' They know I'm immature. If I knew better I wouldn't do some of the things I do. ... But I don't want to act like an old man of 30 when I'm only 22. I figure the time to know how to act right is when you're old because you don't want to mess around anymore anyway. But they keep telling me, 'You can't make any mistakes, Marvin. Don't miss any more planes, Marvin. Drink your milk, Marvin. Eat your vegetables, Marvin.' Bunch of frustrated mothers."[/I]
[B]Joe Caldwell, a Spirits teammate in 1974-75, [/B]
[I]"I remember Barnes once gulping down fried chicken, red beans and rice and a soda right before tipoff. By the second quarter Barnes was in "slow motion'' and ineffective the rest of the game."[/I]
[B]Caldwell recalls another of Barnes' quirks.[/B]
[I]
"He had 13 phones in his house, always wanting to be able to answer the phone with as little movement as possible."[/I]
[B]Barnes on the second amendment...[/B]
[I]"I would carry a .38 in one arm and a .45 in another, Guys would hang their pistols up in the locker room. They called us the Detroit Hoodlums. (A lot of the players) carried guns. It was a normal thing.''[/I]
[B]More of Barnes lamenting his path: [/B]
[I]"I look back with regret,'' Barnes said of his career. "I think I could have been one of the best ever. I was Rookie of the Year and I made the All-Star team (in both his ABA seasons). Everything had come so easy for me. I was destroying 7-footers like Artis Gilmore and (6-9) Dan Issel. I was destroying those guys, and I was beating Moses Malone too. And Bobby Jones.''[/I]
[B]Bob Costas recalls Barnes unique perspective of team play: [/B]
[I]
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Re: Marvin "Bad News" Barnes Insanity appreciation Thread
[QUOTE=AMISTILLILL]Holy shit... this guy sounds amazing.[/QUOTE]
And everybody hates Gilbert Arenas ...
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Re: Marvin "Bad News" Barnes Insanity appreciation Thread
[QUOTE=L.Kizzle]And everybody hates Gilbert Arenas ...[/QUOTE]
Barnes was basically a 1970's Gil Arenas.
His era allowed his exploits to get more out of hand, but I'm betting theses guys should have been on the same meds.
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Re: Marvin "Bad News" Barnes Insanity appreciation Thread
[IMG]http://hellinthehall.files.wordpress.com/2008/04/aba-darnellhillman1.jpg[/IMG][IMG]http://www.remembertheaba.com/TributeMaterial/PlayerMaterial/MarvinBarnes/BarnesGrabErvingClose.jpg[/IMG]
remember the aba
Sound Clip -- December 1974: Marvin returns to the Spirits and endures endless questions about billiards.
[url]http://www.remembertheaba.com/TributeMaterial/Barnes.html[/url]
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Re: Marvin "Bad News" Barnes Insanity appreciation Thread
[QUOTE=G.O.A.T]Barnes was basically a 1970's Gil Arenas.
His era allowed his exploits to get more out of hand, but I'm betting theses guys should have been on the same meds.[/QUOTE]
Gil is in no way a Marvin Barnes. Gil is childish Marvin lived in the streets there is a difference a big one. BUt both were/are missunderstood.
Wow the ALl Missunderstood Team
Gil
David Thompson
Roy Tarpley
Ron Artest
Marvin
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Re: Marvin "Bad News" Barnes Insanity appreciation Thread
[QUOTE=Niquesports]Gil is in no way a Marvin Barnes. Gil is childish Marvin lived in the streets there is a difference a big one. BUt both were/are missunderstood.
Wow the ALl Missunderstood Team
Gil
David Thompson
Roy Tarpley
Ron Artest
Marvin[/QUOTE]
Marvin is from the hood, Gil basically "lived" in the streets as he was homeless for sometime.
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Re: Marvin "Bad News" Barnes Insanity appreciation Thread
[QUOTE=L.Kizzle]Marvin is from the hood, Gil basically "lived" in the streets as he was homeless for sometime.[/QUOTE]
A very short time I think it was like less than a year. Then him and his father found a apartment and he was taken in by a family that helped rear him and it wasnt in the hood.
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Re: Marvin "Bad News" Barnes Insanity appreciation Thread
[QUOTE=zizozain][IMG]http://hellinthehall.files.wordpress.com/2008/04/aba-darnellhillman1.jpg[/IMG][IMG]http://www.remembertheaba.com/TributeMaterial/PlayerMaterial/MarvinBarnes/BarnesGrabErvingClose.jpg[/IMG]
remember the aba
Sound Clip -- December 1974: Marvin returns to the Spirits and endures endless questions about billiards.
[url]http://www.remembertheaba.com/TributeMaterial/Barnes.html[/url][/QUOTE]
Thanks for adding that, but that top picture is Darnell Hillman
Anyway wanted to repost this snipet so more people see it. This is pure awesome.
Finally, Costas on Barnes fear of flying...sometimes...
[I]It was a given that Marvin would miss the 11 a.m shoot around in Kentucky. Once we got the itinerary for that trip and noticed that the flight was exactly one hour. Because of the change of time zones our return flight would leave Louisville at 8 am and arrive in St. Louis at 7:59.
Marvin looked at it an announced "I ain't gettin' on no time machine. I ain't takin' no flight that takes me back in time. "[/I]
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Re: Marvin "Bad News" Barnes Insanity appreciation Thread
Great find on Barnes. The ABA was full of bizarre personalities, as it was easier for them to thrive in a less strictly structured and organized league.
You already mentioned Brisker, a Sprewell-like guy (at his most stable...), with a Bison Dele-like end.
I propose you also look up Reggie Harding - a real life 7-foot criminal, the worst teammate anyone could ever hope to have (imagine your teammate beating you in a one-on-one game and then you telling him to get the F out of the way or else you'd take out your gun and shoot him-and meaning it. Well, this actually happened...).
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Re: Marvin "Bad News" Barnes Insanity appreciation Thread
[QUOTE=Niquesports]Gil is in no way a Marvin Barnes. Gil is childish Marvin lived in the streets there is a difference a big one. BUt both were/are missunderstood.
Wow the ALl Missunderstood Team
Gil
David Thompson
Roy Tarpley
Ron Artest
Marvin[/QUOTE]
I'd say Marvin was more like his era's Tarpley.
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Re: Marvin "Bad News" Barnes Insanity appreciation Thread
[QUOTE=G.O.A.T].Look at what Marvin did for us a rookie. He averaged 24 points, 16 rebounds and shot 50%, and he did it with the worst shot selection I've ever seen from a pro player. He would get the ball turn and shoot it. He didn;t care where he was on the court.
"Marvin was wearing a big wide-brimmed hat and his floor length 100,000 mink coat. He had a bag of McDonalds hamburgers and fries with him. Then he proclaimed, "Have no fear, BB is here." He opened the coat and underneath he was wearing his Spirits uniform."
One day, Marvin came in the dressing room with a9-millimeter gun. He started pointing it at people and guys were hitting the floor. We figured he had finally freaked out, but he was just messing around. He didn't have a magazine in the gun. I don't know how many times I saw him stay out all night, get an hours sleep and then go out and score 35 points. His pregame meal was usually hamburgers, hot dogs and twinkees.
Once we got the itinerary for that trip and noticed that the flight was exactly one hour. Because of the change of time zones our return flight would leave Louisville at 8 am and arrive in St. Louis at 7:59.
Marvin looked at it an announced "I ain't gettin' on no time machine. I ain't takin' no flight that takes me back in time. "
Marvin showed up for (The 1974) playoffs. He showed a great talent he was. But even then before one of the playoff games, Marvin ate a huge plate of Nachos in the dressing room while he was changing. Most guys would throw up doing that, but he went out and played like King Kong against us.
*As a side note Barnes went for 51 and 19 rebounds that game despite sitting the first 8 minutes.
"They all moved away from me. I had it under a towel. I guess I don't need to say that my career didn't last much longer after that."
..[/QUOTE]
ROFL, great stuff GOAT. The guy is a walking Saturday Night live skit. And his lessons on the player and the played. Bwaahahahaha. Guy is hilarious.
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Re: Marvin "Bad News" Barnes Insanity appreciation Thread
GOAT I recognize the name Barnes - did he have a real big fight or something?
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Re: Marvin "Bad News" Barnes Insanity appreciation Thread
[QUOTE=G.O.A.T]Thanks for adding that, but that top picture is Darnell Hillman[/I][/QUOTE]
Not only that but Darny looks like he is the one that got played - he don't look like the Player.
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Re: Marvin "Bad News" Barnes Insanity appreciation Thread
[QUOTE=Niquesports]
Wow the ALl Missunderstood Team
Gil
David Thompson
Roy Tarpley
Ron Artest
Marvin[/QUOTE]
What' misunderstood about them... Cocaine is a helluva of a drug. Well not Artest but if Air makes you high, LOL.
I remember Tarpley coming out zooted and just put some stiff in a head lock.
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Re: Marvin "Bad News" Barnes Insanity appreciation Thread
[QUOTE=L.Kizzle]And everybody hates Gilbert Arenas ...[/QUOTE]
I don't, but thanks for playing.
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Re: Marvin "Bad News" Barnes Insanity appreciation Thread
[QUOTE]"I'm a basketball player, not a monk. I play the women, I play the Clothes, I play the cars, I play everything I can play. There's players and there's playees. The playees are the ones who get played by the players. I am a player."[/QUOTE]
Is that where player comes from?
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Re: Marvin "Bad News" Barnes Insanity appreciation Thread
[QUOTE=magnax1]Is that where player comes from?[/QUOTE]
Yes, I forgot the movie, I think its "the Mack" where the line is dropped.
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Re: Marvin "Bad News" Barnes Insanity appreciation Thread
[QUOTE=Psileas]Great find on Barnes. The ABA was full of bizarre personalities, as it was easier for them to thrive in a less strictly structured and organized league.
You already mentioned Brisker, a Sprewell-like guy (at his most stable...), with a Bison Dele-like end.
I propose you also look up Reggie Harding - a real life 7-foot criminal, the worst teammate anyone could ever hope to have (imagine your teammate beating you in a one-on-one game and then you telling him to get the F out of the way or else you'd take out your gun and shoot him-and meaning it. Well, this actually happened...).[/QUOTE]
Just looked up Reggie Harding. What a true thug.
He raped Florence Ballard(of the Supremes) at knifepoint while they were in HS.
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Re: Marvin "Bad News" Barnes Insanity appreciation Thread
[QUOTE=Pointguard]ROFL, great stuff GOAT. The guy is a walking Saturday Night live skit. And his lessons on the player and the played. Bwaahahahaha. Guy is hilarious.[/QUOTE]
Man this guy is awesome.
They should do a movie about him.
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The Poetry of Marvin Barnes
A poem by Barnes prior to a game with the New York Nets in 1975...
"There once was a doctor named Erving,
Whose slam dunks were especially unnerving,
But when Marvin gets movin',
And the crowd gets to groovin',
For the doctor a hospital bed they'll be reserving."
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Re: Marvin "Bad News" Barnes Insanity appreciation Thread
First time I heard of "Bad News" was from my dad. From what I heard he was problematic, hence the name. He was one hell of a character. Funny stuff.
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Re: Marvin "Bad News" Barnes Insanity appreciation Thread
Marvin Barnes really is "bad news". I hate him. Let me explain.
Awhile back, I had an argument with my girlfriend which turned ugly. So we were in seperate rooms, with her crying and me feeling upset. I wanted to wind down, so I picked up The Book of Basketball by Bill Simmons, and got to this passage:
[COLOR="DarkOliveGreen"](writing about being a kid in the Boston Garden in the late 70s)
"...but thanks to a fleeing base of paying customers, they upgraded our seat location to midcourt, right alonside the Nancy Parish Memorial Tunnel, where players, coaches, and referees entered and exited the arena. My seat happened to be two rows in front of Dad's seat - we couldn't get two together unless we moved away from the tunnel, which we didn't want to do - but I could hop under the railing, stand in the tunnel and chat with him during time-outs. Even better, a bizarre collection of injured players, old-timers and media personalities gathered in the tunnel and watched a quarter or two, leading to one of my favorite childhood memories: a washed up Marvin "Bad News" Barnes standing eighteen inches away from me, milking some bogus injury, wearing a full-length mink coat and leaning against my railing. Every few minutes, after a good Celtics play, he'd nod at me with none of those "What it [I]is[/I], Tirny White Dude!" smiles on his face. And since I wasn't over my racial identity issues yet, I spent the entire time marveling at his coat and hoping he'd legally adopt me. Didn't happen. Although we did have this exchange:
ME (finally mustering up the courage after three quarters): Mr. Barnes, when are you coming back?
BAD NEWS (gregarious): Wrggrghsdhshs nmdmakalkm nbbd jsjajajp idksaksjhj, lil' man![/COLOR]
I couldn't help but burst out laughing. My girlfriend heard this and got even more upset for me laughing while she was in the other room crying. Fugg you Marvin Barnes!
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Re: Marvin "Bad News" Barnes Insanity appreciation Thread
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Re: Marvin "Bad News" Barnes Insanity appreciation Thread
[QUOTE=Rake2204]Bump for Bad News.[/QUOTE]
:facepalm
bump this while you have your very own thread on it first page.
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Re: Marvin "Bad News" Barnes Insanity appreciation Thread
A few awesome Barnes quotes from his days here in Detroit.
"I didn't come here to sit on no wood"
"I'm the most well oiled machine in the motor city, gotta let me purr"
"I'm the news and losing games is gettin' old."
"People say Bad News is no good, but they don't know me, I'm love baby, plain and simple. Everyone knows when I'm in town because I let em' know."
Love this guy.
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Re: Marvin "Bad News" Barnes Insanity appreciation Thread
He's talked about a lot in the 30 for 30 film free spirits if anyone wants to see more of what the game was like at that point.
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Re: Marvin "Bad News" Barnes Insanity appreciation Thread
[QUOTE=Spaulding]:facepalm
bump this while you have your very own thread on it first page.[/QUOTE]G.O.A.T. linked me to this thread in the one I started. I thought this thread, with so many stories already accounted for, was more fitting for a tribute.
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Re: Marvin "Bad News" Barnes Insanity appreciation Thread
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Re: Marvin "Bad News" Barnes Insanity appreciation Thread
[QUOTE]When people wonder what kind of player Marvin Barnes was in the ABA, Joe Mullaney recalls this play in Terry Pluto
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Re: Marvin "Bad News" Barnes Insanity appreciation Thread
[QUOTE=Psileas]Great find on Barnes. The ABA was full of bizarre personalities, as it was easier for them to thrive in a less strictly structured and organized league.
You already mentioned Brisker, a Sprewell-like guy (at his most stable...), with a Bison Dele-like end.
I propose you also look up [B]Reggie Harding - a real life 7-foot criminal[/B], the worst teammate anyone could ever hope to have (imagine your teammate beating you in a one-on-one game and then you telling him to get the F out of the way or else you'd take out your gun and shoot him-and meaning it. Well, this actually happened...).[/QUOTE]
[IMG]http://oi58.tinypic.com/2a5hppx.jpg[/IMG]
Looking at the box scores I'm surprised he didn't shoot wilt :lol
[url]http://youtu.be/nIGZ5F9gOME?t=1m4s[/url]
And to the OP, thanks for posting this!
Marvin Barnes (13pts) vs. Cavaliers (1977)
[url]https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7oFeXHBVuCE[/url]
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Re: Marvin "Bad News" Barnes Insanity appreciation Thread
Barnes was a character for sure.
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Re: Marvin "Bad News" Barnes Insanity appreciation Thread
[QUOTE=dr.hee]:lol[/QUOTE]
So, did it go in?