OB Daz and OB Aidan react to Allen Iverson and how good he actually was. Support us on Patreon: / officeblokedaz Instagram: officeblokedaz Link to original video: • How Good Was Allen Ive...
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@millardfilmore14039 күн бұрын
This video somehow completely undersold his cultural impact. Even 20 years later, the culture of the modern NBA has predominately been shaped upon the foundation of Allen Iverson.
@johncarolina49509 күн бұрын
Iverson was so cool he made Reebok basketball shoes legitimately popular again for awhile. That's incredible lol
@grantdowling85509 күн бұрын
@@johncarolina4950not only him. Shaq’s shoes were widely affordable from Reebok. I had a pair when I was little.
@osas5211Күн бұрын
More like Rodman
@jartstopsign9 күн бұрын
The craziest thing about AI, at least to me, is that he was arguably better at football than basketball. He was a higher rated QB prospect than Peyton Manning in 94, and was also a standout DB and kick returner. His basketball coach in college wouldn't let him play football, figuring he'd probably get hurt and lose his best player. It's insane
@mypud4068Күн бұрын
The dude had to really work out just to hit 175 pounds, I’m a huge a.i fan but he would have gotten killed in the nfl. The average weight is 220 pounds at qb right now and this is a time in history where scramblers are not nearly as shied away from as they once were. I’m not saying he wasn’t talented at football but there’s a reason even the most athletic QBs in college fail to make the nfl because you can’t be successful on athleticism alone like you can in college, even now the QBs who over rely on the run are the ones constantly hurt. I think it’s a lethal weapon to have in your bag but ultimately being an elite pocket passer will almost always be more successful. Mahomes as much as I hate to say it is amazing at striking that balance (if not pushing it occasionally haha)
@Sixers3699 күн бұрын
If iverson had himself a shaq back then he wouldve won 6+ titles.
@melissaford7175 күн бұрын
To this very day, A.I. is still beloved in Philadelphia. He gave us his all on the court. Love this guy always. GO SIXERS ❤️🏀💙and GO PHILS❤️⚾️🤍
@davidm39549 күн бұрын
That ‘01 Lakers team in the playoffs were unstoppable! Kobe throughout the first 3 series, and Shaq to top it off with a dominant finals showing. Iverson was the sole loss the Lakers faced that entire postseason!
@TahiriVeila13ABY9 күн бұрын
I'll always be sad the Bucks lost that game 7 to the Sixers, but at least they didn't get steamrolled by the Lakers in the finals, which was the fate of any team that went up against them. So silver lining I guess.
@Xsquared-r3n8 күн бұрын
The Lakers were rusty in Game 1, having had a week off waiting for the Finals.
@johncarolina49509 күн бұрын
The amount of hate he got looking back on it is completely crazy. People literally criticized him for having tattoos. The Wizards had a home game program with Iverson on the cover for their game against Philly and they removed all of his tattoos digitally.
@jefftezos9 күн бұрын
My favorite player. I was fortunate enough for him to be the star player on my hometown team, so I got to see him play all the time and put up 50 points in person.
@ThePhillyspade9 күн бұрын
Philly on the channel!!! F*ck the cowgirls, Go Birds!!
@firebird74799 күн бұрын
I was an editor/videographer/writer for Comcast Sportsnet, Philadelphia (now NBC Sports Philadelphia) from 1998-2009. It's the regional sports network for the Philadelphia region, founded by Ed Snider who brought the NHL to Philadelphia in 1967 with the Flyers. He eventually purchased the Sixers. The newsroom and studios are in what is now the Wells Fargo Center. I was there in the press conference when Iverson had his "We're talking about practice" moment. He also confronted the late Phil Jasner, Sixers beat writer for the Philadelphia Daily News (Who Iverson gave a beautiful eulogy when Jazz passed away) with this nugget, "You think if I worked out more, and got all swole like Arnold, Phillip, that I might win more MVPs? Well, I won the MVP all skin and bones!" Not only did Iverson show up late to practice, but he'd usually bring lunch with him, which was usually Taco Bell. This video really glosses over what a shit show the Iverson/Larry Brown feud really was. It was as bad as the Bobby Clarke/Eric Lindros feud on the Flyers side of things. Also, while the world knows Iverson as "A.I." his nickname growing up is one for the ages: Bubba Chuck.
@khalida84628 күн бұрын
listen to iguodala on Carmelo’s podcast. The 76ers didn’t have a their own practice facility. Other teams in the league did but they had to rent out a space for a couple hours. So even if iverson wanted to practice later he couldn’t. Iverson didn’t practice as much as he should but the organization didn’t give every resource they could. They made its seem like iverson was professional for one year and seee that’s why we went to the finals lmao. Both iversons ego and the 76ers blaming iversons for their own bad picks and resources provided still didn’t stop a legendary moment in basketball history.
@christiansmith13899 күн бұрын
Found you guys through talking about the US national Team. Keep up the good work, lads!
@YerpDerp179 күн бұрын
AI is hands down the most influential player culturally in NBA history, possibly American sports history. His impact is still very much felt today. AI was the truth and a true innovator of the game on and off the court, in so many different ways. A lot of players, I mean a lot of players, play they do today because of Iverson.
@Green.P39 күн бұрын
AI was a magician on the court
@farleytravis899 күн бұрын
AI3!! I used to wear his armband and finger sleeve
@reggiebrown95089 күн бұрын
AI will always BE THAT DUDE!!!
@K.C.Uncovered8 сағат бұрын
He’s from my area!! Huge influence here still to this day!
@Aydin-Adam8 күн бұрын
Lifelong Sixers fan here. i was 3 years old the last time they won a championship. That game 1 against the Lakers has been the franchise's greatest moment since 1983.
@cbogolo3 күн бұрын
To be fair to iverson he led the league in minutes and injuries for like 5 years in a row and that's why he didn't practice. He was a small guy taking a beating every game because nobody else was a good scorer and it was him or nothing. If he practiced he wouldn't have been as effective in games
@ericwilliams84205 күн бұрын
As crazy as it sounds he might've been at Football than Basketball. He was a great QB in Highschool, but at the time the old guard in the NFL were big on prototypical big and tall pocket passers. His slight frame, and the out of pocket scrambling scared teams. Nowadays everyone is looking for a playmaker at QB than can do it in or out of the pocket, and prototypical size isn't as big of a deal. AI was truly the man.
@kindofbluenyc9 күн бұрын
AI was a tremendous talent. It was amazing to watch a normal-sized human dominate the NBA. Injuries shortened his hall-of-fame career, but it was wonderful while it lasted.
@JB-4232 күн бұрын
barely 6 feet tall, 160165 pounds at most yet played tougher than 99% of NBA players. dude had to wrap his entire body in ice and wear hockey pants after most games. Love Iverson
@andrew3489 күн бұрын
What people don't understand is the 76ers didn't have their own gym. They rented a gym to practice. They scheduled 2-3 hours for practice and that's all the access they had to a practice gym.
@JB-4232 күн бұрын
Kobe once said that if Iverson was 6foot 5 then he'd be unstoppable. i just wish Iverson put in half the off court work that Kobe did. dude would be known as a top 5 talent of all time
@sportgeek20287 күн бұрын
Ty Lue is the coach of the Clippers now
@kunarmakun7939 күн бұрын
AI is one of those guys, GAME-CHANGERS! players thats so big, they change the game itself! he changed how the game was played! he was one of the biggest basketball stars of all time! hes even bigger than kobe or shaq back then .. kobe got bigger late 2000s, AI earlier! ..
@stevenmonte73973 күн бұрын
Check out How a 23 year old accountant became the most unbeatable player.... It's about N'Golo Kante. Fascinating story about a player that gave it everything; against all odds. Video came out 5 days ago.
@osas5211Күн бұрын
You should react to Dennis Rodman next, it’s like watching a sex pistol play basketball
@facelesscalvin16678 күн бұрын
Gotta do Dennis Rodson by NonStop, please. His story is very interesting.
@rorykeenan30699 күн бұрын
Detroit was on top when he almost got traded, they won the championship in 2004
@lovesgucci19 күн бұрын
Daz, you were in Jersey during the AI years, right? Did you make it to any games in Philly?
@alaromukhtar21275 күн бұрын
Bro could’ve gone to the NFL if he wanted 💀
@kunarmakun7939 күн бұрын
NO PLAYER IN THE NBA TODAY WILL PLAY A HIP INJURY! OR ANY INJURY! thats the difference about the old era, the difference in mindset truly makes a huge difference! NBA today is boring not bcoz the game is not good! actually NBA today is much stronger, players are all very good players .. BUT THE MINDSET OF THE PLAYERS IS DIFFERENT! THEIR ARE NOT KILLERS NOWADAYS! 2000s superstar SG are all killers😅 AI, kobe, VC, Tmac, allen ... KILLERS ... they got that MJ psychopath DNA😅😂😂 2000s basketball for me is the PEAK OF BASKETBALL ... the physicality of the 90s + modern basketball..
@jimmybobsap87292 сағат бұрын
He was the last player I watched their games, now I dont care about it just catch highlights
@anthonyjohnsonjr8865Күн бұрын
Philly never put any talent around him…
@carladavis14739 күн бұрын
I don't know if you know this but Iverson was just as good at football. He could have went to college on a football scholarship as well.
@bigKyrieFan119 күн бұрын
Do a video reacting to nightcap by Shannon sharpe
@lovesgucci19 күн бұрын
AI was the best era of basketball in Philly during my lifetime. This video was okay but that guy left out the whole Kobe feeling snubbed by his hometown (Philly), the trade & the tiny statue that the new awful Sixers owners got.
@joshuabolton38663 күн бұрын
Didnt Kobe say Thank God Allen Iverson isn;'t 6'5
@garentee2damangotree5869 күн бұрын
Do Kobe Bryant next please
@JoeyVatavuk9 күн бұрын
detroit can’t possibly be more shit than philadelphia
@tejida8155 күн бұрын
When I taught fifth grade all the boys loved AI. The African-American guys copied his hair style. AI, soooo Philly!
@Sandman600779 күн бұрын
It's funny how he's become more popular now than when he played. He was a good player, but not as iconic as people over the last few years have made him out to be.
@stevies62949 күн бұрын
I would whole heartedly disagree with this comment
@coo555559 күн бұрын
This isn't true at all. People can argue how good he was since he was often inefficient, his teams didn't always win, and his prime was short, but no one can dispute how iconic and popular he was in the early 00's. He was incredibly popular at the time. I'd also argue he's the most influential player of the 21st century culturally.
@manicmisfit12069 күн бұрын
@@coo55555 He's right. Iverson was good, but not as good as a lot of people are making him out to be. He was a really good player, but that's it. He's not this legendary iconic player and he's definitely not the most influential player of the 21st century 🤣🤣🤣 Iverson falls into the same category as guys like Dwight Howard, Paul Pierce, and Jason Kidd. All really good players, but not icons.
@JMYTpage799 күн бұрын
I noticed that too. After he retired he kind of faded away, like most players do after they retire. Then about 3 years ago just out of the blue people started talking about him like he's one of the greats up there with Jordan and Kobe. He was good but not great.
@JMYTpage799 күн бұрын
@@stevies6294 I wholeheartedly agree with his comment.
@ccjtv8099 күн бұрын
This video did not show his cultural significance
@areguapiri9 күн бұрын
His behavior was a complete put-off.
@isaiahrholt6 күн бұрын
You guys get bad information In these videos and that practice clip is actually old click bait his friend had died so he went to the hospital and they where asking him about missing practice …..
@MelanctonYates7 күн бұрын
I love that you guys are finally reacting to AI, but the source video was terrible. Hope you guys are able to come across a better video and react to it some time.
@isaacgadinabokao6886Күн бұрын
Typical case was Ricardo Quaresma super talented but lacked discipline and hard work
@5thgen6919 күн бұрын
Watch his highlights! This video aint it
@MichaelSims949 күн бұрын
100% would’ve been the best NBA player ever if he had Michael Jordan’s work ethic, and motivation
@user-yu1gy9qv1r4 күн бұрын
Man who gives af what Brits think of Allen Iverson. Yall couldnt feel what we felt so your opinions are invalid.