- 陶小凡
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我能背这个了~呵呵,纯手打啊~吉尔状态再低迷,都永远支持他。他是NBA中真正靠勤奋成功的人之一,这也是他打动我的地方。
hi,i am gilbert arenas,and this is my story. when i enter the NBA,the first 40 games of my career i sat on the bench.they said i was gonna play zero minute,they thought i was a zero.instead of sitting there being bitter,i just practised and practised.you know,if no one believes in you,anything you do is a positive.it wasn"t about basketball anymore,it"s about proving them all wrong.now the reason i wear NO.0 is beacause it lets me know that i need to go out there and fight everyday.
你好,我是吉尔伯特阿里纳斯,这是我的故事。我职业生涯的前四十场比赛都是在板凳上度过的,他们说我只配当个板凳,他们认为我一无是处。我没有苦涩地坐在那里伤心,而是不停地练习不停地提高自己。你知道,如果没有人相信你,那么你所做的任何努力都是一次积极的作用。这甚至已经和篮球无关了,我只想证明他们都是错的。现在我仍然穿着0号球衣的原因是它提醒着我让我每天都必须去战斗。
- 牛云
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Gilbert Arenas
Gilbert Jay Arenas Jr. (born January 6, 1982) is an American professional basketball player in the National Basketball Association (NBA). He currently plays for the Washington Wizards as a point guard and shooting guard.
Arenas became one of the best young basketball players to ever come out of Los Angeles" San Fernando Valley. He attended Grant High School in Los Angeles, and accepted a scholarship offer to the University of Arizona late in his junior year. He entered the 2001 NBA Draft and was selected with the 31st overall pick by the Golden State Warriors.
Arenas is a three-time NBA All-Star, three-time member of the All-NBA Teams, and was voted the NBA Most Improved Player in the 2002–03 season. Arenas was most often nicknamed "Agent Zero," but has increasingly been referred to as "Hibachi," a nod to the small Japanese heating device, which literally translates to "bowl of fire."[1] Both names have quickly become fan favorites in the Washington area.
NBA career
Rise to prominence
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When Arenas entered the 2001 NBA Draft out of the University of Arizona, he did not seem one of the best prospects. Teams in the first round passed on Arenas because he supposedly lacked the size needed at the shooting guard position in the NBA and lacked the awareness and ball handling skills of a point guard.[citation needed] His dream was to be drafted by the New York Knicks, who had two picks in the first round. They had shown interest in him but they passed. With no position solidified and a shaky prospect at best, Arenas went the entire first round without being drafted.
The Golden State Warriors finally drafted him with the second pick in the second round (31st overall). Although the Warriors did not enjoy much team success during his tenure with them, Arenas quickly established himself as one of the league"s bright young talents. In 2003, his second year in the league, Arenas received the NBA Most Improved Player Award and was named Most Valuable Player of the Rookie-Sophomore game during the NBA All-Star Weekend.
After that season, he was one of the most sought-after free agents of the NBA. He signed with the Washington Wizards, reportedly after flipping a coin to decide among several teams, including the Wizards, Warriors, and Los Angeles Clippers.[2] Arenas had a disappointing first season with the Wizards, battling a strained abdominal muscle injury all season. However, Arenas enjoyed great success in his second season in Washington. He teamed up with shooting guard Larry Hughes (22.0 points per game) in 2004–05 to give the Wizards the highest scoring backcourt duo in the NBA. Arenas was selected for his first NBA All-Star Game. He guided the team to a 45-win season and its first playoff berth since 1997. Arenas led the team in scoring with 25.5 ppg, and finished seventh in the league in that category. He also finished sixth in the league in steals per game in 2004–05 with 2.24 (Hughes led the league with 2.93 steals per game).
Known for his fierce competitiveness and somewhat unusual behavior, Arenas quickly became a fan favorite in Washington. In the fifth game of the first round of the Eastern Conference playoffs in 2005, Arenas hit a 16-foot fadeaway as time expired to give the Wizards a 112–110 win over the Chicago Bulls. The Wizards eventually won the series, the franchise"s first playoff series victory in more than a decade.