James Harden is Brooklyn Happy. Kyrie Irving Is Brooklyn Angry. Welcome to the Melodrama.
James Harden was always going to be the winner which means Kyrie Irving was going to lose. But you can’t Chris Bosh Kyrie.
James Harden was always going to be the winner which means Kyrie Irving was going to lose. But you can’t Chris Bosh Kyrie.
Is this a defining moment in Kyrie Irving’s career? Does he want to be Barry Sanders? Retired at 30?
The Nets and the Nets have the same record. Blame Kyrie. Blame the Nets defense.
Three games away from a fourth NBA title, LeBron’s James has to be diminished. Once again, Kyrie playing petty Kyrie games.
Duke Basketball engenders a lot of emotion. Either it’s an overrated college to the NBA pipeline program. Or, it’s the cream of the crop.
Kyrie is a long way from the leader he needs to be if he has any shot at winning a NBA title without LeBron James.
Kyrie or Ray Allen as Greatest Single Shot of the Decade? You decide
Kyrie finds a way to incoherently attack the systems that make it possible for Kyrie to be a millionaire
Brooklyn Kyrie has a fresh start. No more sad sorry Kyrie that we saw in Boston last season.
The Brooklyn Nets are ready to go toe-to-toe with the New York Knicks and steal all the limelight as they become the Prince of the City.