![]() Vegas couldn’t afford anything but dominance from their superstar, Cambage. Washington hasn’t lost back-to-back games since July, and is the title favorite. On the defensive end in Game 3, the Aces finally found answers to Meesseman’s back-to-back 27- and 30-point games, and contained MVP Elena Delle Donne. All that trash talk doesn’t affect us” /2qTTAyJ5HT- Ben Golliver September 23, 2019 When Emma had 57 points in the first 2 games, all she said was ‘my shot’s going in.’ That’s humility. Mystics’ Natasha Cloud fires back at Aces’ Liz Cambage’s “weight room” comments: “We didn’t hear that the first 2 games. All that trash talk doesn’t really affect us. “All she said was ‘my shot was going in the basket.’ That’s humility, and that’s who we are. “We didn’t hear that the first two games when Emma had 57 points,” Cloud said before Game 4. We could only be so blessed to see this riff continue.įor now, the Mystics are playing it cool. Bill Laimbeer doubled down on the weight room statement, saying, “ was correct,” per The Athletics’ Lindsay Gibbs, setting the table for a heated Game 4 with Las Vegas’ season once again on the line. Now her ways are stretching to the Mystics, and she even has the green-light from her head coach to keep talking. In June, she had “the hair incident” with LA Sparks center Kalani Brown, too. In August, she shared a role with Cheyenne Parker and Allie Quigley in an on-court and social media beef with the Sky. #RunItBack /YvtWgyNlRs- Washington Mystics SeptemLet Cambage’s trash talk continue now and foreverĬambage’s role as the WNBA’s biggest shit-starter is seeing its peak, and she’s getting inside Washington’s heads just as she did Chicago’s. I’m a good retaliator in that respect.In case you missed it. "If there is some chattering back and forth, or some people trying to get physical and all that type of stuff, I’m ready for those moments. ![]() “Because I know it’s just basketball at the end of the day. We’re not solving life’s issues out here - we’re hooping and competing. “I keep it to the game, and that’s why I like to have fun with it,” Curry said. His barrages of buckets and shimmies can be demoralizing enough. Most of the time, Curry doesn’t need to say a word. ![]() I love that it gets the fire going even more." RELATED: Steph, Klay and Draymond form NBA's most enduring core That’s usually the experience, but I love it. "Usually if you’re saying something like that, you’re probably not as confident as you seem. “Just trying to, I guess, boost their confidence up when they get out there. "Not the majority, but certain guys will say, ‘Oh, I’ve been waiting for this. In Monday’s 53-point performance, when Curry surpassed Wilt Chamberlain to become the Warriors’ all-time leading scorer in franchise history, cameras caught him jawing after making a 3-pointer over Denver Nuggets guard Facundo Campazzo. "I guess my mannerisms play a little bit more a, facial expressions or pointing or celebrations that might rub people the wrong way. I keep it to what’s happening in that moment. I don’t have material of life or like good one-liners and stuff like that. "That’s just my nature, I guess, in general. "It’s definitely under the radar," Curry told Liffmann and Andrews. That humble attitude apparently extends to his trash talking, too.ĭuring the latest Dubs Talk podcast episode with NBC Sports Bay Area’s Grant Liffmann and Kendra Andrews, the Warriors star described his style of trash talk. Steph Curry has been praised for his humility during his ascent as one of basketball’s biggest stars.
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