• Home
  • FIBA
  • EuroLeague
  • NBA/NCAA
  • National Leagues
  • Podcast
  • Features
  • More
  • Contact

Grimag

  • FIBA
  • EuroLeague
  • NBA/NCAA
  • National Leagues
  • Podcast
  • Features
  • More

It's official: Enes Kanter is the toughest player in the NBA — and possibly the world

March 28, 2013

The most amazing thing about the dislocated shoulder injury that Turkey’s Enes Kanter suffered last night in the Utah Jazz’ win against the Phoenix Suns last night wasn’t the way TV cameras gave the audience such a prolonged view of the visibly excruciating damage or even the manner in which the Jazzmen held on short-handed (or -armed) for the win.

Nope: Most surprising of all, rather, was the Turkish tough guy’s reaction, i.e. To pick himself off the floor and walk off court himself. Can you imagine this reaction from, say, Luke Ridnour? And what exactly is the big man’s threshhold for pain?

Best guesses reckon Kanter could miss up to two weeks of action, but after watching this video, doesn’t anyone else believe he’ll be back out there by the weekend…?

Mar 28, 2013ballineurope
Powered by Sidelines
Share on FacebookShare on Twitter
This post was published on March 28, 2013
Podcast: Interview with Larry Gordon of Bundesliga Cinderella story Phoenix Hagen (plus Euroleague patter and review of Rollerball)Serious stunner: FIBA introduces five-point shot, effective immediately in international competition
Comments: 0
Pingbacks: 2

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

ballineurope
12 years ago 2 Comments More, NBA/NCAAEnes Kanter, NBA, NBA 2012-13, Turkey, Utah Jazz
Recent Posts
Will Cummings delivered a gritty performance as Galatasaray stunned Tenerife to reach the BCL final & reclaim relevance on the European stage
Will Cummings Leads Galatasaray’s BCL Surge
1 day ago
NBA Semifinals 2025 Betting Guide for Series Outcome Wagers
NBA Semifinals 2025 Betting Guide for Series Outcome Wagers
1 day ago
Kostas Papanikolaou plays a smaller on-court role these days, but his leadership remains vital to Olympiacos’ pursuit of a Euroleague title.
Kostas Papanikolaou’s Quiet Fire Powers Olympiacos
6 days ago
Categories
Recent Posts
Will Cummings Leads Galatasaray’s BCL Surge
NBA Semifinals 2025 Betting Guide for Series Outcome Wagers
Kostas Papanikolaou’s Quiet Fire Powers Olympiacos
Tags
EuroLeagueNBAYouTubeReal MadridCSKA MoscowFC BarcelonaFIBAOlympiacosPanathinaikosZalgiris KaunasACBSpainMaccabi Tel AvivRicky RubioTeam SpainLos Angeles LakersMontepaschi SienaPartizan BelgradeLithuaniaIrelandGermanyPau GasolItalyTeam LithuaniaTurkeyTeam FranceCaja Laboral BaskoniaLietuvos RytasFenerbahce ÜlkerGreeceJuan Carlos NavarroSerbiaSan Antonio SpursTony ParkerMinnesota TimberwolvesFranceDirk Nowitzkibasketball highlightsTeam RussiaALBA BerlinEuroCupEuroleagueDallas MavericksTeam USAEuroBasket 2011
Share
0
Facebook
ABOUT
BallinEurope.com was founded in September 2007 by Christophe Ney (who now runs the excellent scouting-themed website European Prospects) and Tobias Seitz, both then bloggers for FIBA.com with over 10 years’ worth of experience in the professional basketball world each. The mission then was to “provide a very unique perspective of Basketball in and about Europe.”
Most Commented
Why Andrei Kirilenko and CSKA Moscow must win the Euroleague
13 years ago
180 Comments
Euroleague Transfers Table 2008/2009
17 years ago
168 Comments
A week in highlights: Spanish block party, mighty Milos, Utah rap and some dude dunking in L.A.
14 years ago
139 Comments
Archives
Get In Touch

Email: emmetryan@gmail.com

Name: Emmet Ryan

2014 © BallinEurope. Join JCI Dublin