Not even close to being the same. Wtf lol. I’m probably bigger and stronger than you, so idk why you’re calling me “little guy”
need @cmoak1982 and @maj21 to post dikk piks for us to determine who is bigger, hence who is more correct
Amen + Sengun seems like a nice fit to me long-term. They both need to shoot well enough to keep defenses honest, and if that doesn't come, they're going to have a hard time remaining as NBA starters, so let's just assume they'll both develop into adequate shooters. Building around Sengun, you really want athletic cutters so he can utilize his passing ability. Right now, Sengun is actually better at hitting cutters with creative passes than he is at kicking it out to shooters on the perimeter. Amen should be great for that. You also really need long, athletic defensive players. Check and check. Neither player can be on the floor 48 minutes per game. With each of them being great playmakers, you keep the offense going when one of them heads to the bench.
so like with hardon and cpthree, where you can have supposedly hof point guards on the floor for 48mins/24/7. cept both are playoff chokers. i hope senjoon and amen won't be professional chokers
Woah woah woah enough with the hate speech. Austin is NOT the same as San Antonio. Our women aren’t fat. But yes, it’s Spurs country (mostly). I mean Spurs are playing 2-3 games here now at the new Moody Center.!
Haha nah man, you’re crazy. I live in the cedar park area, but Austin is nice. There’s some shitty parts bc the overpopulation of homeless people. Houston is the most dangerous in Texas by far. I know this bc I’ve been thinking about moving there, but I don’t feel safe raising my son in that ****
All seriousness, inside Houston city limits it’s become a cesspool. I don’t blame you for not wanting to be there. It’s my city and I love it but you couldn’t pay me to live inside city limits outside of some very select locations that are ridiculously expensive. The suburbs are nice. Sugarland, Pearland, Friendswood, Katy, The Woodlands. Done deal. Similar to Austin imo, I don’t like city limits of Austin. Mainly because of their leaders and laws but it’s probably better than Houston city limits.
I’d stay in Cedar Park over Cypress for sure though. I have some properties in the northwest area of Austin
The suburbs of any Texas city are a dumpster fire of bad planning, and Cypress is one of the worst of a godawful bunch. I grew up in Cypress and every time I go back there I instantly become miserably depressed. Ugly, sprawling neighborhoods, horrible stroads with tons of traffic, strip malls full of sh*tty chain restaurants and big box stores. It's like everything wrong with Texas splattered out all over an area that should still just be forests and farmland. Inside the loop in Houston is better. Montrose, the Heights, Upper Kirby, Rice Military are all tolerable. (I lived in two of those places and enjoyed them for what they were.) But still pretty bad quality of life by national standards, let alone across the rest of the less-f***ed-up developed world. In Austin, anywhere within biking distance of downtown is going to be decent (not great, just okay), but also massively overpriced. Gun to my head, if you forced me back to Texas, I'd probably live in central Galveston. Galveston has loads of problems, starting with hurricanes and continuing into poverty, homelessness, drug issues, and over-tourism, but damn it, at least it has some character and decent bones that haven't been totally nuked for parking lots and freeways like Houston's were. If more of Texas looked like this I might still be living there.
Those are literally the only decent places inside Houston city limits. They’re overpriced and the “character” is overrated. I like the suburbs, I don’t know about Cypress but Sugarland, Pearland, Friendswood, Katy and The Woodlands are good places to live and raise a family.
Have you seen the inflation here? It’s nuts!! Also, we’ve got a decent amount of rockets fans here too
Man, inflation is hitting everywhere. You might be able to get a nice chunk of change for your home but you still gotta buy a new one.