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Are you a young basketball player looking to get better? Alex Maroko may have the “silver bullet” you’ve been seeking.
Once cut from his basketball team when 13, Alex Maroko went on to play college basketball. Though it didn’t happen overnight, Alex trained and honed his dribbling skills to the point where he was so good, he is actually now a certified sports performance trainer. To help others, like himself, that were struggling to get better, Maroko has put together a groundbreaking new basketball training program called, Effective Ball Handling Program. Okay, the name needs some work, but the content is certainly top shelf.
Get the program that made Alex Maroko the premier ball handling trainer for basketball — absolutely free. A must for Effective Ball Handling Program fans.
Are you struggling to improve your ball handling skills? Why not get a free resource that helped basketball guru, Alex Maroko, go from Cut to College Ball. He used this exact same program to help him hone his dribbling skills. Can it work for you?
Effective Ball Handling Program Gives You a MAD Handle
The best basketball players on the planet — Kobe Bryant, Dwyane Wade, LeBron James, and Chris Paul — have mastered the basic skills. But there is one skill that any non-center must possess if they want to make it at the next level.
Let me give you a hint, it’s not dunking. Nor is it passing, though that greatly increases the chances of your team winning. It’s not even a massive vertical leap. Steve Nash is a gravity slave but managed two MVP awards. Still guessing? It is the ability to dribble and handle the basketball.
Little Nate Robinson may only stand 5 foot 7 inches, but he saved the city of Boston from a humiliating loss.
Nate Robinson scored 13 points in 8 minutes of the first half as the Boston Celtics eliminated the Orlando Magic in the pivotal game six of the Eastern Conference Finals. The former New York Knickerbocker energized the aging Celtics off the bench, scoring in bunches. The veterans, most notably Paul Pierce, followed suit and bombed the Orlando Magic who failed on their attempt to become the only team in NBA history to win a 7-game series after going down 3-0.
Instant offense is exactly what is expected of Nate Robinson. Like Jamal Crawford in Atlanta or Vinny Johnson of the Pistons years back, Nate is there to do one thing: score. Tonight, on the biggest stage of his career, Nate delivered. The Celtics had all the pressure on them going into Game 6. A comfortable 3-0 series lead had been swept away by aggressive play from the Magic. Dwight Howard looked like a new man and the Celtics were having trouble containing the spritely Jameer Nelson. A loss tonight and all the momentum would be with Orlando, and the deciding game would be on their court.
The Celtics took no chances and came out aggressive. Early foul trouble on Jameer and Dwight, horrific three point shooting, and a renewed commitment to defense by the Celtics gave the Magic very little hope of winning this game. Credit the Celtics for regrouping and delivering a championship-caliber performance, even though Rondo still hasn’t found his groove since Game 3.
Ron Artest has had a bad year with Los Angeles. But his Game 5 tip-in at the buzzer of the Western Conference Finals may have punched LA’s ticket to the Finals.
Ron-Ron, as he is known in NBA circles, has not had the incredible impact that was expected when he arrived in LA from Houston in a trade that sent the playoff-peaking Trevor Ariza to the Rockets. Long praised as a defensive stopper, Artest no longer strikes fear in opponents. Though his play against Kevin Durant helped LA overcome the Oklahoma City Thunder, Artest has done very little on the offensive again.
In Thurday’s Game 5 at the Staples Center, Los Angeles was cruising against an out-of-sorts Phoenix team. Shooting poorly and with an uncharacteristically low number of assists, Phoenix was unable to get any flow going. Not so for the LA Lakers. Led by Kobe Bryant and Lamar Odom, they were finding holes in the new Alvin Gentry zone and when not exploiting the middle, hitting deep threes.