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#once again a game from 2004 reigns supreme
dmumt · 1 year
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god i wish ts4 let your sims run businesses from their home lots like in ts2 
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emblem-333 · 7 years
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DWBI: What-If the Spurs Won The Duncan Lottery
The Sixers already had their man to build around in Allen Iverson. Entering the ‘97 Draft with little expectation. It is a weak draft, much like the draft of this previous year, except there is only one coveted athlete: Tim Duncan of Wake Forest. Three teams had a chance to snatch him with the number one pick. San Antonio shamelessly tanked to get here, benching a healthy David Robinson for the second-half of the season, fired their head coach and decimated a fifty-nine win team. Can’t say I blame them. We’ve seen the ceiling of the Robinson-led Spurs the year before when Hakeem torched the MVP Robinson in the conference finals. Avery Johnson and Sean Elliot aren’t getting any younger. With a victory in the Duncan lottery the Spurs will become title contenders again overnight. At the very least the Spurs would have won a ring in the post-Jordan era. But the team that had the best odds were the Boston Celtics, once a proud organization now clutch tightly on to ping pong balls after suffering constant losing in the post-Bird years. Kentucky/celebrity head coach Rick Pitino threw the legendary Red Auerbach out of day-to-day operations to feed his already massive ego. Out of all the teams Boston was the one who was the most transparent in them tanking. Rumors circulated on what’s the backup plan if Duncan isn’t to be a Celtics, one linked to the Bulls Scottie Pippen in exchange for the Celtics pick and the sixth choice from the Dallas Mavericks that later fell through. Pitino acted as if the Bulls wanted the farm and he stood firm against that when really it was MJ threatening retirement if the trade went through.
Then there were the Sixers. Already with an established young star in place, Philly’s situation is similar to the Orlando Magic just a few years prior when they won back-to-back lotteries tapped Shaquille O'Neal and flipped Chris Webber for Penny Hardaway and made the Finals with their two best players under the age of 25.
And it was David Stern who announced the successor to those mid-90s Magic teams. “With the first overall pick in the 1997 NBA Draft: the Philadelphia 76ers select Tim Duncan, power forward from Wake Forest.”
Elation swept the front-office. In two-years the Sixers went from a laughingstock who just five-years ago traded Charles Barkley for the quintessential po-po platter deal, now possessed two of the best young stars in the league. Pundits around the NBA pegged the Sixers as the heirs to Michael Jordan and the Bulls once they exited stage right.
Duncan and Iverson experienced some growing pains in 1997 to 2000. One desperately needed the ball, was undersized for a two-guard and playing next to Duncan at the four and Theo Ratliff at center clogged the lane in an era already known for its lack of spacing and clunky mechanics. In the middle of 2000-1 Larry Brown finally moved Theo to the bench, slotted Timmy to the five and just by pure happenstance the Sixers won 15 of their next 18. Iverson won the MVP - should have been Duncan -, TD averaged a double-double and Philly upset the Los Angeles Lakers in seven-games en route to their first NBA Title since the Dr. J-Moses Malone “Fo-Fi-Fo” year in '83. Kicking off a the “Duncan Wars,” waged against Shaq, C-Webb, Sheed and Garnett up until 2010. The next year the Sixers beat back the Sacramento Kings in six, and loss the following year to them in five with the core of McKie, Hill and Snow aging out, the Sixers GM Billy King still signed the aging vets to outrageous extensions that sunk the A.I-Duncan Era.
Bad contracts destroyed the tandem. Looking to save their jobs the King regime blamed the nonexistent locker room divide between Iverson and Duncan, thus creating an actual divide in the locker room.
Timmy and Iverson were Penny & Shaq reincarnated right down to their contrasting personalities. One dragged the uptight NBA kicking and screaming into the era of baggy pants and hip-hop music, while the other drove a discrete '95 Volvo and played “Dungeon and Dragons” in his spare-time. Iverson was seen as the rebel - Duncan was seen as a conformist. When A.I was busy ranting about practice to the press after a nail-bitter defeat at the hands of the Nets in 2003; Duncan never ever said one thing of particular interest to the media. In American politics we want John Wayne to be our president, but we also want the nerdy bean-counter to do the books. In England you have the Chancellor and Prime Minister to fill-in those roles. A.I was the Chancellor, Duncan the Prime Minister. Iverson was not only the boisterous face of the team - when nobody in the front office wanted him too - he was a cross between gunslinger Nat Turner and Clint Eastwood in “Grand Torino.”
Better men than Brown and King could have corralled the distrust and the growing divide over which star to hitch the franchise too. In the summer of 2005 Allen Iverson was banished to Boston for Kendrick Perkins, Tony Allen and a 2007 1st round pick (Jared Dudley) for the rebel. And two-years later Ainge flipped Gomes, Green, Jefferson, Ratliff, Telfair and two 1st round picks for 2009 - that later became Jonny Flynn (Kahn passed on Curry because of course he did) and Wayne Ellington - for disgruntled star Kevin Garnett. The Big 3 of Pierce, Garnett and A.I, with Delonte West and Glen Davis filling out the PG and PF spots, the Celts ripped through the NBA winning 64-games and the NBA Title over the MVP Chris Paul and the New Orleans Hornets - confidentially, CP3s backcourt mate Kobe Bryant led the team in scoring that year.
Garnett and A.I reminded many of KG and Sprewell just more competitive. Two uber alpha-males willing to burst through a brick wall to win a game in mid-January like it were Game 7 of the Finals.
From 2008 and on things would disintegrate, Garnett’s knees deteriorated, A.I’s burst vanished and in just fifteen-months the championship core was broken up, Iverson traded for chump change to be a glorified cheerleader on a Pistons team passed their peak.
Now alone in the City of Brotherly Love, Duncan averaged 20 points a year off a 51.1 fg%, lead the Sixers to three conference finals appearances between 2005-2010, one Finals appearance in 2007 thanks to newbies Kyle Korver and Andre Iguodala, the Sixers again reigned supreme in the NBA winning the eastern conference in 2007 over LeBron and the Cavaliers. Injuries plagued “The Big Fundamental” by 2009, forcing him to retire in 2011 at age 34. He complied three MVPs (2003, 2004, 2007), two runner-ups (2001 - to A.I, and 2004) a Finals MVP (2002), ten All-Star appearances, 9 All-NBA 1st teams, 3 All-NBA 2nd teams.
Crestfallen by their snakebite luck the next year San Antonio finished an uninspiring below-.500, and in the summer of 1998 David Robinson, The Admiral was traded to Chicago for an unprotected 1st in the '99 Draft in a failed attempt to coaxing Michael Jordan into coming back for one more season. But the departure of Scottie Pippen, Dennis Rodman, Steve Kerr, and the firing of coach Phil Jackson, MJ stayed on the golf courses until 2001. The Spurs chose Elton Brand with the first pack in the 1999 Draft.
By 2003 the Spurs finally broke through to the Finals losing to Jason Kidd and the New Jersey Nets in seven, and the following year got swept by the Pistons. By 2005 with the development of foreign born players Tony Parker and Manu Ginobilli weren’t enough for San Antonio to take the next step thanks to the emergence of the D'Antoni Suns en route to a Pistons repeat, but in 2007 the “Seven Seconds or Less” team would finally be victorious over the Tim Duncan led Sixers.
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365footballorg-blog · 6 years
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Which title-winning team will go down as the best in Premier League history?
It’s one of football’s great debates – which top level team will go down in history as the best of the best?
The Premier League Show has drawn up a shortlist of eight teams from the four clubs that have won the title on more than one occasion, recruiting a panel of experts to debate which they think is the greatest of the era.
Could it be the Arsenal ‘Invincibles’, Mourinho’s Chelsea ‘machine’, Manchester United’s treble winners or Guardiola’s record breakers?
Former players Ian Wright (Arsenal striker), Wes Brown (United defender) and Chris Sutton (Chelsea forward), plus journalist Miguel Delaney, joined Gabby Logan to discuss the merits of all eight contenders.
Below are some of their reflections, plus an analysis of what made each team so special. You can watch the debate on the Premier League Show on Thursday 11 October at 22:00 BST, BBC Two.
We want to know what you think too – you can vote at the bottom of the page.
Arsenal
1997-98
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“At first, I thought, what does this Frenchman know about football?” said Arsenal captain Tony Adams, unimpressed at the appointment of manager Arsene Wenger from Japanese side Grampus Eight.
But the Frenchman silenced critics in his first full season in charge.
The Premier League looked lost in February when the Gunners were 12 points adrift of reigning champions Manchester United, but a brilliant late-season charge that included 10 straight victories saw the trophy head to Highbury.
Having pipped United to the title by a single point and with Wenger now the first foreign manager to win the English top-flight title, Arsenal went on to complete a domestic double that season, beating Newcastle in the FA Cup final.
The team was packed with leaders including Adams, Steve Bould and David Seaman, and was sprinkled with the magic of Dutch duo Marc Overmars and Dennis Bergkamp, while midfielders Patrick Vieira and Emmanuel Petit went on to win the World Cup with France that summer.
Ian Wright: “You look at the back five with Martin Keown in and around as well, and that was what it was built on. Then Wenger brought in the likes of Vieira and Petit. Nicolas Anelka joined too and when I saw him in training I knew my time was coming to a close. I had never seen anything like it.
“Overmars is easily the quickest player I have ever seen – once he broke you could not keep up with him.
“Wenger had changed everything right through the week. It was a different place – the diet, the training.”
Manuel Delaney: “There was that English defensive core and on top of it you had this modern athleticism that the Premier League hadn’t seen at that point.”
Wes Brown: “At United the perception was that they were big and strong, hard to score against and they did not give anything away.”
2003-04
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The Invincibles – wins: 26, draws: 12, defeats: 0.
Wenger’s Arsenal became the first English side to go the full league season unbeaten since Preston in 1888-89, to claim their second title in three years.
The side extended their remarkable run to a top-flight record 49 games, before being beaten 2-0 at Old Trafford by rivals Manchester United the following season.
Vieira and Bergkamp remained the mainstays from the 1997-98 team, with German goalkeeper Jens Lehmann between the sticks, marshalled at the back by Sol Campbell and led up front by the magnificent Thierry Henry.
Little did Arsenal supporters suspect then that by 2018 they would not have seen their team lift the Premier League trophy again.
Chris Sutton: “It is an unbelievable achievement – they were invincible, playing attractive football.”
Wes Brown: “They were one of those teams where the substitutes would have all been starting somewhere else. We knew playing them was going to be the toughest game of the season – they were all ready for it.
“Thierry Henry was always on your shoulder, his finishing was unbelievable – it seemed like every time he got a chance, he scored. Once he was behind you there was no getting back to him.”
Chelsea
2004-05
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“I have top players and I’m sorry, we have a top manager. Please do not call me arrogant because what I say is true. I’m European champion, I’m not one out of the bottle. I think I’m a special one.”
Portuguese manager Jose Mourinho certainly made an entrance to English football when appointed as Chelsea manager the summer after guiding the unfancied Porto to Champions League glory.
Bankrolled by Russian billionaire Roman Abramovich, Mourinho built a Chelsea machine that won the title from holders Arsenal by 12 points. The Blues conceded a miserly 15 goals in 38 games and kept 25 clean sheets – both records that still stand.
Chelsea lost just one game all campaign – against Manchester City in October – and collected their first top-flight title in 50 years. They went on to defend their crown the following season.
Ricardo Carvalho and Paulo Ferreira, who both followed Mourinho from Porto, formed part of the impenetrable defence alongside captain John Terry, while holding midfielder Claude Makelele allowed Frank Lampard the freedom to push forward and score 13 league goals that season.
Chris Sutton: “Mourinho really was the special one. To come in and back up what he said in his first press conference – it was something extremely special. At the start of the season who fancied them to win? They had to gel and mould together and it clicked straight away.
“He had a brilliant transfer window, his team were supremely well organised and had a threat coming forward.”
Ian Wright: “What sticks out for me that season are the wingers Arjen Robben and Damien Duff – they were absolutely magnificent.
“Chelsea could cope with any kind of confrontation and set all sorts of records that season.”
Miguel Delaney: “They shut so many games down – they would go two goals ahead and Mourinho would declare. They must have been horrendous to play against.”
2009-10
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Another Chelsea manager, another title in his first season and the FA Cup too – but all in very different circumstances.
While Mourinho’s mantra was to nick a goal and keep it tight at the back (12 of their wins in 2004-05 were by a single goal), Italian boss Carlo Ancelotti’s philosophy was based on attacking football and blowing away opponents.
Chelsea ended the campaign with 103 goals, a record at the time, and a goal difference of +71 to finish top ahead of Manchester United – by just a single point.
Terry, Lampard, Drogba and goalkeeper Petr Cech featured heavily once again, with the likes of Michael Ballack, Florent Malouda and Nicolas Anelka providing the attacking talent.
Ian Wright: “Didier Drogba is now the fully fledged number one striker – an unbelievable player. That team was very functional, strong. They had the aura of being champions, knowing what it’s like to be champions. They now knew what it’s like to beat teams and how to do it.”
Wes Brown: “You could see a lot of their players – they were hurt when we beat them to the title the previous season and they knew what they wanted. And Drobga – at that time he was one of the best in the world. If we are talking about team talks before a match, he was the main one.”
Manchester United
1993-94
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The shock signing of Eric Cantona for £1.2m from Leeds during the 1992-93 season was the catalyst for Manchester United’s first title triumph in 26 years.
Helped by the French mastermind, the Red Devils won the inaugural Premier League season and made it back-to-back titles the following campaign.
Cantona scored 18 league goals and was named the Professional Footballers’ Association Player of the Year, with United going on to claim their first domestic double by thrashing Chelsea 4-0 in the FA Cup final. Sir Alex Ferguson’s men could have made it a treble but were beaten 3-1 by Aston Villa in the League Cup final.
That dressing room was not for the faint hearted, full of strong personalities including Roy Keane, Peter Schmeichel, Steve Bruce, Paul Ince and Cantona.
Ian Wright: “When I hear people talking about United teams and what they should be, the 93-94 team is the one that I judge them against.
“That team was so good, so dominant and the standards they set – they were amazing to play against. You knew you could not make too many mistakes.”
Wes Brown: “I was 13 at the time – I used to love Pallister, he was quick and always seemed to win the ball. Keane and Ince would battle all day in midfield, then you had my favourite player, Giggs, who was emerging – because of him I always wished I was left-footed.”
Miguel Delaney: “I’m pretty sure they were top of the league from the first day to the last, but how much does lack of European progress count against them?”
1998-99
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“Champions of Europe, champions of England, winners of the FA Cup – everything their hearts desire.” Clive Tyldesley’s commentary during Manchester United’s last gasp win over Bayern Munich in the 1999 European Cup final summed up the season perfectly.
United became the first – and only – English team to win all three trophies in the same campaign, and their Premier League triumph was the first of three in a row.
Strikers Andy Cole and Dwight Yorke combined in a formidable partnership to net a total of 53 goals that season, while summer signing Jaap Stam was a rock in front of goalkeeper Peter Schmeichel in his last season at Old Trafford.
But they had great strength in depth too, with Teddy Sheringham and Ole Gunnar Solskjaer available off the bench, both scoring the all-important late goals in the win over Bayern. Jesper Blomqvist and Nicky Butt started that game in place of the suspended Keane and Paul Scholes.
Wes Brown: “It was my first year in the full squad and to watch them train, it was a different level. The concentration that went into sessions, it was so quick and there was no messing about. You could not get the ball off Scholes and Keane was taking people out, training like he was playing in a match. The whole focus of the team that year was unbelievable.”
Ian Wright: “You would have to go some to beat Andrew Cole and Dwight Yorke – some of the stuff they did was unbelievable. If you had to pick a team to fight for you, it would be very difficult to pick another one to match this team in terms of resilience.”
Chris Sutton: “They were the side in the history of the Premier League with the most belief.”
2007-08
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Legendary manager Ferguson’s longevity lay not only in his unmatched self-belief, but also in his ability to create a number of winning sides. The 2007-08 squad was his third generation of title winners.
Again, it was the start of three straight Premier League victories, also triumphing in the 2008 Champions League final against Chelsea in Moscow.
Superstar forward Cristiano Ronaldo netted 42 goals that season, 31 in the league, and won the first of his five Ballons d’Or – but he could not have achieved it without the support of hardworking forwards Wayne Rooney and Carlos Tevez.
The stylish Rio Ferdinand and rugged Nemanja Vidic complemented each other perfectly in central defence, while Michael Carrick kept the ball ticking in the middle of the park alongside club stalwarts Scholes and Giggs.
Wes Brown: “We were a great bunch of normal lads who really got on, and that is what made us. It was one of those perfect years when nobody was arguing or going to the manager’s office every five minutes and complaining because they had been substituted.
“I remember walking out for games and we all said ‘right, nothing is getting past us today’, and we just believed it.
“Tevez was unbelievable, he reminds me of Luis Suarez – he was a little bit nasty, he really got in there. Ronaldo and Rooney were absolutely tearing people apart. Ronaldo just had one of those years. There was a game at Fulham and we were rubbish, but he just picked the ball up on the halfway line and went on to score.”
Manchester City
2017-18
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Manchester City provided perhaps the most iconic Premier League moment when Sergio Aguero netted an injury-time winner on the final day against QPR to give the club their first title in 44 years at the end of the 2011-12 campaign.
Since the turn of the decade, City have won three titles – more than any other side – and their win last season was the most dominant performance in the history of the competition.
Pep Guardiola’s men became the first team to notch 100 points in the campaign and claimed numerous other records too, including:
Most wins: 32
Most consecutive wins: 18
Most away wins: 16
Most goals: 106, surpassing Ancelotti’s Chelsea
Best goal difference: +79, beating another of Ancelotti’s records
Biggest points margin to second place: 19
The undoubted star of the side was passmaster Kevin de Bruyne, Aguero led the line up front for much of the campaign, while Ederson brought a new dimension to goalkeeping with his range of passing.
Chris Sutton: “I thought the key to that season was the signing of goalkeeper Ederson – they started to look solid at the back. They blew everybody away.
“The mentality to keep going when they weren’t under pressure towards the end of the season – Guardiola did not let them switch off.”
Ian Wright: “By the time other teams got started they were 18 wins in and people were saying it was over already.
“It was a magnificent effort from them last season and they will want to win the league this season to cement their greatness. It is what they should be after.”
Miguel Delaney: “The most stylish, different, sophisticated team in the Premier League. Getting to 100 points became, for them, a motivational factor – the need to do something special to commemorate the season.”
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Which title-winning team will go down as the best in Premier League history? was originally published on 365 Football
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trendingnewsb · 7 years
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Justin Timberlakes Super Bowl Halftime Show Was a Total Disaster
For someone so recently tone-deaf, its remarkable that Justin Timberlake managed to get out a note at all during his Super Bowl halftime show.
Then again, the sound design was so poorTimberlakes vocals were only decipherable when no instruments were playingeven that meager commendation is arguable. Whats inarguable is that after a string of jaw-dropping extravaganzas from the likes of Lady Gaga, Bruno Mars, and Beyonc, Justin Timberlake delivered the worst halftime show of the traditions recent pop-star era. May the ghost of Prince haunt him forever.
Its one thing when a cynical media is preemptively eager to drag a performance. From the unjust optics of Timberlakes redemption for his part in the Janet Jackson nip-slip fiasco to the rumors that hed be using a hologram of The Purple One against his familys wishes, the lead-up to Sunday nights show was mired in controversy. But its another when the abysmal end product merits the inevitable snark.
Listless, muted, lacking any cohesion and spectacle, it was the Big Games biggest fumble.
These past weeks have served us an unwelcome Justin Timberlake reinvention as a Man of the Woods, with all the conviction of a thirty-something man who grows some stubble and starts telling everyone hes really into IPAs now, as if thats a personality trait. Sundays show thankfully spared us any more of that, opting instead for a stroll through memory lane soundtracked by his hit-laden back catalog. But it was also a reminder of how easily memories can be tainted.
Timberlakes set opened with a performance from what looked like Minnesotas least fun karaoke bar, warbling through his unremarkable new single Filthy with the finesse and enthusiasm of someone forced to get up and sing by their annoyingly drunk friends. Starting underground in the arenas hallway was an odd choice for kicking off pop cultures biggest concert, starting with a whimper in cramped quarters rather than a bang from the greatest stage.
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The whole thing was extremely claustrophobican awkwardness that lingered throughout the entire set, as Timberlake moved from one tiny, overly crowded stage to another, and finally into the stands where he was swarmed by fans desperate to film him on their iPhones.
Though its one of his more popular hits, were honestly surprised that he followed Filthy with a few minutes of Rock Your Body, the song he performed with Janet Jackson during the infamous 2004 incident. Youd think Timberlake would want to avoid any reminder of the scandal, especially considering how angry so many people still are over the way he handled it.
As Ira Madison recalled in The Daily Beast, while it was Timberlake who literally exposed Jacksons breast, he swiftly passed the blame onto her. She was blacklisted from TV and her music banned on radio stations, a cloud that hung over her career for most of the next decade while Timberlakes fame skyrocketed, landing him right back on the Super Bowl stage.
Its unclear whether an invitation was extended to Jackson to join Timberlake at Sunday nights show, but after so much speculation she did clarify that she would not be appearing. In response, fans had #JanetJacksonAppreciationDay trending on Twitter, paying respect to the pop star over the white male who disrespected her.
All of this is to say were shocked by the, well, rudeness of Timberlake choosing to sing Rock Your Body again on Sunday night. Its just as well, though, to remind us of how ludicrous we are as a society and selectively unforgiving and hypocritical we can be. We buried Janet for the nipple, but will we forgive Justin for the hate crime that was that Prince duet?
Word leaked earlier in the weekend that Timberlake was planning to pay respect to Minneapoliss greatest pop star by performing with a hologram version of him, a report that was eventually debunkedand at least the third time I can remember that a planned hologram performance was scrapped after public outcry over how tasteless and grim the entire idea is.
Still, the constant pop-culture threat of these things is exhausting. Who are the people who desire these holograms? They are macabre and appropriating and disrespectful and, even excusing all that, cheesy as hell. Its a baffling strategy if the idea is to amp up a live performance. What would make the thrill and the crackling energy of a live show where anything can happen even more electric? I know! A computer facsimile of a human.
Most of us presumed that no hologram meant no cringe-worthy Prince homage, but no, Timberlake dueted with a projection of The Purple One performing I Would Die 4 U. Princes family approved of the use of the projection. Social media certainly didnt.
That so much of the reaction to Timberlakes halftime show is in relation to its egregious connections to two other pop stars speaks volumes; despite the fact that the singer performed a hit-filled set of chart-toppers including Sexy Back, My Love, Cry Me a River, and Mirrors, there was no sense of grandeur that weve come to expect from the Super Bowl stage.
Timberlake has set his own bar as a phenomenal, electrifying live performer. Here, his dance moves werent as lithe and spritely as they once were, almost as if he was marking the choreographylike it wasnt rehearsed enough.
And, because it must be said, he was wearing what might have been the ugliest outfit Ive ever seen. Baggy camouflage cargo pants. A red bandana handkerchief around his neck. A button-up shirt with a still life of deer in a field screened on it. The assault on the very idea of fashion became a grenade to the eyes when he then donned a matching blazer for Suit and Tie, the debonair anthem and ode to suaveness, performed here in a camouflage suit.
Listen, we like Timberlakes hits. Hes a charismatic performer. When that song from Trolls comes on while were at Duane Reade, we smile and sing along and fondly remember that time we spilled wine on ourselves while dancing to it at our sisters wedding. But, momentarily absolving all his thinkpiece-fodder sins, the thing that ruined Timberlakes halftime show was a naked lack of ambition.
There was no political statement, sly as they might have been when Beyonc performed with only women on stage with her when she sang Formation, and then had a dance battle of the sexes against Bruno Mars (that she killed, obviously), or when Lady Gaga opened her show with a patriotic medley saying this is what America means to me, and then proceeded to put on a freak-flag-flying-fantasmic-supernatural-LGBT-empowering spectacular. (And in the first weeks of Trumps presidency, to boot.)
There was no feat of athleticism akin to the sense that Beyonc, Gaga, and Mars trained like a Super Bowl player for their shows, expending every ounce of energy they had in them in their explosive sets. There wasnt even a sense of superb musicianship, a la Prince or Springsteen, or any sort of regal ownership of the right to be on that stage, which Diana Ross, Paul McCartney, Madonna, and Michael Jackson had reigned supremely on before.
I mean, for Gods sake, at least give us a Left Shark. Then again, maybe his entire performance was Left Shark.
No costume changes. No stunts. No guests. (Not even NSYNC!) Just warbled noise. Once upon a time, Justin Timberlake brought sexy back. Now wed like a refund.
Read more: https://www.thedailybeast.com/justin-timberlakes-super-bowl-halftime-show-was-a-total-disaster
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