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同時也有16部Youtube影片,追蹤數超過15萬的網紅pennyccw,也在其Youtube影片中提到,Zydrunas Ilgauskas didn't care who was or wasn't wearing a 76ers' jersey. Four years between victories over Philadelphia was long enough. Ilgauskas ...
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Recommended!Translated
Beatles Forever
正值Klaus 11歲之時,在一個午後,哥哥爬上前院旁的樹屋,意外的遭雷擊中,不幸身亡。年少的他,從此不再說話。直到一年之後,偶然聽到披頭四的紅色專輯,他才如大夢初醒,在音樂的世界裡重生(聲)。吹薩克斯風的父親見到二兒子對音樂的癡勁, 便從遺棄在路邊的大型垃圾中,覓了一台兩邊仍有古典燭台的破舊鋼琴,拖了回家送給他,或許就是這台古董鋼琴的精髓吧,在他身上留下了歷經滄桑的智慧。。。。。Beatles從此在他的生命中,扮演永遠無法動搖的地位,在最悲傷的時候,Beatles永遠給他安慰與信心讓他得到再出發的力量:1980年藍儂被槍殺、911(2001年)。
Beatles Forever ( Concert on 3. May 2019 )
The Beatles’ timeless melodies are interpreted by a group of well-seasoned musicians who combine groove and emotion: You-Ting on drums, James on sax, Ken on bass, Klaus on vocals and guitar and – as special guest- Dasu on vocals. Join us on a trip from the early days of the Fab Four in the Liverpool Cavern Club to their final show on the rooftop of their Apple Studio.
表演的曲目/Songlist:
With A Little Help From My Friends
A Hard Day’s Night
Ticket To Ride
Penny Lane
Something
Eight Days A Week
Please Please Me
Norwegian Wood
I Wanna Hold Your Hand
Let It Be
From Me To You
Come Together
„Stars On 45” Beatles Medley :
1) Stars On 45
2) No Reply
3) I’ll Be Back
4) Drive My Car
5) Do You Want To Know A Secret
6) We Can Work It Out
7) I Should Have Known Better
8) Nowhere Man
9) You’re Gonna Lose That Girl
10) Stars on 45 Reprise
Yesterday
I Feel Fine
Octopus Garden
Ob-La-Di-Ob La Da
Lady Madonna
Hey Jude
Can’t Buy Me Love
The Long And Winding Road
All You Need Is Love
I Saw Her Standing There
More Infomation 詳見: http://www.yup.com.tw/2019/03/music-20190503.html…
https://www.facebook.com/events/871125299921658/
Hommage à The Beatles
Klaus還寫了一首歌 The Biggest Band On The Planet 表達他對Beatles 的思念:https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=k7Cp00MSui8
lane eight us 在 pennyccw Youtube 的精選貼文
Zydrunas Ilgauskas didn't care who was or wasn't wearing a 76ers' jersey.
Four years between victories over Philadelphia was long enough.
Ilgauskas scored 28 points and had a key putback, assist and
block in overtime as the Cavaliers snapped a 16-game losing streak
against the Sixers with a 91-88 win Saturday night.
The 7-foot-3 Ilgauskas added eight rebounds and a career-high
seven assists for the Cavs, who hadn't beaten the undermanned
Sixers since April 2, 1999, at Philadelphia.
"Every win is a good win for us," Ilgauskas said. "We only
won 17 games last year, so they're all big. That's a tough team to
beat."
Rookie LeBron James had 22 points, eight assists, five rebounds
and a huge block with 11 seconds left in overtime for the
Cavaliers, who won it with defense down the stretch.
With Cleveland clinging to 90-88 lead, James was caught by a
pick in the lane but raced across the floor and swatted away rookie
Kyle Korver's jumper from the baseline.
"They used (Allen) Iverson as a decoy," James said. "When
Korver got it, I knew he was going to shoot and I just had one of
my high school moments."
Korver then missed a 3-pointer with 5.5 seconds left, and Kevin
Ollie made one of two free throws for Cleveland. Philadelphia guard
Eric Snow's desperation heave at the horn was way off.
The Sixers played without their starting frontcourt for the
second straight game. Derrick Coleman, Glenn Robinson and Kenny
Thomas sat out with injuries.
Iverson, the NBA's leading scorer, matched a season-low with 19
points on 8-of-29 shooting. After leading the Sixers to a win over
the defending champion San Antonio Spurs on Friday, Iverson, who
was hounded by Ricky Davis, just didn't have it.
"If I have an off-night, I have an off-night," Iverson said.
"But I don't do my teammates any favors if I quit trying. You have
to keep fighting and hopefully something will happen at the end.
That's the way it nearly went."
Marc Jackson had 19 points and 15 rebounds for the Sixers, who
shot 34 percent. Snow was just 3-for-15 from the field.
Carlos Boozer, who had 15 points and 15 rebounds, opened the OT
with a jumper and then scored on a dunk off a nice inside feed from
Ilgauskas to put the Cavs up 88-84 with 2:47 left.
After John Salmons scored for Philly, the Cavs crashed the
boards with Ilgauskas finally following in a miss underneath to
make it 90-86.
Ilgauskas, who played the entire OT with five personal fouls,
then blocked Salmons' shot with 1:27 left.
"It was Z's night," Iverson said of Ilgauskas. "They ran
their offense through him. He shot well and caused us problems with
his passing, too."
Aaron McKie's two free throws pulled Philly to 90-88, but the
Cavs survived the comeback with some stifling defense -- a rarity
for them in the early season -- and just enough offense down the
stretch.
"This is a huge win for us," James said. "We didn't buckle
under pressure and we executed in overtime. That's a big, big step
for us."
lane eight us 在 pennyccw Youtube 的最讚貼文
If the outcome was a surprise to anyone, those people need to check themselves.
Temple was faced with a huge task yesterday and didn't deliver. Not so much because of effort as inability.
Against Georgetown, the nation's fifth-ranked team, the Owls posed little resistance as sophomore sensation Allen Iverson went for 24 points. Victor Page, his freshman backcourt mate, added 18 - with an aerial show for emphasis - as the Hoyas breezed to a 74-49 win over Temple in the second round of the Preseason National Invitation Tournament at USAir Arena.
The win advanced the Hoyas (2-0) to New York for the tournament semifinals Wednesday night against Georgia Tech. The Owls (1-1) headed home for an eight- day break.
"I learned a lot today," Temple coach John Chaney said. "I learned I've got some good people on this team.
"No one was pointing fingers at each other. It's easy to handle the high tide, and everyone's a good guy when you're winning. But when you lose, that's when you test the spirit of your players."
The framework of the game was established within a few seconds: The Hoyas would score off fastbreaks, follow layups or post moves, and score they would. And the Owls could do very little to stop them.
Jerome Williams (14 points, 12 rebounds) converted a layup on the first play of the game. A Temple turnover followed and Boubacar Aw scored on another layup, indicating what was on the horizon.
The Hoyas, sparked by a running jumper and two layups by Iverson, opened with an 11-2 run and kept going. Temple tried creeping up from behind, getting a follow slam by Huey Futch (seven points), and a couple of layups from Johnny Miller, but the closest the Owls got was seven points (30-23) with 4 minutes, 28 seconds left in the half.
Then Page went to work, hitting two free throws and two jumpers, then punctuating the half with a spectacular flying slam over Lynard Stewart, enabling Georgetown to go up, 42-27, at the break.
"You can never give Temple but so much," Georgetown coach John Thompson said. "They just chip away at you . . . But the key was the lack of that third guard. We knew they didn't have that, and we wanted to attack their guards and take advantage."
That would explain Temple's difficulty in running plays, setting screens, having anyone but the point guard distributing the ball. The Owls also had 14 turnovers and shot just 26 percent in the second half.
The bright spot, as expected, was Miller. The "other" sophomore guard was 0 for 5 on three-pointers in the first half, causing more problems for Temple, but came to life in the second half, finishing with 21 points on 9-for-22 shooting.
His help, however, was scarce.
Miller knifed his way through the lane numerous times, only to have his passes dropped or open layups missed. The turnovers fueled Georgetown's momentum, which made the outcome that much more predictable.
"We didn't play our game," Miller said after battling Iverson all day. ''Playing them is good for this team because of the pressure they threw at us, but losing never is good. We've got to come back from this and just play our game, that's all."
The Hoyas never stopped playing theirs as Iverson and Page took over in the second half. Steals, high-flying dunks, assists, rebounds . . . name it and they did it, and no one other than Miller had an answer.
Temple scored just four points in the first 6:20 of the second half. The Owls made just 33 percent of their shots, shot only seven free throws, were outrebounded, 47-34, and had just four assists.
It was a learning experience that might come in handy against the top-notch opponents Temple will play later this season. But it didn't make the day any better.
"The best time to test your team is the early portion of the season. That's why this was a good game for us," Chaney said.
lane eight us 在 pennyccw Youtube 的最讚貼文
It seemed like a highly unlikely game for Allen Iverson to sink his first career game-winning buzzer-beater.
Iverson shook off an awful performance to make a 14-footer at the overtime horn and give the Philadelphia 76ers a thrilling 106-104 victory over the depleted Indiana Pacers.
"It's just a great feeling to hit a shot with no more time left on the clock and they can't do nothing about it," Iverson said. "It's something that never happened for me. I've had the winning free throws, but it's not the same thing as hitting the game-winning shot. I might have hit shots that put us ahead, but just that one right there is a feeling that I can't even express."
Second in the NBA in scoring at 28.2 points per game, Iverson had one of the worst outings of his career, making 5-of-23 shots and committing seven turnovers. Iverson could not find the range, was sloppy while running the offense and was on the bench when Philadelphia climbed back into the game in the second half.
But the Sixers forced overtime on the seventh 3-pointer by Kyle Korver, a 28-footer with 3.7 seconds in regulation. Korver scored a career-high 23 points.
"That wasn't the play we drew up in the huddle," Korver said. "Our initial play was to pass into Marc Jackson, run a couple of player screens. That obviously didn't happen, so we pitched it back and forth. I knew we needed a three so I went back as far as I needed to go to get it off. I shot it and it went in."
"That play was a mistake by our coaching staff," Pacers coach Rick Carlisle said. "We gave our guys a coverage that wasn't the right coverage and it cost us. If we hadn't, Korver wouldn't have gotten that wide open look."
In the extra session, Iverson finally found a rhythm with a runner that tied it at 104-104 with 1:19 to play. On Philadelphia's next possession, Iverson missed a jumper to fall to 4-of-22. But Indiana's James Jones also missed a jumper, setting the stage for Iverson's heroics.
From right of the top of the circle, Iverson dribbled down Eddie Gill into the lane, stopped short and leaned into a jumper that rattled in as the buzzer sounded, giving the 76ers their second straight win in overtime.
"I didn't have any doubt that I was going to take the last shot if I was played man-to-man," Iverson said. "I honestly feel like my teammate expected me to, but they had their hands ready if guys came off of them."
Iverson entered the NBA in 1996 and has collected five All-Star berths, three scoring titles and an MVP award. But he had never made a pure game-winning shot, although he had one to beat Germany in an exhibition game last summer.
"Allen had a tough shooting night," Sixers coach Jim O'Brien said. "He had some good looks at the basket. His shots didn't fall until that last one, but who cares about the other 18."
"I've found out in my career that if I do keep playing regardless of struggling, something positive will happen," Iverson said.
Marc Jackson had 21 points and 10 rebounds for the Sixers, who erased an eight-point deficit in the final two minutes of the fourth quarter. On Wednesday, they rallied from six points down with 70 seconds left to defeat New Jersey in overtime.
In this one, the Sixers outlasted the Pacers, who used their size advantage and 3-point shooting to build a 17-point lead in the third quarter but simply ran out of bodies. Dressing just eight players, Indiana lost Jermaine O'Neal (career-high 39 points), Jamaal Tinsley (10 assists) and reserve center David Harrison to fouls in overtime.
"The difference in the game was the ref calling a foul on me when I got elbowed in the face," O'Neal said. "Also the foul on Jamaal when Iverson jumps into him. It upsets me that the game can be taken away from us."
Ron Artest scored 29 points in his return from a two-game benching and Stephen Jackson added 17 points for the Pacers, who have lost two in a row after opening the season with four wins. Indiana made 11 3-pointers but none in the final 12 minutes.
The Sixers could not have won without the hot-shooting Korver, who scored 11 points in the fourth quarter. His jumper made it 98-92 with 1:49 left, and Iverson added two free throws with 58 seconds to go.
Josh Davis made a free throw and Marc Jackson sank two, making it 98-97 with 16 seconds to go. The Sixers fouled Austin Croshere, who made both foul shots, setting the stage for Korver.
For the sixth time in as many games, the Sixers fell behind by double digits. The deficit grew to 76-59 late in the third period when Iverson missed a shot, threw away a pass and committed an offensive foul on consecutive possessions before taking a seat.
"We're not playing every quarter. We could easily be 0-and-6," he said. "Hopefully the light switch turns on and we start to get it."