We used to play 'Double Dribble' on Nintendo. Later, in high school, it was more 'NBA Live' and 'John Madden Football.'
I am capable of dribbling the ball. I can dribble. And I can play a little defense!
There are certain guys in the league that get their rhythm off their dribble.
When I'm on the field, the trick I like to do most are stepovers. For me, it's a simple, beautiful dribble that also has a point.
I don't take the ball in the middle of the pitch and dribble past six guys.
My teams in Serbia always had really good point guards. But I have always loved to dribble the ball. Even when I was outside, just walking by myself, I would always love to dribble and imagine my defender there in front of me - what I would try to do.
I dribble rhymes like basketball...
People call me 'E.T.'
What's that, Shaq man?
'Extra Tall.'
Normally, midfielders only pass the ball, but I dribble as well.
They are not the same - Xavi is more the man of passing and Iniesta can dribble more - but they have great vision, they are important to the defence and the attack.
Wherever I go, I have a basketball with me. I used to dribble a basketball down the street to the movie theater, to the mall.
I think with the qualities I have everyone expects me to dribble past four or five defenders every time I get the ball.
I just like to play, to pass the ball and dribble.
On a lot of teams that bottom guy, that weakside defender, is critical if something happens and you're broken down off the dribble or you're beat. That person has got to be there.
Players know how to dribble, shoot and pass. The challenge is to teach them why they should do it a certain way, and when they should do it.
I'm a confident player, I know I can score. I don't think anyone can guard me consistently off the dribble. But I'm a team player.
Really I can do everything on the court: pass, shoot, dribble, score.
Steph is scary. I've never seen anyone who can shoot the ball off the dribble like him. He got it going in 4th. Every game is different.
Life is just chemicals. A drop here, a drip there, everything's changed. A mere dribble of fermented juices and sudenlly you're going to live another few hours.
Because I was fast, technical, and could dribble well, it was always the easy thing to label me just a winger and have me stick to that.
Oh man, I am so happy when I get to dribble the ball.
That's something a point guard can always work on, with keeping his dribble alive a little better. It's so important.
Your touch and your feel for the game is pretty much gone if you don't work on it - at least get some shots up or dribble the ball.
I like to dribble to Queen's 'Another One Bites the Dust.'
I had a two-dribble limit.
I like to dribble and give the decisive pass to my teammates.
I can dribble with my right hand and I can dribble with my left hand. I'm amphibious.
The fundamentals of the game are the same wherever you go: pass, dribble, shoot, defend, rebound, screen, play hard and together
I'm two-footed. I prefer to dribble with the left and shoot with the right.
I'm the only black man you ever met who couldn't dribble a basketball.
It's very important to know how to dribble and pass and catch and cut at a very high level if you want to be a good basketball player.
When I was young, I never shot. I always wanted to dribble the ball in the goal.
Nobody likes it when people dribble past them, me included, but I can't tackle.
People have to understand what my game is. It's not all about numbers. There's a bigger picture here. I don't create off the dribble. I rely on my teammates; my role is to set screens and get rebounds
If you never pass or dribble or go on the outside, cutting inside will stop working.
When I used to dribble, I'd be on the wing, and I'd control it with the outside of my foot - it slows the ball down.
When I decide to score, I score. I know I am strong, but I believe it is not enough yet. I can kick fine, dribble very well, but I still have to improve.
I learned at a young age to dribble with both hands, and that allows me to be more creative when I go against bigger and stronger opponents.
Lewandowski is very complete. He can hold on to the ball and build play; he can dribble. He can score goals from anywhere. He is fast, strong in the air.
I like to dribble. I like to turn heads with the ball.
Play the pass at the right moment - not on a dry pitch and not hitting it hard enough. We don't have to accept it; that was a mistake - no goalkeeper should dribble in this situation.
I feel helpless, hopeless, too low to call out, too weak to think. Impotent tears dribble down.
At the end of 2003, my game was complete. Shooting, defense, using the dribble, transition, midrange stuff was all there. Then it was about fine-tuning and trying to improve in each area.
If you're playing for five hours you don't want to score goals all the time and I loved dribbling. I could score a goal, but I preferred to dribble.
I grew up, I used to two-ball dribble, one-ball dribble like three or four times a week for like an hour all the way up until I got into the league where I felt like I now have it in my head.
You can't dribble on bow ties.
Great shooters are one dribble guys.
People expect you to dribble past 10 players and put the ball in the back of the net.
People have to understand what my game is. It's not all about numbers. There's a bigger picture here. I don't create off the dribble. I rely on my teammates; my role is to set screens and get rebounds.
I realised, 'I'm not going to dribble past five payers and score', so for me it was about having something different, and being two-footed was it. I pride myself on that now.
I'm not Giovinco. I don't get the ball and dribble past three players.
Dudes are coming at me every day; I'm playing different positions on the defensive end. I'm really working on that, because that's the next level. In the league, everybody can dribble.
Basketball is a simple game. Your goal is penetration, get the ball close to the basket, and there are three ways to do that. Pass, dribble and offensive rebound.
As soon as somebody falls in love, all the wits seem to dribble out of the bottom of his head.
Messi is just an anomaly: he can dribble, he can score, he can pass, he has the vision, he understands the game.
I feel like nobody can stop me off the dribble. At crunch time, we're looking for somebody to score and I definitely want to be the guy who has the ball in his hands.
I'm way more comfortable off the dribble, shooting the ball of the dribble, making a play off the dribble.
I'm one of those players who loves to dribble the ball, to run at people.
Some may be different to others based off of situations that they experienced in their life, but there's no amount of money that can get me to just shut up and dribble. No, I'm not going to do that.
Not everything depends on me. I can't dribble the ball all the way from the back to the front.
I always dribble for a reason, and I always head for the goal.
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