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January 1, 2008

Hero: Bryan Colangelo

Torontoist is ending the year by naming our Heroes and Villains of 2007––the people, places, and things that we've either fallen head over heels in love with or developed uncontrollable rage towards over the past twelve months. Get your dose, starting Boxing Day and running into the new year, three times a day––sunrise, noon, and sunset.

hero_colangelo2.jpg

Two years ago, the Toronto Raptors were the laughing stock of the NBA. Vince Carter and his mom had whined their way out of town; a series of bad draft picks, front office mismanagement, and coaching changes resulted in a poor product on the floor; and the team was regularly booed off the court. Rock bottom might have come the night that Kobe Bryant scored 81 points, all by himself, against a hapless Raptors defence.

Then Bryan Colangelo came to town, and things began to change.

In a year and a half, the tanned wunderkind from Phoenix completely turned around the organization, making the team not only a respected force in the league, but one that is widely recognized as being full of character and heart.

In January 2007, the team achieved a feat that has never been accomplished by any other in the NBA, winning the awards for Player (Chris Bosh), Rookie (Andrea Bargnani) and Coach (Sam Mitchell) of the Month. In the spring, the Raptors clinched the Atlantic Division title for the first time in its history and made the playoffs for the first time in five years. And though they lost in the first round to an experienced Nets squad (including uber-villain Vince Carter), the team could finally be counted amongst the league's best.

Colangelo accomplished all this not by doling out huge dollars to some superstar player, but by finding guys that the NBA had previously ignored or given up on. Anthony Parker was a star in Israel, but had washed out of the NBA years before. Jorge Garbajosa, at 28, was a King in Spain, but couldn't get a humble pie in North America. Colangelo got rid of locker room cancers like Rafael Araujo and Mike James and brought in solid guys like Rasho Nesterovic and TJ Ford. Every move he makes seems to go his way. The trend has continued this year with the signing of a previously unknown 27-year-old rookie phenom named Jamario Moon and the smart trade for Argentinian Carlos Delfino, who had been withering on the bench in Detroit and who cost the team almost nothing to acquire.

Thank you, Bryan. Now we only have one question: you wouldn't happen to know anything about hockey, would you?

Photo from bgnewf.


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Comments (8)

Just a note: Argentine is the demonym of Argentina, not Argentinian.

 

Do you have a source for that rek? Every reference I can find says either is correct.

 

Both are indeed correct. The OED contests that "Argentinian" is a later (origins ~1918) development of the word "Argentine" (origins ~1830), being "A native or inhabitant of Argentina." ("Argentino" is also correct, as of about the same date as "Argentinian.")

 

• Wikipedia's entry for Argentina; the Demonym listed in the right hand column is Argentine, here.

• CIA World Factbook entry for Argentina; under Nationality both noun (demonym) and adjectival form are given as Argentine(s), here.

• Wikipedia's entry on the formation of suffix demonyms from Latin roots (Argentina comes from the Latin word for silver) says adding -ine to the root is the correct, see here. Note that it also cites Mirriam-Websters in the section below, saying 'Argentinian' as an adjective is a less common and sometimes acceptable form.

• Google finds over 33 million hits for Argentine but only 4 million for Argentinian, to which it suggests the former.

 

No doubt Argentine is more common, but the fact remains that Argentinian is also acceptable. So, I'm not changing it.

Surely we both have better ways to spend our time.

 
 

Thanks Chris––I was looking for the original but couldn't find it. I'll replace the pic now.

 

Acceptable but wrong. Do what you want.

 
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