@jumpman23 THE ONE FINALS in NYC
1 - A rooftop on a pier overlooking Brooklyn bridge. What else?
2 - @riri_perezzz making Manila proud (fav pic of the weekend)
3 - morning runs w/ @sbb_uk and @regularhoops
4 - @_zeinosman_ representing @summerjamau
5 - random court
6 - wandering in Brooklyn
7 - billboards
8 - first time at Yankees stadium
9 - Italians at NYHQ @francesco.scaramucci
10 - still hooping
11 - them boys from @overseasmag
12 - Chinatown basketball
13 - 19 THE ONE FINALS
In the Korean language, there exists an untranslatable term: 정 | Jeong. It does not simply mean affection or love, but rather a deeply rooted emotional bond, built over time, often in silence, through the pure sharing of everyday life. It is a form of human connection and cohesion, shaped by simple, constant gestures.
Walking through the forward-looking streets of Seoul, this concept naturally unfolds in the relationship between the Korean people and basketball | 농구. A bond that is never shouted, but quietly sustained: revealing itself through brief yet recurring moments, traces of an emotional and cultural presence.
A presence that takes on countless forms and expressions across the Land of the Morning Calm and its capital city.
📸 @fbonard
Like the perfect ending to a film. Beyond rhetoric. Beyond anything contrived. At PalaRomare, everything turns Orange for Game 3 of the Finals: an apex that feels like an ending long before it becomes one.
After 40 breathless minutes, the ever-noble @familabasketschio add their 14th Scudetto to a history that keeps expanding. And captain @gio_skirt , at 37, reaches 30 national titles in a career that has always carried something regal. Closing as the protagonist, as she always has.
“I’ve lived through every emotion: this is the last game, this really is the last,” she says after the final buzzer, where dream and fulfillment, ecstasy and legacy collapse into one. And a legend’s farewell to the Game becomes the final confirmation of the legend itself.
📸 @fbonard
You may have seen every city in the world and still find yourself astonished upon arriving in Venice. Montesquieu wrote. The hoop culture of the ‘Queen of the Adriatic’ proves him right.
A love that permeates everything: guided by the solemn presence of Her Majesty @umanareyer , and handed down from generation to generation, finding fertile ground even within the school system, as the invigorating marvel of the @reyerschoolcup so vividly attests.
You may have seen every city in the world and still be astonished upon arriving in Venice, Montesquieu observed. To step inside the legendary Taliercio and be swept up in waves of students, united and animated by the Game, is nothing less than a living confirmation of his assertion.