'23 NY/NJ S Moussa Kane (Duke Signee)

BobbyMac

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S
Blair Academy
Blairstown, NJ
From Harlem
wAAACH5BAEKAAAALAAAAAABAAEAAAICRAEAOw==
o6kqa8jonj5awl7mbh52


Measurements:
Height: 6-1
Weight: 18o

Rankings:
247 Comp:. .. NR
247: .............. NR
Rivals: .......... NR
ESPN: .......... NR

Offers:
Notre Dame ..... No .... Visiting 7-27-21

Clemson
BC
MD
PSU
Purdue
Rutgers
Cuse
VT


Media Links:

Twitter =. https://twitter.com/Moussak_22

Instagram = https://www.instagram.com/mk022_

Hudl =.


Highlights:
.
[TWEET]
 

BobbyMac

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[TWEET]https://twitter.com/ND__Recruiting/status/1413932058078965760[/TWEET]
 

BigJim

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Moussa Kane is a bad ass name. As is Sanoussi Kane, his brother at Purdue. They're apparently city kids from the upper, Upper East Side.

Too cool. I like that his brother is at Purdue thus not too far away should Moussa really like ND and vice versa.
 

BrownerandFry

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Moussa Kane is a bad ass name. As is Sanoussi Kane, his brother at Purdue. They're apparently city kids from the upper, Upper East Side.

Too cool. I like that his brother is at Purdue thus not too far away should Moussa really like ND and vice versa.

Hmm moving from Harlem to Blair Academy (nice) is a shorter hop, culturally, than from Blair to South Bend.

And he and his brother play football it is because they chose it, not because it was the local thing.
 

BrownerandFry

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Imagine how many great football players from New York over the years never laced up a pair of cleats.

I'm from New York.

Basketball is highly valued.
BaseballUSED to be highly valued
football is not.

Just look at the data

Of Syracuse's big four
Brown
Davis
Little
Csonka

Only Davis was born in New York (sure Brown went to wear Orange from Manhasset but was born on St. Simon's Island in Georgia (whence the brilliant piercing scene in One Night in Miami)

But New York?

Kareem Abdul Jabbar
Connie Hawkins
the Cous
Dr. J

and the ones drugs did in like the Goat

And every year, another Kemba Walker seems to grow out of the pavement.

Indifference is rampant.
Football, simply is not the city game.
 

Irish#1

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Moussa Kane is a bad ass name. As is Sanoussi Kane, his brother at Purdue. They're apparently city kids from the upper, Upper East Side.

Too cool. I like that his brother is at Purdue thus not too far away should Moussa really like ND and vice versa.

It can't hurt.
 

Cackalacky2.0

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Imagine how many great football players from New York over the years never laced up a pair of cleats.

Welcome to the board BigJim. If you have any questions reach out to the Admins/mods and we will be happy to assist.
 

BobbyMac

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I'm from New York.

Basketball is highly valued.
BaseballUSED to be highly valued
football is not.

Just look at the data

Of Syracuse's big four
Brown
Davis
Little
Csonka

Only Davis was born in New York (sure Brown went to wear Orange from Manhasset but was born on St. Simon's Island in Georgia (whence the brilliant piercing scene in One Night in Miami)

But New York?

Kareem Abdul Jabbar
Connie Hawkins
the Cous
Dr. J

and the ones drugs did in like the Goat

And every year, another Kemba Walker seems to grow out of the pavement.

Indifference is rampant.
Football, simply is not the city game.

What about the other GOAT... MJ?
 

BrownerandFry

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Are you saying Baseball is not big in New York any more?

Let me attempt to clarify. Baseball is not the summer obsession it used to be in New York.
in the 50's there were only 16 MLB teams and three of them were the New York Yankees, the New York Giants and the Brooklyn Dodgers. Of course the Dodgers and Giants broke hearts by moving west, but the Koufax Dodgers and Willie Mays Giants were considered New York property to the chagrin of the West Coast.

Between 1949 and 1965 there were 17 champions and in 14 cases it was Yanks, Giants or Dodgers. Only the '57 Braves (Aaron, Spahn) '60 Pirates (Clemente/Mazeroski) and '64 Cards (Brock Gibson) broke that streak. In my little town in upstate Yankees, Giants, Dodgers gear was all over, and the eternal debate: MAYS/mantle/snider. Having your dad take you to a game in New York was like a Muslim going to Haaj.

And all summer long it was playgrounds every day, EXCEPT when the Little League and Babe Ruth games were played. Drive your bike through the neighborhood at night and from the front porches you would hear the siren songs of Barber, Allen, Scully and Hodges. No politics, no easy listening.

Decades later the Commie sports took over, with the Marxists playing Soccer, the Leninists playing golf and the Trotskyites on the tennis court.

But back in that belle epoque the National Pastime was baseball, and its epicenter was New York.

Baseball at the MLB level is still prized, but it is not the singular summer obsession, for young and old, that it once was.

And, in honor of the cause of this thread Moussa Kane, come on down!!!!!!!!!!!!.
 

Ndaccountant

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Let me attempt to clarify. Baseball is not the summer obsession it used to be in New York.
in the 50's there were only 16 MLB teams and three of them were the New York Yankees, the New York Giants and the Brooklyn Dodgers. Of course the Dodgers and Giants broke hearts by moving west, but the Koufax Dodgers and Willie Mays Giants were considered New York property to the chagrin of the West Coast.

Between 1949 and 1965 there were 17 champions and in 14 cases it was Yanks, Giants or Dodgers. Only the '57 Braves (Aaron, Spahn) '60 Pirates (Clemente/Mazeroski) and '64 Cards (Brock Gibson) broke that streak. In my little town in upstate Yankees, Giants, Dodgers gear was all over, and the eternal debate: MAYS/mantle/snider. Having your dad take you to a game in New York was like a Muslim going to Haaj.

And all summer long it was playgrounds every day, EXCEPT when the Little League and Babe Ruth games were played. Drive your bike through the neighborhood at night and from the front porches you would hear the siren songs of Barber, Allen, Scully and Hodges. No politics, no easy listening.

Decades later the Commie sports took over, with the Marxists playing Soccer, the Leninists playing golf and the Trotskyites on the tennis court.

But back in that belle epoque the National Pastime was baseball, and its epicenter was New York.

Baseball at the MLB level is still prized, but it is not the singular summer obsession, for young and old, that it once was.

And, in honor of the cause of this thread Moussa Kane, come on down!!!!!!!!!!!!.

 

Cackalacky2.0

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Im a reasonably intelligent man but someon needs to explain to me how golf has been taken over by this:
Lenin argued that in an underdeveloped country such as Russia the capitalist class would remain a threat even after a successful socialist revolution. As a result, he advocated the repression of those elements of the capitalist class that took up arms against the new soviet government, writing that as long as classes existed a state would need to exist to exercise the democratic rule of one class (in his view, the working class) over the other (the capitalist class). Lenin wrote that "[d]ictatorship does not necessarily mean the abolition of democracy for the class that exercises the dictatorship over other classes; but it does mean the abolition of democracy (or very material restriction, which is also a form of abolition) for the class over which, or against which, the dictatorship is exercised
 

BrownerandFry

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Im a reasonably intelligent man but someon needs to explain to me how golf has been taken over by this:

In fairness and truth, you're a few clicks north of "reasonably intelligent."

I was just trying to mimic an aged curmudgeon (is that redundant by throwing shade ((is that not what these kids today say?) on any sport other than baseball.))

Attempt at humor lead ballooned.

The most recent advocate of Lenin, by the way, is Steve Bannon, who grows more obese and toxic each day. But at least his attempts at a coup d'etat of the Vatican failed.(quid vide)

Meanwhile, I hope that Moussa Kane can transcend this labyrinth and have a good time at the barbecue.

I came from the po' side of town. We could fund the equipment for sandlot baseball and that was about it.

Golf and tennis were what rich people did. And they were all Yankee fans, who we Giant and Dodger fans regard with a cocktail made of two jiggers of suspicion and a splash of hate.
 

NorthDakota

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Not gonna lie I'm always gonna raise my eyebrows when I see a football player from NYC. Its like seeing a unicorn. Very rare.
 

Dale

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[TWEET]https://twitter.com/moussak_22/status/1420171499441377280?s=21[/TWEET]
 

dublinirish

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Signed with Duke nice pick up for Elko


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