![]() ![]() ![]() He earned another 50.įor his final flourish, McClung put on his Gate City (Va.) high school uniform over his red Sixers jersey and threw down a 540-degree two-handed dunk - one-and-a-half turns in the air - to run away with the trophy. McClung started the final round by again taking the ball from another friend holding it over his head - just one person this time, Skinkis - and performed a pronounced double pump before finishing the dunk with a two-handed reverse. Lisa Leslie was the only judge to prevent him from opening up with two straight perfect scores. ![]() His second dunk - a whirling helicopter, two-handed, 360-degree stuff - earned him a 49.8. "We just wanted to try to make something up that we haven't seen before, and the first dunk, I hadn't seen before, so hopefully, it's not out there," McClung said. He opened Saturday's contest with 50s across the board as he took the ball from a friend sitting on another friend's shoulders - Chase Skinkis, who identifies himself as a "vertical jump specialist," and high school buddy Bradley Dean - and tapped it against the backboard first before putting it through the hoop. A win for Apple and you want to run Windows in Bootcamp or in a virtual machine. Despite his size, McClung said watching the classic showdown between Zach LaVine and Aaron Gordon in the 2016 dunk contest made him dream about being a part of it someday. We'll make our own CPUs,' and then waited until they were both faster and more power-efficient (even when running old apps in a translation layer which is about 80 of native performance) than the Macs with Intel inside. McClung gained an online following in high school for YouTube compilations of his dunks that seemed otherworldly for a player who is now listed at a generous 6-foot-2 and 185 pounds.
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