male heavenly delusion characters
He was suspicious of Shikamaru's offer of help, but became interested when Shikamaru admitted that the possibility of his memories of Boruto and Kawaki being altered began looking plausible. Before they
could continue, Boruto had to prepare to fight Mitsuki again, who was tracking him. Once catching up to Boruto, Mitsuki attacked hard. As Boruto easily countered Mitsuki's assault, he soon had Mitsuki subdued by his sword as Mitsuki's neck. As Mitsuki indifferently told Boruto to finish him, Boruto withdrew his sword and saw through Mitsuki's depression, noting that he has lost his way from "Kawaki" losing his
shine as Mitsuki's sun. He insisted that Mitsuki's true sun is him, not Kawaki. Furious, Mitsuki bound Boruto with his snakes, shocked to see the missing-nin not trying to defend. Seeing the sincerity in Boruto, Mitsuki let’s Boruto go and he asks him who his is. Boruto simply tells Mitsuki that he has no intentions of killing Kawaki and that Boruto’s parents, Naruto and Hinata, are alive. Before leaving, Boruto insisted that Mitsuki could shine on his own, but if he still needs a
separate sun, to find him. While alone, Boruto continue talking to Shikamaru.
[49] Independent athlete Shane 'Slam' Wise introduced a cuffed-cradle of the ball prior to initiating the under the leg transfer and finishing with two-hands. [50] While a number of players have finished the dunk using one- or two-hands with their backs to the rim, perhaps the most renowned variant of the dunk is the combination with a 360°, or simply stated: a 360-between-the-legs. Due to the athleticism and
hang-time required, the dunk is a crowd favorite and is heralded by players as the preeminent of all dunks. Elbow Hang[edit] The player approaches the basket and leaps as they would for a generic dunk. Instead of simply dunking the ball with one or two hands, the player allows their forearm(s) to pass through the basket, hooking their elbow pit on the rim before hanging for a short period of time. Although the dunk was introduced by Vince Carter in the 2000 NBA Slam Dunk contest, Kobe Bryant was filmed performing the dunk two years earlier in 1998 at an exhibition in the Philippines[51] and during the 1997 offseason at Magic Johnson's A Midsummer Night's Magic charity event as well as Roy Hinson who performed the dunk during warm-ups for the 1986 NBA Slam Dunk contest. [52] Colloquially, the dunk has a variety of names including 'honey dip', 'cookie jar', and 'elbow hook'. In the 2011 NBA contest, Los Angeles Clippers power-forward Blake Griffin completed a self-pass off of the backboard prior to elbow-hanging on the rim. A number of other variants of the elbow hang have been executed, including a lob self-pass, hanging by the arm pit,[53] a windmill,[54] and over a person. [55] Most notable are two variations
which as of July 2012, have yet to be duplicated. In 2008, Canadian athlete Justin Darlington introduced an iteration aptly entitled a 'double-elbow hang', in which the player inserts both forearms through the rim and subsequently hangs on both elbows pits.
Retrieved September 3, 2023. ^ Loo, Egan (January 16, 2014). "Sui Ishida's Suspense Horror Manga Tokyo
Ghoul Gets Anime". Anime News Network. Archived from the
original on January 30, 2014. Retrieved January 16, 2020. ^ Green, Scott (January 16, 2014). "Anime to Adapt "Tokyo Ghoul" Suspense Manga". Crunchyroll. Archived from the original on January 16, 2020. Retrieved January 16, 2020.