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Circa 2007, independent slam dunker T-Dub performed the double clutch with a 540° spin which he concluded by hanging on the rim. [40] Between the Legs[edit] For one-footed jumpers, the ball is generally transferred to the non-dominant hand just before or upon take-off; for two-footers, this transfer is
often delayed for milliseconds as both hands control the ball to prevent dropping it. Once airborne, the dunker generally transfers the ball from non-dominant to dominant hand beneath a raised leg. Finally, the ball is brought upwards by the dominant hand and slammed through the rim. The between-the-legs dunk was popularized by Isaiah Rider in the 1994 NBA slam dunk contest, who called it "The East Bay Funk
Dunk,"[41] so much so that the dunk is often colloquially referred to as a "Rider dunk"—notwithstanding Orlando Woolridge's own such dunk in the NBA contest a decade earlier. [42] Since then, the under-the-leg has been attempted in the NBA contest by a number of participants, and has been a staple of other contests as well. Its difficulty—due to the required hand-eye coordination, flexibility, and hang-time—keeps it generally reserved for exhibitions and contests, not competitive games. Ricky Davis has managed to complete the dunk in an NBA game,[43] but both he[44] and Josh Smith[45] have botched at least one in-game attempt as well. Because of the possible combinations of starting and finishing hands, and raised-legs, there are many variations on the basic under-the-legs dunk—more so than any other. [46] For example, in a 1997 French Dunk contest, Dali Taamallah leapt with his right leg
while controlling the ball with his left hand, and once airborne he transferred the ball from his left hand, underneath his right leg to his right hand before completing the dunk. [47] NBA star Jason Richardson has also pioneered several notable variations of the between-the-legs including a lob-pass to himself[48] and a pass off of the backboard to himself.
It has been serialized in Kodansha's seinen manga magazine Monthly Afternoon since January 2018, with its chapters collected in ten tankōbon volumes as of February 2024. An anime television series adaptation produced by Production I. G aired from April to June 2023. The story is divided in two storylines with one involving the characters Maru and Kiruko as they travel across a post-apocalyptic world, while another story focuses on a group of children who live in a school. The series was inspired by a manga Ishiguro
read in university with the intention of making it different from his previous work, And Yet the Town Moves, and portray a proper dynamic between the two leads as well as the evil they face. The manga has been received positively, with praise given to its sense of mystery and character relationships. The anime adaptation has received a similar response for its focus on relationships and gender issues. Plot[edit] In the outside world, 15 years have passed since an unprecedented disaster completely destroyed modern civilization. A group of children live in a facility isolated from the outside world. One day, one of them, a girl named Tokio, receives a message that says "Do you
want to go outside of the outside?" Mimihime, another girl who lives in the same facility, has a prediction and tells the upset Tokio that two people will come from the outside to save her, one of whom has the same face as her, while the director of the school tells her that the outside world is Hell. Meanwhile, a boy named Maru, who looks just like Tokio, is traveling through this devastated Japan with a girl named Kiruko, in search of Heaven.
^ Anime News Network
Editorial Team (September 28, 2021). "Our Most Anticipated Anime Of Fall 2021". Anime News Network. Retrieved December 11, 2021. ^ Mansfield, Dan (April 19, 2021). "86 EIGHTY-SIX
Episodes #01- 02 Anime Review". The Fandom Post. Retrieved December 11, 2021. ^ Mansfield, Dan (July 7, 2021). "86 EIGHTY-SIX Episodes #09 – 11 Anime Review". The Fandom Post.