3ba11
05-24-2024, 12:26 PM
The best player on 4 of the last 6 champions has been a low hold-time player (Tatum, Jokic, Curry, Kawhi), and we can add AD to this list if we think he was the best player on the 2020 Lakers - he joined a lottery team and was their leading scorer, while turning their defense from worst to 1st.
Ultimately, the low hold-time players (biggest winners) are generally expert jumpshooters (Tatum, Curry, Jokic, MJ, Bird, Kobe), or fundamental bigs (Kareem, Duncan, Jokic), while the high hold-time players, aka "down-hill" players are the low frequency winners (Lebron, SGA, Ant, Luka, Harden, Westbrook) - this style isn't 5-man basketball and imposes spot-up roles, so it lacks capacity to develop great chemistry required for great-performing casts, aka great teams .
TLDR: Tatum will now be mentioned along with all the other "expert jumpshooters" that developed great chemistry (MJ, Curry, Bird, Kobe, Tatum).. Due to their superior ability to dominate while the ball moves and therefore develop great chemistry that allows a great-performing cast, aka great team - this is a primary argument for them being superior at basketball than players whose skillset is restricted to the "down-hill" approach, which isn't 5-man basketball and therefore lacks the great chemistry needed for a great-performing cast, aka great team.
Ultimately, the low hold-time players (biggest winners) are generally expert jumpshooters (Tatum, Curry, Jokic, MJ, Bird, Kobe), or fundamental bigs (Kareem, Duncan, Jokic), while the high hold-time players, aka "down-hill" players are the low frequency winners (Lebron, SGA, Ant, Luka, Harden, Westbrook) - this style isn't 5-man basketball and imposes spot-up roles, so it lacks capacity to develop great chemistry required for great-performing casts, aka great teams .
TLDR: Tatum will now be mentioned along with all the other "expert jumpshooters" that developed great chemistry (MJ, Curry, Bird, Kobe, Tatum).. Due to their superior ability to dominate while the ball moves and therefore develop great chemistry that allows a great-performing cast, aka great team - this is a primary argument for them being superior at basketball than players whose skillset is restricted to the "down-hill" approach, which isn't 5-man basketball and therefore lacks the great chemistry needed for a great-performing cast, aka great team.