Mephariel wrote:threethehardway wrote:Mephariel wrote:To me, whether Jokic is a center or not is irrelevant. Jokic should be a great defender because that is half the game. Jordan was great both ends.
Jokic should anchor a defense because he should if he wants to give himself the best chance of winning at the highest level, and if he wants to set an example for all of his teammates, not because he is a center.
What kind of response is this? Players can't do everything, it is a team sport.
Since when the best player should do everything for his teammates. If his teammates don't play defense to make up for the offensive load Jokic carries, they should be replaced. All great offensive players have defensive players to make up for their offense.
Jordan wasn't a great defender, we need to stop lying to people about "two-way players" that were merely average on defense their entire career.
Jordan played great defense for one year out of his entire career. The year he won DPOY. After that, he want back to being a lazy defender and gambling.
In the beginning of his career, Jordan was James Harden level of standing around and getting loss and gambling.
Then he started being better at gambling and eventually used his motor on offense for defense and had two great years of world breaking help defense (1986-1987 and 1988-1989 season) using his athleticism.
After his DPOY, he got by on reputation. He wasn't a great defender. He was average, like most players that have huge offensive loads. He stood around, gambled, often loss and out of position but occasionally would make a spectacular play.
Jordan as this great defender that was locking people up is a myth. He was never that.
Jordan was never a lazy defender. Stop lying and writing fan faction please. I watched the games in the 90s with MJ. Offensive players didn't even want to test him. Jordan isn't a great defender is not a serious take. The guy tries on defense even in Washington. Just ask Ron Mercer. He didn't just win DPOY, he was all-defense first team 9 times.
Also, you are just being obtuse. I don't even need to use Jordan as an example. What about Lebron? What about Olajuwon? What about Duncan? What about Adul-Jabbar? Great players can play both ways and often do.
And also, what does team sport has to do with anything? You are responsible for your performance. It is like saying you can slack off on your job because your company is one team. Do that see what your boss say. Jokic isn't playing defense for his teammates, he is playing defense to win and to set an example for his team. That is what high performers do in every company.
Now, you are writing the classic "Jordan was the do it all winner that nobody wanted to come across" and "It's like working at a company."
This is the prime of example of sports being corporation loving middle class cope.
LeBron is a lazy defender too outside until his last two years with the Cavs and his stint in Miami where he was forced to play the elite defense due to how weak the Heat were at the 4 and 5. He was the biggest, most athletic player on the team, he didn't have a choice.
Most of the All-Time GOAT perimeter players were lazy defenders because they carry a heavy offensive load.
They tried in spurts or used their energy to make splash plays. They weren't defensive stoppers.
Magic Johnson was lazy
LeBron is lazy
Kobe was lazy
Jordan was lazy
These guys are not defensive players with good technique or motor. They were try-hard defenders at best during certain times in their careers and for their career, they grade out at average or neutral defensers.
LeBron proved he could anchor an entire defense by himself and when he didn't have to do it anymore, he stopped doing it because he was worth more on offense.
Every star perimeter offensive player does it.
To think they don't is being naive.
"Jordan tries his best on defense."
Yeah, when he was young and wanted to prove a point.
When he got Pippen, you think he was flying around like in his DPOY year?
Fans kill me when they call star GOAT offensive players great defenders off of reputation.