Long2s wrote:Clutch is not arbitrary.
Clutch exists everywhere in life. Yeah, it's easy to walk on a tight rope when you're 1 foot above the ground, not so easy when you're 1000 feet over a canyon. Easy to do a great presentation in front of the mirror, not so easy in front of thousands of people. Easy to come up with what you're going to tell a crush in your mind, not so much in front of a living person. Easy to have a plan for the boxing ring, not so easy when you get punched in the face (Mike Tyson: "Everyone has a plan until they get punched in the mouth").
Clutch is "keeping your cool" under pressure. That's a real thing.
The problem is the definition of clutch, which when it comes to certain players, changes constantly.
If it's keeping your cool under pressure like you say, why would you have such a rigid definition of pressure?
You make it seem like the only time a player can be under pressure is exactly when the game has 5 or 2 minutes to go (I've seen one where it's exactly 24 seconds to go, as if the player always has a full shot clock to work with at the end of every game), with exactly a 5 or 3pt gap, and you hold on to this religiously, which is not right.
Your examples don't help your case either. In all of them you reference the entire performance. You didn't talk about "when you're 10m from one end of a tight rope exactly 100m above the ground" or "during the 4th slide in your presentation when the audience has only clapped once" or "When Mike Tyson punches you in the face in the 11th round and at least one eye is swollen". How would you even measure clutchness against Mike Tyson? Number of bobs and weaves? Number of succesful hits? Time taken before hitting the ground after taking said hit? The more you try to confine it to some arbitrary criterion the sillier it sounds.
In basketball you can be "clutch" in the 3rd quarter, an entire game, and yes even with 5:16 left on the clock and the gap within 6 points. And it doesnt have to be scoring alone. I've seen Dwayne Wade make multiple clutch steals and of course LeBron's clutch block, Pierce made an incredibly clutch rebound in that 2008 series against the Cavs and yet none of these gets mentioned (by guys like you at least) when discussing the clutchness of these guys.













