Pachinko_ wrote:I'm fundamentally against any supernatural basketball notion like "playoffs are different", "clutch gene", "chokers" etc
As for Clutch/chokers, I agree with you. I think those perceptions just come down to small sample sizes. There are hundreds of NBA players. Some of them will have better statistics than others in clutch time just like some will seem to perform exceptionally well if you take any random sample of NBA games. For example, T.J. Leaf has a .563 eFG% overall this season. In the first three minutes of 2nd quarters, his eFG% is .841 (37/43 2Ps, 4/8 3Ps).
That being said, any player who has played in the playoffs will say the playoffs are different than the regular season. There's attention, pressure, intensity to playoff games that the regular season can't replicate. That is why playoff experience is considered so valuable. Sometimes there's things you just can't explain. Games are different than practice. Some players shoot 80% on free throws in a gym but 50% in games. Basketball has the same rules no matter what NBA arena it's played in, and yet the home team usually wins. Russell Westbrook won an MVP. These are all things that are inexplicable but true.




















