Post#29 » by Winsome Gerbil » Tue Jun 11, 2019 5:02 pm 
            
            
            The difference is that MJ would have closed the deal.
And I'm not being sarcastic.  Kawhi, and I suspect all great offensive goto wings in the future, has discovered the same devastating power of the 1 on 1 midrange pullup/post game.  It's kind of an ultimate goto guy move because it's very hard for a defense to get extra guys to it without leaving others radically open.  And Kawhi does it very well and has had some flat takeover superstar moments with it that have been every bit the equal of previous stars.
But 
a) he has it, but can't seemingly call on it at flat will to takeover games the way Jordan did.  THat remains the most impressive thing about MJ, the thing younger fans don't get -- he was the ultimate killer.  Just every single time you knew he was coming for you, and you STILL couldn't stop it.  And he would miss sometimes -- he even had a famous commercial about all the gamewinners he'd missed.  But you didn't seem to have much control over that missing.  And he responded to the moment like nobody I've ever seen.  His obsession with winning and dominance was so extreme you could almost call it a mental illness.  He even used his HOF speech as a classless opportunity to stick his junk in the face of everybody who had ever dared get in his way.
b) Kawhi is a shorttimer at this.  He actually hasn't had much of a career at this superstar level, and hasn't been the most injury immune guy so its not clear whether he's going to build an enormous legacy or not.  In any case though MJ or Kobe didn't build their reps off of a couple good years and one playoffs.  They came back again and again and again and again, were in these moments hundreds of times.  Kawhi has nowhere near that legacy or experience.  Maybe next time he takes it, finds that last burst, gets his own legend.  Maybe not.