70sFan wrote:rtiff68 wrote:70sFan wrote:1. Magic was a great shooter at his peak (1987-90). He was ATG free throw shooter, excellent midrange shooter and good three point shooter when he actually shot them at decent volume.
2. Magic didn't score a lot, but he never struggled with scoring the ball. He was always extremely efficient and he could up his volume anytime Lakers needed that. He was inarguably better scorer than someone like Duncan or Garnett among top 10 players.
3. Defensive weaknesses has nothing to do with my point. I said he had no weaknesses offensively.
Doubling down on a bad take is not a great look.
Magic was not a “great shooter,” especially in the greater context of NBA history. You, as a hoops history buff (and I generally enjoy your content here a ton, for what it’s worth) should certainly know that.
He could shoot well enough to keep teams honest, but he was never a great shooter. That, and assuming someone who was never a great volume scorer but “could’ve been if they wanted” is one of the weakest common arguments on boards like this. It’s the same thing some people argue about Ginobili: “he could’ve averaged over 30 if he wanted to!”
Magic was great, but there’s no need to pretend that he was things that he wasn’t.
I won't back down from my take, sorry but you won't convince me that Magic isn't a great scorer or shooter. Magic's game wasn't about scoring, but he never had any problems with upping his volume when wanted to. He didn't take a lot of jumpers either, but he could punish you everytime you tried to leave him open.
Magic wasn't ATG shooter, but his shooting touch was exceptional. You can't be 90% FT shooter without great shooting touch. You also can't average 20 ppg on 60% TS for almost decade of long postseason runs without being a great scorer.
Magic’s game wasn’t about scoring, and he was phenomenal— we can agree on that.
I suppose we’ll leave it at that.



















