falcolombardi wrote:
It's not an identical series though... not even close. Jordan didn't visibly quit and look dejected. Jordan played better defense.
And the bottom line is his team won the series which means he did his job. Did he underperform? Sure. But that series is closer to Lebron's 2013 Finals... underperforming in a win is a far smaller transgression than underperforming in a loss.
By the way never did I ever claim that Jordan stopped trying after Game 3. He just shot poorly in a couple of games. It happens but he didn't show mental weakness.
colts18 wrote:How the hell did Lebron quit in Game 6 vs the 2010 Celtics if he had 21 shot attempts, 12 Free Throw attempts, 19 rebounds, 10 assists, 9 turnovers, 3 steals, 1 blocks while holding Paul Pierce to 13 points on 4-13 shooting? Who gets 19 rebounds in a game they quit? That doesn't sound like the effort level of a "quit".
He quit in Game 5 and then in the closing minutes of Game 6. He stood there and watched as the Celtics scored.
DCasey91 wrote:Djoker in a civilized discussion emotional/subjective biases must be taken aside or else your point isn’t credible.
Do you have a degree in psychology? No so you can’t attach emotive language to one person with zero clue of what’s going inside a persons head.
Earlier someone literally said Jordan was celebrating and taking the foot off the pedal vs the Sonics.
1. Is MJ that player to do that? All evidence points to squarely at no. That’s like saying an F1 driver decided to go at half gear for half the race. That doesn’t work at all
2. Once again double standard. Lebron didn’t play as good... mentally weak, Jordan didn’t play as good ... “celebrating”. It’s illogical
How about this to MJ fans, just say he played like crap compared to what he usually always produces.
That would be fair more acceptable and accurate.
I mean the cognitive dissonance is why a serious discussion becomes comprised and from my poi it always comes from MJ’s side of the net.
I never could and will not accept thorough examination on both parties without logical discourse. It’s makes for better and more sound cases for both not just one.
Sometimes it’s like discussing with an imaginary pedestal that’s completely off limits and anything to examine will be brought as taboo and slandering against towards the other side.
That’s literally the definition of a religion or occult. That phenomena is exactly to me what the overall narrative is for him.
Little to zero admittance into or close to blasphemy makes discussions like this null invoid before they even begin to take any shape/form. Because as soon as you or a side gets somewhere the net disappears.
There are no subjective biases on my part. Jordan wasn't some god who couldn't have a bad game. He had plenty of bad games...
BUT
He simply never had the kind of blackmarks that Lebron had. A blackmark is something that is difficult to define or quantify but this is a generally accepted fact. Lebron's lows were lower than Jordan's lows. Even falcolombardi admitted that.
I never claimed (another poster did) that Jordan stopped trying after Game 3. He had three poor shooting games. I said that in the very first post about it. He had three mediocre games... but his team won so it doesn't define his legacy the way a loss would. That's just the reality.
And no I'm not a psychologist but I know what I've seen from Lebron in 2010. And I've never ever seen it from Jordan. That dejected look... Jordan would be angry but never dejected.
Anyways this discussion has gone to an uninteresting direction. I've explained why I think the Career Value methodology, which is integral to any Lebron argument, is flawed. The most important reason is scarcity.