freethedevil wrote:frica wrote:Fluidity often gets underrated and doesn't show up in "classical" athleticism benchmarks like straight line speed and jumping do.
Fludity's a lot easier to counter defensively in the postseason tho.
I'm guessing what you mean is that Magic's fluidity edge doesn't loom as large as LeBron's other edges against playoff defense rather than saying that Magic's superior fluidity is actually a hindrance.
What I'd tend to say is that Magic & LeBron are both in that rare group of superstars who truly seem to be able "figure the game out" with time. We tend to call this "old man game" and it's a known thing, but the thing that isn't brought up is that most guys never develop "old man game", they just fadeaway. Those who can continue to learn savvy on the other hand, can get remarkably good at the parts of the game that don't get crippled with a loss of physical explosion.
In the debate between Bird & Magic, I see Bird as a guy with more intuitive brilliance that he just scattered over whatever was happening on the floor, whereas Magic was a guy who essentially said "I'm going to play like this, and if someone stops me, I'll adapt until they can't."
I really do think Magic could have been great for many years if not for the HIV, and that he'd have kept figuring new things out as he went. He would have, in other words, perhaps kept growing like LeBron's been growing.
But no one like this has grown as long as LeBron has grown. He's got a mastery over the game, including an awareness of the things he cannot do, that I'd say is unprecedented.