Originally Posted by KC_Connection:
There is no distinction other than the nature of the sport itself lending itself to a smaller sample size deciding outcomes. A bad playoff performance remains a bad playoff performance and LeBron, Mahomes, Brady (a ton of them), and yes even MJ have had them.
Players in the NBA have bad games or halves all the time.
If Curry choked in one game, that is not the same thing as Lebron choking for an entire series either.
It's absolutely amazing how difficult it is for you to grasp this.
The best part is, I know it's 100% because you have Lebron stan brain rot. You aren't really this dumb. [Reply]
Originally Posted by staylor26:
Players in the NBA have bad games or halves all the time.
If Curry choked in one game, that is not the same thing as Lebron choking for an entire series.
It's absolutely amazing how difficult it is for you to grasp this.
The best part is, I know it's 100% because you have Lebron stan brain rot. You aren't really this dumb.
Bad halves/games in the NFL decide SBs. Mahomes had one of those that likely cost him one against a clearly inferior team. But he gets a pass for that and LeBron doesn't in the GOAT discussions because of the nature of the sport they play?
Are you sure I'm the one with stan brain rot here? [Reply]
Originally Posted by KC_Connection:
Bad halves/games in the NFL decide SBs. Mahomes had one of those that likely cost him one against a clearly inferior team. But he gets a pass for that and LeBron doesn't because of the nature of the sport they play?
Are you sure I'm the one with stan brain rot here?
Yes, absolutely.
No matter how you try to spin it, Lebron choking for an entire series is not the same as Mahomes choking for one half of football.
We can't just ignore the reality of the differences in the sports because it's inconvenient for your hero. [Reply]
No matter how you try to spin it, Lebron choking for an entire series is not the same as Mahomes choking for one half of football.
We can't just ignore the reality of the differences in the sports because it's inconvenient for your hero.
Their "choking" literally had exactly the same effect in each case with the only real difference between the nature of the sport they play and how outcomes are decided.
And I would say I'm very much not the one who is ignoring reality here because it is inconvenient for their hero. [Reply]
KC_Connection 03-27-2024, 01:35 PM
This message has been deleted by KC_Connection.
Reason: double post
Originally Posted by KC_Connection:
Their "choking" literally had exactly the same effect in each case with the only real difference between the nature of the sport they play and how outcomes are decided.
And I would say I'm very much not the one who is ignoring reality here because it is inconvenient for their hero.
Yes, the effect is the same, if we're robots discussing this, you have a point.
We're humans though, and anybody with half a brain can understand the difference between Lebron showing up night in and night out and letting his team down on the biggest stage, and Mahomes having a bad half once in an AFCCG.
It's not a 1 for 1 comparison. You want to ignore the context to make it one, because again, it's inconvenient for Lebron to acknowledge the difference. [Reply]
Originally Posted by staylor26:
Yes, the effect is the same, if we're robots discussing this, you have a point.
We're humans though, and anybody with half a brain can understand the difference between Lebron showing up night in and night out and letting his team down on the biggest stage, and Mahomes having a bad half once in an AFCCG.
It's not a 1 for 1 comparison. You want to ignore the context to make it one, because again, it's inconvenient for Lebron to acknowledge the difference.
Both of their teams were favored against their opponents and both of their performances arguably cost their team a championship. The nature of football itself lends itself to a smaller sample size deciding outcomes, but you really have to reach to find much of a distinction there. [Reply]
Originally Posted by KC_Connection:
Both of their teams were favored against their opponents and both of their performances arguably cost their team a championship. The nature of football itself lends itself to a smaller sample size deciding outcomes, but you really have to reach to find much of a distinction there.
I realize that it's the same when you completely ignore context.
Exactly what point do you think you're making repeating this? Maybe you are just really dumb. It would explain the Barry persona. [Reply]
Originally Posted by KC_Connection:
The point of the comparison was to show how silly it is to grip onto one bad playoff performance in an entire career of playoff excellence.
Only insecure Brady and MJ fans seem to do it, though, so I suppose it can't be too much of a surprise.
It's not just a "bad playoff perfomance". There's an enormous amount of context that you're ignoring.
The irony when people point out KD being no different than Lebron trying to build super teams and stack the deck, then all of a sudden there's this context that changes EVERYTHING.