FNG wrote: ↑Sat Oct 26, 2024 8:56 am
And I've ben making the same case for over a year now...my concern is that Ant might love the "NBA life" more than he loves winning, and this may hold him back. I contrasted his on-court behavior during the Laker game with that of two real winners...Davis and James. Ant seemed more interested in yakking it up with his summer Olympic teammates than he did in winning...and they in contrast seemed to be swatting him away like an annoying bug. I've said it before and I'll say it again...I worry that Ant may lack the gravitas needed to reach his enormous ceiling. I look back at the behavior of the top 100 players of all time, and Ant seems different to me.
Wilt for example may have been banging a different woman ever night, but when he got on the court, he was all business. You never saw him chatting up his opponents on the court during he game...he just wanted to destroy him.
No. NO. NO!
He was not. The guy has a laundry list of pettiness, selfishness, and aloofness that largely defined him as a player who never won as often as he should have. I'm willing to share examples if you want... there are many.
For example, he demanded to live in NY while playing in Philadelphia... and refused to wake up early enough to make the commute for timely practices. Instead, he demanded 4:00 p.m. practices... which was a huge problem for his teammates.
In the 1966 playoffs, he just flat-out refused to practice between games or even show up for film or strategy sessions.
Ironically, a new coach arrived and nearly got into a fistfight with Wilt after calling him out in the team's first meeting. But the new coach didn't back down... and he even convinced Wilt to play "more like Bill Russell" which led to his first of two NBA championships... and only one as the team's best player.
Then, the next season, Wilt decided he wanted to win the assist title... even though it made the team worse. He wanted that individual record. In the end, he got his assist title. Title be damned. Heck, in the playoffs... his team was up 3 - 1 and lost. And Wilt didn't even take a shot in the 2nd half of game 7.
Once again, his on-court selfishness and petulance was more powerful than his abundant talent.