What we have here, elindholm, is a failure to appreciate.
Heh, good one.
Now, an appreciative response would be along the lines of, "certainly, he can be considered among them,"
I don't understand why I should be compelled to offer an appreciative response.
As if you were insulted by the very claim or by the mere opinions of others in this trivial and subjective pursuit of "greatest X".
You are correct; I was insulted by the very claim, and I continue to be. However, I am not insulted by the opinions of others -- unless, of course, those opinions specifically insult me, such as the charge that I am being "stingy and rude."
Perhaps I don't understand the bile, but your position doesn't seem all that strong, in argumentation or evidence.
You don't have to understand the "bile" to see the argument. Whether you agree with my position is up to you, but it's pretty clearly laid out.
Robert Horry in my memory has had the uncanny ability to hit clutch shots in limited roles with the Rockets, Lakers, and now Spurs. Therefore, I believe him to be one of the great clutch players in NBA history.
Okay, let's look at this in a slightly different way.
The beauty of being a role player is that no one expects things of you on a regular basis. Horry had a great game last night and everyone is very excited. But remember, you're talking about someone who has played almost two hundred postseason games in his career. Two hundred! That's two and a half full seasons worth of playoff games!
In those two hundred games, how many times has he been "clutch"? Five? Eight? Maybe ten? Ten at the absolute most, right? So you're talking about a player who, in 200 playoff games, has made a "memorable" contribution in maybe ten of them.
How is that clutch?
In six games against Seattle -- which was a tough series for the Spurs -- he broke double figures twice, scoring 2, 6, 2 and 4 points in the other four games. His numbers were better against the Suns, but since the Suns don't guard big men, that's not really a fair comparison. And even then, the "clutch" player came up empty in the close-out game, shooting only 3-11.
Before last night's explosion against Detroit, he had cracked double figures only once in the Finals, in spite of averaging nearly 30 minutes a game, and was shooting barely 30% overall. How is that clutch? You're telling me that his other playoff games this year, including the other Finals games, weren't really big situations?
The reason why people remember Horry's big games is because they always catch us by surprise. If he played well on a regular basis, it wouldn't be big news if he caught fire and scored 20 points with some key three-pointers. But, in fact, he's usually pretty mediocre, even in big games, even when his team needs him, even when the pressure's on. The numbers just don't lie.
In my opinion, you can't be considered a great clutch player if you've had 10 great playoff games out of 200. Not even close. If you find that rude or stingy or dismissive, that's your business, but my stance is that the celebration of Robert Horry is absurd and I will continue to express that view for as long as I am able.