Live broadcast, February 5th news recently, Heat coach spoolstra was interviewed and talked about James’s coming to be the scoring king of history.
He said: “LeBlanc can be said to be the best imitator in history. He would look at other people’s movements and say, ‘I like this, I want to put it in my skill bag. Two or three weeks later, James really turned it into his own weapon. He applied it in the pressure of the competition. In his second and third years in the heat, we need him to become a low threat. He can’t just be a threat of passing. He must have an action that can be relied on at a critical moment. Riley once talked to him about developing some tricks like Jabbar and magicians. LeBlanc said, this is somewhat interesting. He worked hard and suddenly it became a weapon.”
“Like Jordan, he turnaround jump shot on either side. He became so deadly that his opponents were forced to do what they didn’t want to do, which was to bag clip him. He is one of the biggest passing threats in the history of the competition and can involve everyone. This shows his professional spirit, and he is always committed to his own development.”
“He also started watching Ray Allen and his shooting training. I think this is the origin of his three-pointer you see now. He was so deadly in downtown. He will watch Ray Allen train and do everything. We have never used LeBlanc like that. He didn’t really develop such a skill in the heat. He just imitated Ray Allen’s training. In the end, this became what he has done now. He will also watch Wade’s cut-in and ball-free movement. He would look at Bosh and see how he would block and tear down. This became an important part of our system, especially when we asked him to play number 4. No matter what any great player is doing, he will watch it and add it to his skill pack.”