@justanotherfan
"Those performances allowed Perry to shine in a more complimentary role"
Right on! We keep trying to force Perry into a leadership role and to carry this team on his back. That doesn't appear to be the right approach.
We've sort of forced arguments to support this. We've been saying that when Perry plays well we win. True... but is that because Perry is leading the team? Or is that because other players are stepping up and taking some pressure off of Perry, allowing him to do what he does best (stealth scoring)?
We need to come up with a new name for Perry... and it should have the word "stealth" in it!
Perry may not lead with enthusiasm and wild dunks and blocks... we can't force him to be what he isn't. But Perry can work effectively (and invisibly) while another one of our guys (or two) steals the attention. How key is that?
What we have here is a "Yin Yang" situation. Perry is the "Yin"... the night working with the day "Yang". He's the female "Yin" working with the male "Yang."
I'm not declaring that Perry is a female. I'm stating that in our society we view men as the strong role, when in reality we know women have every bit the strength as men do (often in differing, complimentary areas), and women are better "team players" allowing men to steal the limelight while focusing their efforts more on just being effective in the relationship, accepting a stealth position. Men need to "protrude their chests" with pride, like roosters do. And women, for the most part, accept the need for men to prance proudly.
So we have "male" players like Kelly and Cliff.... ready to make a statement, and after their dunks they beat their chests while running down court. Our team needs that energy, that swagger. It's the pride of a "male" rooster. But we need more than that. Perry offers us the other side. The side that works silently that supports our roosters, not only with his stat line, but by letting the emphasis (chest beating) come from our roosters.
James Brown had it right:
"This is a man's world, this is a man's world...
But it wouldn't be nothing, nothing without a woman or a girl"