Basketball System: Hate Makes Me Unstoppable

Chapter 153: Fairy Tail.



(TL/n: Realised not many might remember the '2011 NBA Labor Dispute.' Included a brief explanation in the previous Chapter's footnotes.)

Pass training required assistance, so Han Sen called Grover over to Memphis.

Grover wasn't surprised that Han Sen started special training so early.

After spending a season with him, he knew Han Sen's competitive spirit was the strongest he'd ever seen.

Besides Grover, Han also contacted someone else: Jason Williams.

From the last two seasons, Han had learned that the talents provided by his system were like fertile soil—it was up to him to decide what would grow in it.

For example, after getting the floater talent, he learned the drifting floater from Jamison. And when he received a defensive talent, he studied how to guard Durant from Tony Allen.

Passing was the same.

For tactical passing, accuracy is key—like how LeBron and Draymond Green excel in this area. But for non-tactical passing, creativity is needed in addition to talent.

Williams, nicknamed "White Chocolate," may not have the best passes in history, but he undoubtedly had the most creative (and flashy) ones.

So in terms of creativity, no one could compare to him.

If you find any errors ( Ads popup, ads redirect, broken links, non-standard content, etc.. ), Please let us know < report chapter > so we can fix it as soon as possible.

Tip: You can use left, right, A and D keyboard keys to browse between chapters.