For those keeping track, "loser" Luka further extended his lead in points, rebounds, assists, and steals in this postseason over the rest of the NBA. He's playing banged up and still there's no player close to him.
This is a weird point to trumpet. There are only two teams left in these playoffs, so of course Luka extended his lead in the major counting stats over the likes of other stars who are no longer competing in the postseason.
Luka is an extreme offensive talent, but there are enough deficiencies in his game to make one wonder if he has what it takes to get over the hump. There's a reason he draws comparisons to James Harden, who likewise was an extreme offensive talent during his prime with enough deficiencies in his game to make one wonder if he had what it took to get over the hump.
If the insinuation here is that the Kings would be better off having drafted Luka than having not drafted him, then yeah, sure, I don't think many would dispute such a contention. But in such a scenario, everybody would
still be complaining about how endlessly Luka barks at the refs, how little focus he has on the defensive end, how he has a habit of icing out his teammates, and how regularly out of shape he is. There would probably be a healthy contingent of Kings fans that questioned whether or not Luka impacted winning in a meaningful way, and some who would assert that the Kings' second-best player was their
real best player, and the rest of us would be able to see it if only Luka wasn't so ball dominant.
In other words, Luka is a classically divisive superstar who has enormous talent (on one side of the ball) but isn't necessarily easy to root for because he hasn't yet discovered the importance of accountability for his own weaknesses.