A lot of great points have been raised so I won't repeat them -- to me, this NBA Finals was also about "Guys Who Grind." So much has been made of the Miami undrafted group, but if you just look across the contributors:
Denver -- Murray seems like a hard worker, otherwise MPJ is the only real "pretty boy star" of the bunch. KCP is a hard-working, grind-it-out defender who has gotten so much better over time. Aaron Gordon grinds and has morphed himself into what he needs to be. Jokic -- 41st overall pick -- yes he's absurdly talented but he has transformed his body to be able to sustain this. Bruce Brown -- 42nd overall pick -- built on the grind. Braun was in the 20s and is there for his hustle and work ethic.
Miami -- Bam is the closest thing to a bona fide lottery pick star and he was #14. Grinds. Jimmy late first rounder, known for the grind. Vincent, Strus, Robinson, Martin...all have worked so hard. Lowry same thing.
I guess my point here is that we often fall so in love with pure talent and this NBA Finals to me was a refresh on how much success in this league can be driven by mindset. When you are picking a 20-year-old, you should of course incorporate talent into your evaluation as a priority but as long as the athleticism is there, so much of the player's success is going to be driven by mindset. Is he going to grind from the beginning relentlessly? Is he going to wait until he's 33 and having a mid-life crises of empty stats and no championships?
Defense is 90% mindset. Rebounding is 90% mindset. Turnovers are 90% mindset. Cutting without the ball is 90% mindset. So much of this can be taught...if the teacher is right and the student is ready for it. Otherwise it's salivating over talent that will never come to fruition.