Do you NOT think an additional record from Jayson devalues his achievement, and thus each successive one as well?
It does.
I look at that issue from a different (admittedly totally subjective) perspective:
-- "Godfather II" didn't devalue the excellence and worth of "Godfather I". Both films quite deservedly won multiple awards, huge audiences and jillions of network-evergreen ($$$$$$) TV replays for decades.
-- Historic world championship boxing matches performed by the same fighter and captured on film don't devalue each other at all (for me).
These superficially seem like apples-to-oranges comparisons (great films to 14.1 mega-runs, to great boxers), but the historic, great achievements cited are all entertaining, instructive, suspenseful, memorable, and re-watchable as they unfold for us -- if (and only if) -- you're a fan of any of these.
And so it is with aficionado watchers of ultra-talented players establishing and breaking 14.1 mega-run records. The navigation of every new rack is a series of new situations requiring solutions that are optimal and mysteriously instinctive to Jayson. Optimal enough to make the process look ridiculously easy and so enviably admirable.
Arnaldo
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