Gooner wrote:70sFan wrote:Gooner wrote:
Tony Parker is one of the best point guards of his generation. He definitely belongs in the same class as Manu. He was a finals MVP.
He was a finals MVP in a series in which he was at best 3rd best player.
How? What makes you think he was the third best player?
The fact that he has the weakest +/-, AuPM and only marginally better BPM than Manu (weaker than Duncan). It means that he looks the weakest from impact perspective and doesn't look better from boxscore perspective. Also, the fact that Spurs won this series with their defense and Parker was the weakest defender among starters.
You can make a case that he was better than Manu because of Manu horrible performance in game 3, but Ginobili was better in other games. Duncan had only one bad game in that series (also game 3), but he was clearly the best player in the rest of the series. Duncan looks better from boxscore perspective and they don't capture defensive impact where Timmy crushes Parker.
Ben Taylor also recently shared a podcast on his Patreon account where he compares boxscore and impact metrics to evaluate FMVPs from last 20 years and he said that Parker looks the weakest from both perspective from his point of view, so it's not like I'm alone here.
Averages can be misleading in such a small sample of size. Not always the leading scorer is the best player on the team. Duncan was clearly the best player on Spurs team and Manu was more impactful in his best games, though he had one stinker in game 3. Anyway, Parker wasn't clear best player in that series and he was 3rd best Spurs player throughout the whole season and postseason, so it shouldn't be surprising for us.