The true question here when you're talking about Top anything is to really decide where would you feel comfortable selecting a player to build your team. Let's say for instance there is a draft where the stipulation on all 30 teams is they must select a PG with their first round pick. Not a combo-guard, not a point forward, not a shooting guard, a true PG. In what order does one person really select the Point Guards not being assured of ANYTHING concerning your team makeup. You're not assured of having a compliment like Shaq, Tim Duncan, Kevin Garnett, Amare Stoudemire, Carlos Boozer, etc. You're not assured of anything. All you know is everyone in the NBA has been thrown into a free agent pool and you have to make a PG selection with your first pick. Steve Nash goes first, Jason Kidd goes second, is Tony Parker really the next selection? Lurker selects Gilbert Arenas and said he would think about Tony Parker at #4. Is that true Lurker? You would really pass up Chris Paul's 17 points, 8 assists, 2 steals, and 83% free throw shooting (at the age of 22)? How about Deron Williams 16 points, 9 assists, and one of the best man defenders at PG in the league (at the age of 23)? How about Chaucey Billups' 17 points, 7 assists, career 88% from the line, career 38% (at 4.3 attempts/game) from three pointer, and one of the finest all around defenders. How about Baron Davis 18 points, 8 assists, 2 steals, probably with the type of talent that is still yet to be unleashed due to injuries. How about Stephon Marbury (and before I get laughed off the board), until 2 years ago, the man was a mortal lock for 20 points and 8 assists and he's only 30. How about Mike Bibby and his 17 points and 6 assists, and terrific shooting percentages.
With the exception of Stephon Marbury (because of his attitude), I would take every single person I've just listed before Tony Parker when the metal meets the grindstone and I'm pressed for a selection. After those 8 point guards begins the real guess work of: Is Tony Parker for real? Is Raymond Felton ready to be a PG? Is Mo Williams really that good or just a one year wonder? Will Andre Miller regain the form that saw him average 11 assists a game? Can Leandro Barbosa play point? Will T.J. Ford, Luke Ridnour, and Jarrett Jack ever truly put it all together. Now out of those players I would definitely understand making Tony Parker the highest selection, for my money I still would gamble on Andre Miller and might take Raymond Felton and then I would select Tony Parker. That would make him my 10th overall selection and maaaaybe the 11th.
And I don't much by into NBA Finals MVPs because quite honestly in 2004, when they handed the award to Chauncey Billups, I thought Tayshaun Prince was more deserving of the award. I also didn't buy into the fact that Chauncey was a top Point Guard in the league back then, it took him performing the way he has for the last three years AFTER he got the Finals MVP for me to put him up there. So its great and all that Tony Parker performed well enough in the Finals against a bad team to garner the award but he'll have to show me more to be elevated.
Even though a players talent and basketball sense is much, MUCH more than mere statistics and I've offered many reasons why I would choose others over Tony Parker; I find it amazing the amount of value that is placed in Tony Parker concerning an endeavor that is nothing but statistics--namely Fantasy Basketball. No one who plays Fantasy to win cares about names, intangibles, chemistry issues, fiancees, championships, attitudes, or anything except cold, hard statistics, numbers, and projections. Even on this avenue where ONLY statistics matter, Tony Parker is consistently chosen out of the Top 10 amongst PG only. Perhaps his performance in the playoffs have changed that, we'll see where he goes in this year's draft--but my feeling says he'll still toil around the 10th, 11th or 12th PG chosen.