The last few posts have been absolutely outstanding! I agree with whomever said it, this is one of the best threads in some time.
While we all seem to concede that leadership can and must be one of the criteria whereby PG's are rated, indulge me in one point, if this thread had come up in the regular season, I would have said no, Parker doesn't belong in the discussion, primarily because while he is an integral part of the Spurs offense, he was NOT the floor general you would expect a PG to be, but as the season wound down, and positioning became important, I watched him have more of an inmpact in terms of output in crunch time, no small feat given the presence of Duncan and Ginobili, in the Finals he was a monster contributor, if not in actual assists, certainly in scoring, leading all Spurs scorers 3 of 4 games. Additionally, as has been noted, Finley comments tell me his impact off the court is indisputable evidence that he has elevated his role. I have said twice on this thread I think the playoffs may ver ywell have been his breakout period, only next season will tell.
If we were to put Deron Williams in the mix, as we have, he is clearly not the "floor general" of the Jazz, I daresday in terms of leadership there Boozer supplants him and a PG that has NEVER been top 10, Derek Fisher, has more of an impact at this point than Williams, although I see Williams if he continues at his current pace becoming a serious contender for top 2, he has it all, defense, scoring, court vision, GREAT hands, passing, a dominant type personality, but as with anyone so young, time will tell, Parker has tremendous experience and seems to be heading in the direction of becoming a floor general, and he is only 25, I do not believe Nash was at this level at that age, and although he is clearly the premier PG in the league, when we talk sytems and players performing within a certain system, if Kidd were in SA and Nash stayed in Phoenix, Kidd would IMO be the premier PG and Nash would be #2, reverse it and Kidd would still be #1, becasue Nash would struggle in Popovich's ball and tempo control defense oriented scheme, Kidd would thrive in either system. Does Parker have the ability to adjust? I say yes, he is infinately coachable and as such a very valuable commodity in today's spoiled punk laden NBA. These are the intangables that can't be discounted whe discussing Tony Parker.