It figures you guys would have the great point guard debate while I'm snowed under at work.
I wanna get in on this, dammit!
Quick summary: the biggest question in deciding how good a point guard is is in his ability to eliminate question marks; coaches hate uncertainty, and top point guards eliminate uncertainty.
And that's really the knock on evaluating Tony Parker as a point guard vs. Tony Parker as the point guard for the Spurs. The guy leaves a lot of question marks - partly because he has not been in a situation where he's had to answer those questions. A lot of the answers FOR THE SPURS are provided by Duncan, Ginobilli, and even Horry and Finley. Most simply assume that Parker would be fine when faced with bigger challenges, whereas I DON'T make that assumption.
If there's 7 seconds on the clock with his team down by one, and Parker's teammates are WayOut, JoMal, Skander, and me, how comfortable do you feel in your chances, versus how comfortable you'd feel with Chris Paul in the same situation? How comfortable would you be with the game depending on Parker or Paul's chances of generating a shot for WayOut, and then getting the pass to him? How comfortable would you be if he was forced to choose between JoMal and Skander...how would you feel about his decision-making? How comfortable would you be if he were at the line, down by 1, with two free throws and no time on the clock?
Popovich obviously values Ginobilli higher in these situations...as well he should.
You see, there's just a lot of questions still out there about how good Parker is. Many of the other point guards in the league have answered those questions - folks like Deron Williams, Chris Paul, and even Jason Williams - some in the affirmative and some in the negative. My tendency is to rate Parker HIGHER than those who have answered in the negative, but BELOW those who have answered in the affirmative.
Jason Kidd is an awful shooter. Jason Terry is a good one. But which would you rather have with the ball at the end of a game, when you're down? Kidd has eliminated more of the doubt - you better know what you will get with Kidd than you do with Terry. Those question marks that you have about Terry make him less valuable than Kidd - even though there's little doubt that Terry would be more likely to hit the shot.
That's why I was big on Nash when he was still in Dallas...it's why I'm still big on Baron Davis...it's why I'm big on young players like Deron Williams, Ray Felton, and even Jarret Jack. WHAT DO THEY DO when it comes crunch time...and would I rather have them doing it than Tony Parker, and am I more sure about them than I am about Tony Parker?
So much for a quick summary. But I do have a lot more to add...point guards are a topic near and dear to my heart.