murksiderock
Superstar
You're confusing two different things. Finals MVP and being the team's best player are not always the same. I've always said that Steph was the most important player for the Warriors in the 2015 Finals and that it was a toss-up between him and Durant in the 2017 and 2018 Finals. And I've said the main reason Steph didn't win Finals MVP in 17/18 was because the Cavs' defense focused on Steph rather than focusing on KD.
Shaq was the more essential player for the Lakers during the 2000-2002 stretch and that's undeniable. That's not just because he performed far better than Kobe in the 2000 Finals, 2001 Finals, and 2002 Finals and earned his unanimous Finals MVP every time, it's also because he finished far ahead of Kobe in MVP voting every year (accumulating 142 1st-place MVP votes in 3 years compared to just 1 total vote for Kobe), and because Shaq outperformed Kobe in the two closest series they had, the 2000 WCF and the 2002 WCF. It's indisputable breh and everyone agrees, sorry.
Nonsense. Are you going to claim Larry Bird wasn't the best player on the Celtics in 1981 or that Magic wasn't the best player on the Lakers in 1988 or that Steph wasn't the best player on the Warriors in 2015? Just stupid talk.
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Not. Even. Close.
Shaq: 27.2 / 10.7 / 3.0 on 58% shooting and 2 blocks/game
Kobe: 25.2 / 5.5 / 5.5 on 47% shooting and 1.5 steals/game
Shaq got 15 votes for 1st-place MVP, 696 points total
Kobe got 1 vote for 1st-place MVP, 98 points total
Shaq got 125 1st-team All-NBA votes
Kobe got 72 1st-team All-NBA votes (far fewer than Jason Kidd's 115 and also losing some 1st-team votes to Gary Payton and Allen Iverson)
If you care about advanced stats, Shaq led in EVERY one. Offensive Rating, Defensive Rating, Offensive BPM, Defensive BMP, Offensive Win Shares, Defensive Win Shares, and Value Over Replacement - literally every single one has Shaq ahead on both sides.
So in the regular season it was indisputable. How about the playoffs?
Shaq: 28.5 / 12.6 / 2.8 on 53% shooting and 2.5 blocks/game
Kobe: 26.6 / 5.8 / 4.6 on 43% shooting and 1.4 steals/game
Once again, Shaq led on every single advanced stat on both sides of the court, and by even bigger margins than the regular season
Finals?
Shaq: 36.3 / 12.3 / 3.8 on 60% shooting and 2.8 blocks/game
Kobe: 26.8 / 5.8 / 5.3 on 51% shooting and 1.5 steals/game
Western Conference Finals, the Lakers' only competitive series that year?
Shaq: 30.3 / 13.6 / 1.6 on 53% and 2.4 blocks/game
Kobe 27.1 / 6.3 / 3.9 on 42% and 1.4 steals/game
Shaq was better in the regular season, better in the postseason, better in the biggest playoff series and better in the FInals. Both regular season and playoffs he had better stats, better advanced stats, and better recognition from the voters.
Time to give this one up breh. Kobe has always had the fan love, that's how he got to the 1998, 2014, 2015, and 2016 All-Star games. He's never lacked for that fan support. But objectively he's no Shaq and he's no Duncan.
More than Stans of any other player ever, Kobe Stans have the most difficult time separating popularity from game and impact on winning basketball. It's ridiculous...
Because nobody wants to deal with those narratives.
Kobe fans would’ve never heard the end of it if Shannon Brown hit 9 threes a game in the Finals 