Lol, 07 Finals:
Parker: 25/5 on 57%
Duncan: 18/12 on 45%
Haha what?! It would have been the 5th quadruple double of all time. And it would have come in a Finals closeout game. That will almost certainly never be done again.
Lol, 07 Finals:
Parker: 25/5 on 57%
Duncan: 18/12 on 45%
Lol, so which is it? Parker wasn't even that good or he was feasting on Gibson? Make up your mind and get back with me.
Sure we'll ignore the fact that one actually had to play defense as well, and did it quite well. While the other was going up against 2 D-League lvl players, both of whom were dealing ankle/foot injuries, iirc.
** If timmy D doesn't care about this why should we.. Its not our record that is missing... Let big TD enjoy his vaca and we should as well..
I'll tell you the same thing I told another poster earlier.....a friend of mine shared this video with me and I was just passing it along.
Hahaha yah Big-Z was such a force. What's sad is that Tim shot so poorly against him, while Parker shot lights out being guarded by Hughes, then Gibson, then Lebron.
Duncan had plantar issues that season, but yeah, Tony definitely was the FMVP. '05 FMVP could have (should have) gone to Ginobili if we really want to go there. '13 would have been Timmy's if the Spurs could have grabbed a rebound.
To someone else's point, however, I don't think Tim loses any sleep over any of this, nor do his teammates. I guess the fans do, though.
What's not mentioned. He was going against a hobbled Larry Hughes and Boobie Gibson.
Duncan 100% deserved the 2005 FMVP... Horry with a close second.
I for one would want to see the game line stats rectified... not that Duncan cares... maybe they should make it official during his HOF induction...
Go back and watch the series. They switched Lebron on to him 4 minutes into G1.
Just found a hi-res slow-mo of Duncan's block that was recorded to Robinson. It's at 54:12 on the 2003 championship DVD. Add that to the clear block on Kittles that wasn't even recorded and it's a pretty indisputable quadruple double. Too bad the statisticians missed one of the greatest achievements in NBA history.
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