The top ten players in the NBA's playoffs to average points per game are as follows:
Doncic is temporarily at the top of the list
First place: Doncic, 33.5 points, 13 games
Second place: Jordan, 33.4 points, 179 games
Third place: Morant, 30.0 points, 5 games
Fourth place: Iverson, 29.7 points, 71 games
Fifth place: Durant, 29.5 points, 151 games
Sixth place: West, 29.1 points, 153 games
Seventh place: Mitchell, 28.9 points, 33 games
Eighth place: Trae Young, 28.8 points, 16 games
Ninth place: James, 28.7 points, 266 games
Tenth place: Davis, 27.3 points, 39 games
Doncic: Two first-round trips
Jordan, : Six overall champions
Morant: A first-round tour
IVERSON: A Grand Finals
West: A championship
Durant: Two championships
Mitchell: Two round trips
Trae Young: A Eastern Conference Final
James: Four overall titles
Davis: A championship
(The above is the player's best result in the playoffs)
Although Doncic is currently in the first place of the list, it is somewhat embarrassing. What needs to be known is that Maddy was also once the first player to score points per game in the playoffs, but everyone also knows that Maddy has never broken through the first round during his career as the boss of the team (he is a water dispenser administrator at the Spurs), so for Doncic, his future road is still a long way to go, of course, these 13 playoff games, Doncic's personal performance is indeed quite explosive.
In addition, Morant, Trae Young, Davis and Mitchell have not played many games, all of which are less than 50 games, and for them, there is a long way to go in the future. Mitchell scored 57 points in the playoffs, which is also a rather explosive score, behind Jordan and Baylor, and temporarily ranks third highest in the league's playoff history.
James, Durant, Jordan, and West are worthy of historical scorers, and their games are all more than 150 games, which also shows that they not only have excellent scoring ability, but also can use this scoring ability to help the team win the game, and these 4 are also players with championship rings.
In the end, the answer is that Iverson's number of games is still relatively small overall. But in 2001, he single-core against the OK combination, and broke the Lakers' playoff unbeaten gold body, in that year alone, Iverson is enough to stay in history. Unfortunately, this eventually became Iverson's peak season. And Iverson's experience at the end of his career was lamentable, and the leader of the golden generation in '96 left the league after leaving a sentence I had never seen mvp play as a substitute. #NBA #