After the 80s, there were no MVP and a bunch of players who got FMVP:
—Andrei Iguodala (2015, Warriors)
Other honors: Overall Champion × 4, First Defense × 1, Second Defense ×1, All-Star × 1
—Paul Pierce (Celtic, 2008)
Other honors: Overall champion × 1, Second Team × 1, Third Team ×3, All-Star × 10
—Tony Parker (2007, Spurs)
Other honors: Overall champion × 4, Second Team × 3, Third Team ×1, All-Star × 6
- Chansi Billups (Pistons, 2004)
Other honors: Overall Champion × 1, Second Team × 1, Third Team × 2, Second Defense × 2, All-Star ×5
—Joe Dumas (1990, Pistons)
Other honors: Overall champion × 2, Second Team × 1, Third Team × 2, First Defense × 4, Second Defense × 1, All-Star × 6
—James Worthy (1988, Lakers)
Other honors: Overall champion × 3, Three-Team ×2, All-Star × 7
— Siddrik Maxwell (1981, Celtic)
Other honors: Overall champion ×2
......
Iguodala is not the only FMVP in history who is neither the boss of the team nor the league superstar;
A round of series, up to 7 games, few samples, role players occasionally erupt to steal the FMVP for the team's boss, is undoubtedly a huge blow.
In fact, as many netizens suggested, change the Finals MVP to the playoff MVP, so that the sample is more, and the data and performance are more objective.
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