Tony Parker won Finals MVP in '07 because he was the scorer of the series. Same reason Kobe won Finals MVP in '10 (and Billups in '04). Doesn't change the fact that Duncan and Gasol, respectively, were the most important players on those teams.
Hmm....during the 2010 Finals playoff run, Kobe had an insane 24.7 PER to Gasol's almost equally as insane 24.0. He averaged 29 points a game, 6 boards and 5.5 assists with a TS% of .567. He wasn't just a scorer. He was also a passer and a rebounder. Gasol averaged 19.6 points, 11.1 boards and 3.5 assists. I'm just not seeing an argument that Gasol was the more important player to the Lakers on that team during the postseason, regular season, or any other season ever in existence on any planet.
If one player on the team is the best during the regular season but isn't the primary contributor during the post-season, it doesn't much matter when considering their contribution to the team winning a championship, does it?
Again, tell me how Kobe wasn't the primary contributor during the postseason of that 2010 run when he averaged 29/6/6.
You're going to have a hard time convincing me Kobe's been in a less advantageous competitive situation in LA (which has all the money in the world to spend and tons of draw with FAs) than Duncan. Duncan's had good teams around him, but the plain fact of the matter is that the Spurs have NEVER been a bad team as long as Duncan's been playing. That's insane.
Are we seriously arguing that Kobe's championship team's 4-12 isn't significantly worse than the Duncan's? Regardless of competitive advantage/disadvantages, we only have the facts of what is in front of us which is the roster the two teams had.
Pau Gasol was the most important player in that 2010 run, particularly in the Finals, because the Lakers won by virtue of their major advantage scoring inside and on the boards. Gasol was the factor in that.
Kobe shot 6-24 in the deciding Game 7.
Gasol (and to a lesser extent Bynum) killed the Celtics and won the championship for the Lakers.
The same size advantage is what got the Lakers past the Thunder, the Jazz, and the Suns. Gasol had a really great post-season.
Soap, you're not going to convince me that Kobe wasn't similarly advantaged.
In the first three-peat, Kobe had the most dominant player on the planet (one of the most dominant ever) playing at center. He also had Rice, Horry, Fox, and Grant. In terms of the difficulty of the opponent, they faced the Sixers and the Nets (blech).
In the second run of 3 Finals, he had a stacked team with Gasol, Bynum, Odom, and Ariza / Artest.
It's strength at the top that matters in terms of winning a championship, and Kobe's hardly ever had any cause to complain about that. Kobe has always had talented teammates.