@Budweiser: Does this mean that only players who shoot well and often can be Finals MVPs? What about Regular Season MVPs?
@Donghus: Can we only give out the regular season MVP award to the best player on the team with the most wins in a regular season?
@Anyone who was alive and watching: Did Hondo really deserve the Finals MVP nod over Kareem,or did he get it "just" because the C's won the title? I think Kareem is an interesting case here, since he averaged 32/15/5 (which is, I think, the most outstanding Finals stat line from a player who didn't win the award), but I'm too young to have firsthand impressions of the series.
I few both awards differently. In the Finals it has to be more results oriented than in the regular season, and by that I mean results in the win-loss column of a team.
That's the first part.
Secondly, no not only players who shoot well and often can be Finals MVP. I do think though, that shooting well is that bare minimum a player on a losing team needs to have in order to be awarded the MVP trophy over someone in the winning team (exceptions could be studied if the winning team doesn't seem to have a player that seems deserving of the award, not the case this time around). Doing a lot of great things outside of this is not enough for me. Worth considering, but I don't think that a poor shooting LeBron James is a better candidate for MVP as a losing team, if they lose, than what Curry is currently doing while winning.
For example, I think Iggy has been extremely valuable, and until a couple of games ago, I would've put him ahead of Curry as my MVP candidate if Golden State won, but right now Curry has gone and solidified it for himself.