Monday, April 13th, 2009 at 6:44 pm  |  105 responses

Awards Season

The Commish Picks.

by Vincent Thomas / @vincecathomas

This is probably an amnesiac thing to say, but, I don’t remember more “discussion” taking place around such an ironclad awards season in the NBA. Yeah, there are candidates, but the winners are pretty clear, right? Are we really “discussing” and “debating” who should be the League’s MVP or Coach of the Year? I mean, those joints are in the bag. Still, even though I know my picks are exactly the same as your picks, I thought that I’d offer — as The Commish, after all — my explanation as to why I’m in agreement with what will surely be this season’s unanimous winners…

EXECUTIVE OF THE YEAR
Mark Warkentien, Denver Nuggets

I love what Otis Smith did in Orlando. Snagging Rafer Alston to replace Jameer Nelson was as deft as you can get when it comes to navigating what was a developing crisis. But, on a fundamental level, that was a desperation move. Danny Ferry brought Mo Williams to Cleveland, which has worked out better than any of us expected. But, let’s be real, that was a “let’s get Bron some more pieces” move. Warkentien’s decision to ship to A.I. to Detroit for Chauncey Billups was calculated and prescient. Chauncey is consistently overlooked for what he actually brings to a squad. He not only hits big shots, but he controls tempo and mood. He is this league’s truest exhibit of the “coach on the floor” archetype, because he leads and guides his squads with play, words and temperament. That was exactly what Denver — littered with mercurial cats like J.R., Melo and Kenyon — needed to move from a dangerous circus outfit, to a legit contender.

MOST IMPROVED PLAYER
Rajon Rondo, Boston Celtics

Last season, I argued that LeBron, Kobe and Chris Paul were the most improved players in the League, since each of them improved one or more aspects of their games so thoroughly that they went from having great seasons to historically great seasons that impacted and pervaded throughout the League. My point is that I look at this award as a wayImpactful to recognize impactful improvement, not simply statistical leaps. Last season, Danny Granger and Kevin Durant were really good young players. Now they’re Top 15, maybe Top 10-type players. But their teams don’t matter. Paul Millsap is gonna kop a nice payday, due to his marked improvement. But Booz came back and he went right back to the bench. Devin Harris is an All-Star now … for the New Jersey Nets. But Rondo’s improvement is the most compelling. Rondo went from last season’s “question mark” status, the possible chink in Boston’s armor, to taking his rightful place in what is really the Cs’ Big Four. He’s one of the seven best point guards in the League, a true point guard. And he has earned — in just his third year — respect and even periodic deference from three Hall-of-Famers. He’s not a question mark any longer and that’s the reason that Boston, even as the Big Three age, is still arguably the best squad in the league. Rondo, quiet as kept, was Boston’s MVP. Now that’s a Leap.

BENCH PLAYER OF THE YEAR
Trevor Ariza, Los Angeles Lakers

The Sixth Man of the Year award is kind of bogus. This should be an award we use to recognize a “true” bench player, an unsung man in the rotation that comes off the bench and, in limited minutes, impacts the game Like a hurricanein a way that routinely helps his squad win. Lamar Odom, Jason Terry and Manu Ginobili are starters (even pseudo All-Stars) masquerading as sixth men. My candidates are actual bench players, dudes like J.R. Smith, Travis Outlaw, Nate Robinson, Brandon Bass, James Posey and Ariza. Nate and J.R. are explosive and volatile. They can take over games and win them, but they’re the culprits in losing a lot, too. I love Outlaw coming off Portland’s bench, but no bench player has routinely impacted games on the level of Ariza, this season. Yeah, he starts now, but in the 60-plus games he played as a reserve, Ariza was usually L.A.’s fourth- or fifth-best player; many times, he was second only to Kobe in terms of impact. What he does on the defensive end is sometimes startling. He wreaks absolute havoc. I mean, the dude is all over the court, taking the ball from cats, getting in passing lanes, crashing the boards, drawing fouls, filling the lane on breaks. He’s like a hurricane out there. And unlike J.R. and Nate, he adheres to his role and tries not to do dumb stuff. When he’s not starting, he’s the best bench player in the game.

DEFENSIVE PLAYER OF THE YEAR
Dwight Howard, Orlando Magic

Remember when I said that all of the award winners should be cinches, this season? I lied. This one is tough. You have a dude like Chris Paul that totally disrupts the opposition’s offense with his ball-pressure, steals and “added-bonus” defensive rebounding from the point guard position; and then there’s a dude like Howard that controls the boards and the paint. I’m giving it to Dwight for this reason: You don’t come in the lane with the big-boy down there, which means Orlando’s comp shoots a lot of Js and they miss them those more often than they make them and, of course, Dwight is usually grabbing the board and giving his squad another possession. In the end, his defensive impact is just a tad more dynamic and broad than Paul’s.

ROOKIE OF THE YEAR
Derrick Rose, Chicago Bulls

O.J. Mayo? Are you kidding me? Russell Westbrook? Word? Look. This rookie class has been exceptional. I see about eight future All-Stars. But there shouldn’t be a discussion, here.  Rose came into the season facing the pressure and shouldering the burden of being the No. 1 pickObama approved., playing for his hometown Bulls. He was thrust into a starting role in the game’s most demanding position. To make matters more challenging, he was playing on a young squad without a leader and for a coach whom many of his teammates disliked. Through a season that included a coaching change and roster overhaul, he’s put up 16, 6 and 4 and helped the Bulls get into the postseason. Meanwhile, O.J. and Russ play for two of the worst teams in the League and O.J. has often played like the typical “numbers guy on a bad squad.” Rose better be a unanimous pick.

COACH OF THE YEAR
Stan Van Gundy (aka, Master of Panic), Orlando Magic

I salute Nate McMillan, Mike Brown, Phil Jackson, Doc Rivers, Rick Adelman, Greg Popovich and Jerry Sloan for exceptional coaching jobs this season. But one dude stands out, the dude with the shoulder pads in his suit jackets. Think about this: Orlando, a team with no real defensive stoppers is one the best defensive teams in the league. That’s coaching. There’s man-to-man defense and then there’s team defense. Team defense is all about help and rotation. Watch the Magic get after it on defense. Those dudes rotate and help with purpose, intensity and a collective idea of when and where to be. That’s a commitment to not letting the other squad score, that’s coaching. Think about this: a team with no real go-to-guy, a squad that basically relies and a bunch of drives and kicks, a team without any true “creators” is one of the best offensive squads in the League. That’s coaching. Van Gundy has taken a team and led them to a product that is greater than the sum of its parts. They shouldn’t have won 52 games last season and they surely shouldn’t be on pace to win 60 this season, but they did and they are. 19-7 since Jameer went down. There’s no comp, here.

MOST VALUABLE PLAYER
LeBron James, Cleveland Cavaliers

The MVP debate was the hot topic at one of my last visit to the barbershop, but I told the fellas that I wouldn’t participate until the debate evolved from “Who’s the MVP?” to “Who, besides LeBron, is the MVP?” Once we agreed to focus on the only thing worth arguing — who’s No. 2? — I broke it down like this: the MVP award is about the team and the player. In my eyes, I assign a value to a team and then look at a player’s contribution/value to that squad.

So, brass tacks — the Miami Heat are a middling, barely .500 squad that, at most, will provide some nice conference semi Bron-DWade action. They are not contenders, they do not matter on any broad scale for this year’s NBA. So the fact that DWade has meant so much to them doesn’t really make him all that valuable. Look at these teams like they’re companies. The Heat are not a Microsoft or even an Apple. They are a middle-rung software company with no real influence in the industry and staff of employees that probably couldn’t get an interview at any of the Silicon Valley heavyweights. Wade, its CEO, is brilliant and beyond essential for the company’s relative success, maybe even more essential than Steve Jobs is to Apple, but who, given the value and cachet of their companies, is the more valuable employee? Right. So please shut up with the Wade For MVP chants.

Howard’s defensive presence is probably the chief reason that his squad is close to 60 victories and one of five or six teams with a legit shot at the title. But he’s also a late-game liability on offense because his squad can’t dump it down to him, get out the way and say “go to work.” There are four dudes that truly deserve to be in the No. 2 discussion — Kobe, Billups, Duncan and CP3. The Spurs played large chunks of the season without Parker and Ginobili. Duncan was the constant and, as usual, San Antonio clocked in at 50-plus. Billups totally rewired the Nuggets and would be my pick for Coach of the Year, if he were eligible. But although both were stabilizers and leaders and performers, neither was transcendent.

Kobe was, though. 27, 5 and 5 on 47 percent shooting for a 65-win squad. Chris Webber said it best when he asserted that we take Kobe for granted. Because he hasn’t hit us with a rash of 50-point Chris The Paulgames, because there haven’t been as many theatrics as years past, we look at this season as somewhat of a down year for Kobe. That’s absurd. Kobe’s paced, subtle, spot-picking brilliance for, arguably, the League’s best and most relevant squad is getting shamefully devalued.

He’d be my No. 2, if it weren’t for Chris Paul turning in a season that’s featured production like we’ve never seen before. 23, 11, 6 and 3. Like I wrote last week for NBA.com, “that statline makes me wince.” Yeah, last season the Hornets won 56 games and this year they might stay at 49 or win 51, at best. But, given that the Hornets may be the League’s most oft-injured squad, this season, the fact that they’re even made the Playoffs in the West is an accomplishment that I attribute almost solely to CP3. Again, from last week’s CP3 column: “Think about the downright thorough and all-encompassing impact he has on the full 94 feet of hardwood. First he runs the offense, then he’ll create some type of bucket for him or a teammate, then go and disrupt the other team’s offense with ball pressure, either take the ball from some nervous schlep or barrel his way to a rebound and start the process all over again. Not only should he be in one the MVP discussion, he should be the leader in the Defensive Player of the Year debate, as well.” Chris is as important to his team as Wade — maybe even more. The difference is that his team wins more, in a tougher conference. New Orleans, as a squad, is worth more than the Miami. CP3 is my No. 2.

Vincent Thomas is a columnist and feature writer for SLAM, a contributing commentator for ESPN and writes the weekly “From The Floor” column for NBA.com. You can email him your feedback at vincethomas79@gmail.com or “follow” him on Twitter at @vincecathomas.

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  • http://www.stonesthrow.com/ Michael NZ

    Bruise Bowen. Haha yeah thats what I meant. Share that one 50/50 then Darksaber? Of course, would be better he he was 27 rather that 37.

  • Pardeep

    MVP: Kobe Bryant. Best player on the planet can score anytime he wants and plays in an offence were he cant get as many assists. The man averaged 35 points a game two years that is dominance for some strange reason I never hear bout that but I here a lot about D-wade “dominating the league” averaging 29 ppg? Kobe has not slown down he can score wen he wants on who he wants and has aredi made it clear he is saving it up for the playoffs beacuse he is not in his early 20′s like LeBron who can play longer. Kobe has to save his scoring and agressiveness up for the ultimate goal something LeBron is trying to get aswell but will not get because KOBE will be too much for him to handle. Trust me we aint even saying anywhere near the best of Kobes abiltiy this season. Im preety sure LeBron will be playing this way if he is desprate for a championship and has failed in the finals twice. Kobe will prove again why he is the best in the world just like he did in the final seconds of USA v.s. Spain and you will all eat ur words.

    MIP: Danny Granger

    Coach of the year: Stan Van Gundy. NO IT IS NOT GEORGE KARL HE IS ONLY GOING TO WIN 5 more games than last year and the Nuggets defence is still pathetic just because they did decent against the Lakers dont mean its good.

    Exec of the year: Otis Smith

    ROY: Derrick Rose

    DPOY: Dwight Howard

    6th Man of the year: Ariza

  • http://www.droseroy.com/ airs

    DROSE by a LANDSLIDE
    all i care about, really.

  • http://nba.com tealish

    I like the article, but I’m confused. You name Dwight as your DPOY but then you cite Orlando’s strong defensive in spite of not having a defensive force, as justification for giving Van Gundy Coach of the Year?

  • http://nba.com tealish

    That should be strong defense*

  • http://jamescleaton.ning.com jaymes

    Deep down, the guys that are on here barricking for Kobe as MVP, wouldn’t be too upset if LBJ gets MVP. Conversly, Lebron fans, would deep down, feel a little hard done by if Kob’ got it….

  • frank castle

    MIP danny granger 6th man jr smith DPOY chris the birdman anderson

  • rikson

    MOP: I dont get that “great impovement but hes playin on a bad team”- argument!? Shpuld the MOP be about improvement on a player and not a team basis. I mean the guys cant choose… Its not grangers or harris fault their playin on mediocre teams, and in the same way rondo is not responsible for playin on a contender!

  • rikson

    * MIP

  • neaorin

    I don’t agree with Warkentien for EOY. Good luck paying eight figures to four guys for the next two years when people won’t renew their season tickets because of the crappy economy. Unless you think a move like this makes them favorites to win a title, this kind of thing should factor into the decision IMO.

  • http://www.hibachi20.blogspot.com Hursty

    How come the Rockets always seem to get overlooked?
    Darryl Morey is GM of the Year. He’s done the best job by far of solidyfying a squad thats been decimated by injury.
    They brought in Ron Artest for (basically) scraps.
    They re-signed Deke – who just proved how good he still is.
    Von Wafer has been a shining light this year, and has improved out of sight.
    They got rid of ever streaky Rafer Alston, and brought in another defensive guard in Lowry- who nobody expected to do anything, but has played the 4th quarter in tight games.
    I mean, what does Darryl Morey have to DO to get more respect?
    They re-signed Landry too when the Cats came calling.

    Credit has to go to Adelman for getting Artest to 1. come off the bench. 2. Make him play the 2 once McGrady went down. 3. Getting Ron to calm the f*ck down in critical occassions.

    Still, IMO, any way you slice it Morey has done the best job of improving/stabilising (whatever words you want to use) the Rockets.

  • http://www.twitter.com/mansonovic Andy

    Why is Warkentien getting the credit for a move that Joe Dumars was actively pushing from the end of last season? If anything, Dumars should get it for services to the Denver Nuggets.

  • http://www.basketballjerseyworld.com nba-jersey-king

    great article – I agree with a lot of points made especially about rookie of the year because a lot of people are saying maybe Mayo, or B-Easy, Chalmers, Eric Gordon, Russ, even the Nets Lopez…. all have had good seasons but none have had it as tough as Rose.

    I would look at JR Smith as the no.1 bench guy though….

  • Bruno, RJ

    very good article and nothing would make me happier than seeing CP3 taking the MVP after the season-long debate Lebron or Kobe….
    and I actually think CP deserves it.
    well… 1 thing would indeed make me happier… remember Dirk?
    well, lebron could take the MVP but loose in the 1st round… that would be great. :D
    too bad they now have Mo… the single cavs player with BALLS.

  • http://www.kb24.com The Seed

    I agree with the comments on Kobe Bryant, see people were making fun of my assists lead to assits comment, but that is what the triangle offense is predicated on. MJ didn’t have a lot of triple doubles in his career with the Bulls when Phil came along. Plus Lebron is a small forward and he is suppose to rebound, the assists are the bonus, because he has the ball 85% of the time and he has one pass to shooters on the three line. OK people like Lebron, I get and the article on ESPN is stupid with the 18 voters, Kobe is 3rd and Wade is getting rewarder for coming on the second half of the season. Kobe should have 3 MVPs by now and Lebron will win, he is Golden Child now, but I feel Kobe team is not as good as everyone makes and the Lakers making 8th seed with Gasol is dumb with the West being so good. How was Gasol as the starting center for Memphis. HMMM!!! Kobe should get MVP, this year to me he is playing less 4th quarters than any of the players, Dwade is playing all the quarters and never sitting down. Thats why to me, Stats mean nothing. and Taking the player of the team stuff is how Steve Nash got two awards-STUPID. SO Shaq will have one, and Kobe will have one, This does not make sense.

  • Dave

    There’s some big, fat rocks of crack going ’round the crowd today.

  • http://sfdjilf.com Jukai

    I love this article, but I STILL don’t get the Duncan love. The dude’s legs are falling off his body. Why would he be in conversation for MVP? I feel that, as the best power forward ever to grace the game (in my mind, by a large margin), people refuse to look at him as a 33-year-old with bad legs.
    Can’t complain too much though, good article.

  • http://sfdjilf.com Jukai

    *referee blows the whistle*
    Technical on The Seed. Lebron plays off the ball in the first quarter and sits the second. He only starts controlling the ball in the third.
    *referee blows his whistle immediately again*
    Technical on The Seed. Kobe should only have one MVP, the second one that Nash had. Last year’s MVP was unrightfully taken from Chris Paul and given to Kobe because people felt bad Kobe didn’t have one.
    I was thinking of calling a flagrant two at that “The triangle is meant to make the extra pass” BS you’re throwing out! The entire Spurs offense is centered around throwing the ball around the perimeter so that when the ball finally reaches the shooter, the defense has shifted to the side the ball was originally thrown too. And remember: the Cavaliers are pretty much a clone of the Spurs because Brown learned under Pop-A-Zit.
    The only real time Lebron can just toss it to a shooter without the second pass coming is this giant, five-man pick-and-roll that the team always runs, which usually leaves one of the two guards on the floor open from the three point line (or Z from the top of the key).

  • Kulchakris

    The problem with MVP is the ambiguity regarding criteria. Is it the league’s best player? Is it the best player on the best team? Is it the player that has the greatest impact on his team, regarldless of record? I tend to think it’s the latter, but that’s just me.

    As for Seed’s contention, let’s not forget that Pau was an all-star in Memphis, and the team made the playoffs once with Pau as their offensive leader. Sure the West is tough, but a team with Pau, Bynum, Lamar, and Phil Jackson at the helm would challenge for the 8th spot.

  • Tavoris

    great post…Bron’s numbers are virtually identical to his career numbers, but he has been one of the most dominant forces in NBA HISTORY this year. Take him off the Cavs and they aren’t in the playoffs.

    Howard has had the DPOY wrapped up since November…no argument there.

    Good explanation on Ariza…he’s always been undervalued, and a victim of having a contract that makes him attractive in ANY trade scenario. He’s a definite upgrade over any SF the Lakers put out there the last few years. Ginobili has won this too much. He’s a starter that just doesn’t start games. Terry too.

    Can’t argue with SVG for COTY, but Jerry Sloan is way overdue. The fact that the Jazz are in the playoffs in the west with his two best players out (or ineffective) for extended stretches is amazing.

  • http://slamonline.com Ben Osborne

    Good stuff, Vince. Amen on DRose.

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  • Ders

    Coach of the year: Mike Brown
    MIP: Jeff Green, or Chris Andersen
    6th Man: JR Smith
    MVP: LeBron James
    ROY: Derrick Rose
    DPOY: Dwight Howard

  • truthteller

    Do you know when I think the MVP became what it is now? It was when the “expert” media reporters and even the NBA thought it would be a great idea to give Nash his second straight MVP award! Before then, it was always given to the player who had the most outstanding year. The player who played the best basketball that year! Not the best player, not the most valuable to his team but the player who played the best that year! They had to justify giving it to Nash rather than Kobe who clearly deserved it that year in 06! So they came up with all kind of definitions for what MVP means which I had never heard of unitl that year! They tried to give Nash the award the 3rd time and I think that’s when the public started talking and they realised it wouldn’t go down too well with fans! It’s so obvious that something isn’t right ’cause it’s been ridiculous ever since!

  • Krishan

    Am I the only one here who thinks chris andersen should win the MIP?

  • Krishan

    Sorry, didn’t see ders’ comment. Carry on.

  • Krishan

    Seriously though, after being completely non-existent last season, he comes back and averages 6pts, 6rebs, 2.5blks in !20 MINUTES A GAME! Birdman for MIP, AND sixth man.

  • http://sfdjilf.com Jukai

    truthteller: Can you explain to me why Bill Russel got the MVP over Wilt Chamberlain and Oscar Robertson… when Wilt averaged 50 and Robertson averaged a triple double?
    Maybe you just weren’t listening very hard until Nash won his MVP.

  • Ders

    Good to see I’m not the only one who thinks C.Andersen is MIP. His game is a lot better than last year, and especially his defense. And he is blocking how many shots? Let me count. In April Andersen has blocked 25 shots. Even with zero blocks against Lakers, and two against T-Wolves. Plus some blocks against Portland tomorrow?

  • Khalid Salaam

    Vince always brings the heat so no disrespect….I just can’t take NBA awards seriously anymore. There is too much politickin, too much group-think and too much bs. I just don’t respect it anymore. The award system for the nba is not as bad as mlb which i think focuses too hard on stats but its inferior to the nfl system. The nfl gets it right more often than not. the colts werent the best team in the league last year (they didnt even win their division) but mannings ability to uplift an aging and injury depleted squad was recognized. james harrison isn’t a nfl star (he’s not even the biggest def. name on his team, that would be polamalu) but he deserved the dpoy award. mike smith isn’t remotely famous but was a 1st yr coach on a team that sucked the previous season and the nfl acknowledged what he did and gave him the coy. these are inspired, honest choices. why can’t the nba do that? how is it that jerry sloan have never won coy? or that kobe has 1 mvp when he’s been the best player in the world for like 5 consecutive seasons? i hate that its always so predictable, so boring and so tv friendly. its like the oscars. its corny. sorry to ruin the party but its true.

  • http://sfdjilf.com Jukai

    Khalid: You thought Manning deserved the MVP last season? That was the biggest cop-out award I’ve ever seen the NHL give out.
    I thought you were in hiding after Phili and the Wizards collapsed after your whole “THEY’RE GOING TO SHOW YOU GUYS” speech…

  • Khalid Salaam

    jukai: what the hell are you talking about?

  • Kulchakris

    I have to agree with Khalid regarding NBA awards. The MVP award in particular (case in point, Nash’s back-to-back awards) is such a moving target, fans are unsure as to what it really means. I guess that’s why there are so many disparate opinions being posted here.

  • http://sfdjilf.com Jukai

    Well, the last thing I remember you typing here was how the Wizards were going to turn their season around after about 15 games in and that we were all morons for doubting them.
    Then I didn’t see you post again.
    And now you’ve returned.
    You also said something similar about Phili.
    I mean, just reminding you and all.

  • Josh D

    Executive of the year- Mark Warkentien
    MIP- Devin Harris
    Sixth man-Jason Terry
    DPOY-Dwight Howard
    ROY-OJ Mayo
    COY-Mike Woodson
    MVP Lebron James

  • Khalid Salaam

    So Jukai, you’re saying i havent posted since early December because i’m trying to hide out? Really??? WOW…..i’ve posted several times since. Seriously……to your point what i probably said was something to the effect that people were overreacting to early season developments and its best to wait a while (early jan) before making an assessment. to that i say the wiz panicked and fired eddie jordan only to now bring in flip saunders. how is that better? maybe if someone from the wiz listened to my advice they could have kept the better coach. in regards tot he sixers, i recall everyone saying the season was over in dec after they got off to a slow start. i said don’t worry they’ll make the playoffs no doubt. Uh, they clinched about a week and a half ago. What exactly is your point? I’m not trying to clown you only confused about what are trying to accomplish?

  • http://mindyourbusiness@getalife.com Allenp

    I thought Adrian Peterson was the most valuable player in the NFL last year, not Manning. That dude was the ultimate difference maker.
    As far as the real League, I can’t argue too much with Vince, although I think everybody is riding the Nuggets nuts way too hard. Like somebody said, check their record compared to last year. The West is weaker this year. Last year 50 wins was only good enough for eighth.

  • http://www.rich-imaging.com Dutch Rich

    MVP=The clutchiest of clutch SOB in the game=The dude that will force the play to get you the win=The guy who’s whole army you fear because he’s at the helm. That Geezer=MVP
    Why is this so hard for people?

  • Krishan

    Josh D must be a hawks fan

  • Teddy-the-Bear

    Yes, Z, five more attempts for Kobe. So what? Is Wade averaging 35 ppg? Did Wade drope 60 points like 3 times the way Kobe did? What’s Wade’s career high, 55?
    What’s your point? If Kobe didn’t get it that year, Wade shouldn’t. Keep in mind that Kobe was the best player in the league back then, and still is.
    Wade isn’t even the best right NOW.
    And I like Dwade.

  • http://sfdjilf.com Jukai

    Khalid Salaam: I think I didn’t like how you brushed off MVP because you didn’t like the current criteria was but instead of arguing that point, I was busy so I just decided to poke fun at your previous assessment that the Wizards were going to pick up their season. My posts aren’t very complicated to deconstruct, Khaalid.

  • http://sfdjilf.com Jukai

    You know what’s sort of lost nowadays?
    The fact that MVP isn’t “best player.”
    And it never has been
    It’s been MOST VALUBLE PLAYER.
    Charles Barkley was never more valuable than Michael Jordan, but people generally accept that, at the time he won MVP, he was more valuable. David Robinson was never more valuable than Hakeem, but he did win it over Hakeem. Why? He was more valuable than Hakeem to his team.
    So, why is everyone complaining now that the best player didn’t win MVP?

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  • truthteller

    Jukai,
    Can you explain to me why Shaq has only won the award once? Isn’t he supposed to be the most dominant player of this past decade?

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  • truthteller

    Jukai,
    Charles Barkley and David Robinson won the awards because they played better than MJ and Hakeem that year! If you remember, MJ wasn’t at his best that season. he even admitted that.He started slow and picked it back up in the playoffs! Charles was never more valuable to his team than MJ was to his! You must be kidding me! Ask Pippen who was more valuable to their team in 94! This whole nonsense started when Nash won his 2nd award! It’s always been about WHO PLAYED THE BEST BASKETBALL THAT YEAR not who was more valuable to his team.

  • jarrett

    Ariza starts buddy…. L.O. is on the Pine

  • Erika Badu

    easily my favorite columnist on this whole site. always speaks 100% truth.

  • LilKDub503

    I like the titles of the pictures when you hover over them.

  • Nbk

    In regards to dwayne wades “impact” on the heat, isn’t this the worst they have been since wade was a rookie with him at full strength? His rookie year they were young and talented and were in a very similar situation. Dwayne wade came back his team improved by 28 games that’s great but his impact is still being overblown. Maurice Williams is the new addition to Cleveland and they have improved by 21 games. That’s a 7 game difference which is a lot until you consider Cleveland won 45 games last year and Miami won 15. How can dwayne wade be the MVP solely because of his impact on the team without taking into consideration that the 15 games they won last year were played with chris Quinn on the floor instead of dwayne wade. That’s about a 7 game difference between Mo Williams and EricSnow nothing to special.

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