If you were to put NBA fans into tiers in terms of their interest in individual awards from extremely interested, kinda indifferent to completely oblivious, you’d probably have to create an extra tier for me – the “Why not abolish individual awards?” tier.
I just have never heard one reasonable explanation how individual awards make a team sport better. They don’t mean much in terms of winning a championship. They might rather have a tendency to distort perception.
Among the most recent ten NBA MVPs only one has managed to lead his team to a championship the year they won MVP – Stephen Curry in 2015. No one has done that ever since. Some played for MVP rather than to win a championship – Westbrook and Harden spring to mind. And both Giannis and Jokic won their ring in the season after their MVP steaks snapped.
There’s one thing that the MVP and the other awards help. They’re effective marketing tool, and not just in the sense of the guys who win them. A significant portion of NBA coverage is dedicated to these awards. Even the nerdiest of NBA content creators won’t do without “Monthly Awards Updates”. Probably because even the nerdiest of NBA content consumers deeply care about the awards and the strange discussions around them. I just don’t.
This year, my dismay at individual awards had popped up even before the start of the season. Wemby was penciled in as DPOY, the only thing that stood between him and also winning MIP was the notion the award maybe shouldn’t go to second-year players. Some even saw him in the MVP conversation, in case the Spurs somehow can make the playoffs.
Ten games into the season, reality has caught up with the expectations many, including probably himself, put on Wemby. But at least he had an encouraging game in the home loss to the Utah Jazz. Or did he?
Takeaways
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Photo by Thearon W. Henderson/Getty Images Top accolades: Four NBA titles, one Finals MVP, one All-Star, two All-Defensive Teams, one Olympic gold medal, o