The Trentonian (Trenton, NJ)

Jokic’s MVP a win for hoops-crazed nations outside U.S.

- By Ken Maguire

LONDON » Maybe it’s the cevapi, or the souvlaki, or the mbanga soup.

Whatever it is, there’s no denying the tinge of internatio­nal flavor when it comes to the NBA elite with Denver Nuggets center Nikola Jokic about to become the league’s MVP for a second straight season, a person familiar with the situation told The Associated Press. The MVP has not been publicly announced by the league.

This will be the fourth consecutiv­e year that a foreign-born player has been crowned MVP, another first for the NBA.

The Serbian big man beat out two-time MVP Giannis Antetokoun­mpo of Greece and the reigning champion Milwaukee Bucks and Philadelph­ia center Joel Embiid of Cameroon to mark another first — never before have the top three in MVP voting all been internatio­nals.

The NBA playoffs are loaded with internatio­nal talent, including Dallas Mavericks guard Luka Doncic, the 2019 rookie of the year and EuroLeague champion from Slovenia.

The influx of internatio­nal talent was former Commission­er David Stern’s vision. He saw the NBA as a global entity and insisted the league be a driving force in growing the game internatio­nally.

“It’s David Stern’s dream,” Philadelph­ia coach Doc Rivers said. “Everybody else is good. It’s a world game. It’s no longer just ‘us,’ whatever us means. It’s a world game and that’s a good thing.”

The ripple of effect of internatio­nal players extends well beyond the U.S.

For the basketball-mad countries of Serbia and Greece, the success of Jokic and Antetokoun­mpo means bragging rights. Antetokoun­mpo won back-to-back MVP awards (2018-19, 19-20), and now the pride of Sombor, Serbia, has matched him.

“We are a country of basketball. This is more proof that we are the best,” said Marko Cosic, who trained a teenage Jokic as strength and conditioni­ng coach at Belgrade club Mega. “It is not easy for a country like Serbia with 7 million people to compete with the rest of the world.”

Cosic, now a professor at the University of Belgrade, said Jokic’s style of play “is really poetry. .. he’s an artist.” The 27-year-old Jokic averaged 27.1 points, 13.8 rebounds and 7.9 assists in the regular season.

Across NBA Europe’s social media channels, content featuring Antetokoun­mpo performs 100% better than the average post, according to the NBA. Jokic content does 10% better than average.

Subscriber growth for NBA League Pass shows a 17% increase in Serbia, 14% in Slovenia and 9% in Greece this season over last season. It was up 40% in Africa as a whole, though the NBA does not release its total number of subscriber­s.

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