New York Daily News

Only thing Jordan hasn’t done for Yanks yet is win EMBIID WAS REAL MVP

Dominant 76er deserved nod over Jokic, but Durant was worthy of some votes, too

- BY MATTHEW ROBERSON KRISTIAN WINFIELD

Jordan Montgomery has been doing well. It’s everyone around him who’s letting him down. We’ve all been there.

The elastic lefty in the Yankees’ rotation has a 2.90 ERA through his first six starts of the year. He’s completed 31 innings, striking out 25 hitters and walking five. With a WHIP under 1.00 and only two home runs allowed all season, Montgomery has excelled at limiting damage both large and small. Opponents are flailing their way to a .209 batting average against Montgomery, who has a better walk rate, FIP and has thrown more innings than Gerrit Cole through each of their first six starts.

Yet, Montgomery’s winloss record sits at 0-1 with five no-decisions.

Still think the pitcher win is an important stat?

The Yankees have not scored more than five runs in any of Montgomery’s outings this year. In the only game where they did plate five runners, only two of them were in support of Montgomery, with the other three coming after he was pulled. Since the beginning of the 2021 season, Montgomery has made 31 starts in which his offense supplied zero to three runs of support. That’s the most in the American League during that span, and when taking into account the fact that he’s made 36 total starts over that time period, Montgomery has some of the worst luck of anyone in the Big Apple.

The mild-mannered pitcher is certainly not the type to raise a stink over this or throw any of his teammates under the bus. But he would have a legitimate case to do so. With the help of a new and improved sinker, Montgomery has made himself into one of the most stifling left-handed pitchers in the league during the season’s first month.

That sinker, which is now his most-used pitch, has run the full gamut of effectiven­ess. As a rookie in 2017, Montgomery’s sinker (24.5% usage) was right behind his curveball (26.1%) for most popular pitch in his arsenal. The problem was that it was getting consistent­ly bashed around the yard for hits.

Statcast shows Montgomery throwing 618 sinkers during his rookie season, a year where he logged 155.1 innings in 29 starts but did not pitch at all in the team’s postseason run. He arrived in the Yankees’ clubhouse with a big-league ready curveball, but that sinker was greeted by hitters who put up a .342 average and whiffed on it just over 11 percent of the time. While it’s still a small sample size, that sinker is now getting whiffs 23.8% of the time Montgomery throws it. Hitters are faring much worse, hitting .243 in the early going with a slugging percentage over 200 points lower than it was in 2017.

Even last year, when Montgomery appeared to put it all together for his best season in the majors, he still had trouble figuring out the sinker. It was clubbed for a .359 average but also started trending upward in an important category, especially for a sinker. 2021 was the first full season of Montgomery’s career where his sinker — a pitch typically designed to induce ground balls — had a ground ball rate at 50% or better. Whatever allowed that change to take place, Montgomery seems to have found a way to take that improvemen­t and make it even better. His sinker has caused a ground ball 68.6% of the time it’s put in play this year.

That substantia­l improvemen­t, plus the fact that hitters are swinging and missing on it more often than they ever have, means Montgomery has one of the most critical pitches on the entire Yankee staff. With better results will come increased confidence in the pitch, and as long as it’s keeping hitters at bay, there’s no reason for the sixth-year southpaw to deviate from the plan.

Somehow, a team that entered play on Monday with the best winning percentage and run differenti­al in the American League has only found eight total runs while Montgomery is pitching. This comes one year after he received the fewest support of any full-time American League pitcher that threw at least 150 innings.

Whatever dark forces are working against Montgomery — whether it’s just consistent­ly horrible luck, opposing pitchers always having a good day when pitted against him, or his teammates simply hating him (kidding!) — the lack of support for one of the game’s most underrated pitchers is a strange phenomenon. Luckily for the Yankees, who have had pretty much everything else go right so far, they can file this away in their folder of things not to worry about, at least for now.

Three different players could have won NBA Most Valuable Player this season. But the candidate that best fit my definition of “value” this season, and whose value has been substantia­ted through two playoff rounds, did not hoist the award on Monday.

Denver’s Nikola Jokic took the crown, according to ESPN, over Philadelph­ia’s Joel Embiid and Milwaukee’s Giannis Antetokoun­mpo. (Yes, the three most dominant players in the league all hail from overseas.)

The league is expected to make the official announceme­nt during Monday night’s playoff games.

Jokic’s name reigning supreme a second consecutiv­e season should remind you that an ostensibly popular opinion isn’t always the prevailing thought.

I voted for Embiid as MVP because he’s the most dominant player we’ve seen since Shaquille O’Neal. Like Jokic, Embiid played first half of the season without his co-star (Ben Simmons), then had to carry the Sixers in the second half of the season with James Harden not shoulderin­g his load until Game 4 of the second round.

If you could fuse Shaq and Kobe into one hooper, you’d probably get Embiid: the Cameroonia­n legend who can dominate on the low block, shoot over you in the high post, knock down an open three and still take you off the dribble.

None of that includes the value he brings defensivel­y, which has been on display in each of the Sixers’ last two playoff games. The 76ers were dead in the water, down 0-2, with Embiid nursing an orbital fracture, recovering from a concussion and playing with a torn ligament in his thumb. With him back on the floor, rocking a black protective mask, the series tied at two-apiece. Embiid, the best player on the court, shifted the momentum in his team’s direction.

But the MVP, and its accompanyi­ng league-wide awards, are regular-season honors in a what-have-you-done-for-melately league. Jokic has done nothing lately because his shorthande­d team proved no match for the Golden State Warriors. Meanwhile Embiid and Antetokoun­mpo remain on national television, dominating their opponents with brute force and skill that’ll pave a definitive path to the Hall of Fame.

Jokic is undoubtedl­y a worthy MVP. If Larry Bird was Serbian, he’d probably look and play something like The Joker. The Nuggets were in position to compete for a playoff spot because Jokic was on the floor. The same can also be said of Antetokoun­mpo’s Bucks and Embiid’s 76ers. Remove either from the equation and both franchises don’t go hunting for playoff wins.

Maybe it’s not the result that’s jarring, but the timing of its announceme­nt. Why wait nearly a month after the regular season to announce results that can be tabulated overnight? (Ballots for voting members were due April 12.)

While we’re on the subject of NBA awards votes, here are my votes for MVP: 1) Joel Embiid (PHI)

2) Nikola Jokic (DEN)

3) Giannis Antetokoun­mpo (MIL) 4) Devin Booker (PHX)

5) Kevin Durant (BKN)

The Nets lost 11 straight and fell from first to 10th with Durant out of the lineup with an MCL sprain back in January. If that’s not value, I don’t know what is.

It’s also valuable being the best player on the best team in the league.

 ?? AP ?? It’s hard to mask the fact that 76ers’ Joel Embiid is NBA’s best big man since Shaquille O’Neal, but Denver’s Nikola Jokic is reportedly winner of league’s highest individual honor.
AP It’s hard to mask the fact that 76ers’ Joel Embiid is NBA’s best big man since Shaquille O’Neal, but Denver’s Nikola Jokic is reportedly winner of league’s highest individual honor.
 ?? ??

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