Santa Fe New Mexican

Jokic’s MVP a win for hoops-crazed nations outside United States

Fourth straight year a foreign-born player will receive award

- 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, 2019-20), 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 Ćosić, 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.”

Ćosić, 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 percent better than the average post, according to the NBA. Jokic content does 10 percent better than average.

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

The league has scheduled the Bucks and Atlanta Hawks to play two preseason matchups at Abu Dhabi in October, marking the NBA’s first games in the United Arab Emirates and the Arabian Gulf.

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Nikola Jokic

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