The Commercial Appeal

Who should be NBA’S MVP?

- Jeff Zillgitt

Philadelph­ia’s Joel Embiid seeks his first NBA MVP award.

Milwaukee’s Giannis Antetokoun­mpo could win his third MVP award in four seasons.

And Denver’s Nikola Jokic has had the kind of season that could make him the 12th player to win consecutiv­e MVPS.

While those three stars are the favorites, the 2021-22 season has provided a deep and compelling MVP race that also includes Memphis’ Ja Morant, Chicago’s Demar Derozan, Dallas’ Luke Doncic, Golden State’s Steph Curry, Boston’s Jayson Tatum, Phoenix’s Devin Booker and Brooklyn’s Kevin Durant.

When the voting is completed – voters rank their top five in order – a few more players may end up with votes.

But with less than three weeks left in the regular season, it’s a three-man race between Antetokoun­mpo, Embiid and Jokic. All three make great cases, and despite what the NBA illuminati on Twitter may demand, there is not a wrong choice or incorrect order. If a voter has watched a full season of basketball and determined that Player A deserves the MVP over Player B and C, so be it. You’re not going to get 100 people to agree unanimousl­y often.

All three have posted meaningful regular and advanced statistics and have been asked to carry more responsibi­lity with key players not available.

The closest three-player races involved Karl Malone, Alonzo Mourning and Tim Duncan in 1998-99, with the trio separated by 87 points and Malone winning, and Magic Johnson, Charles Barkley and Michael Jordan bunched within 72 points and Johnson winning in 1989-90.

Could this season be just as close? Let’s take a closer look at the MVP favorites:

The Big 3

29.8 points and is involved in a down-to-the-wire clash with Embiid and James for the scoring title, which Antetokoun­mpo has never won. He also averages 11.5 rebounds, 5.8 assists, 1.4 blocks and 1.1 steals and shoots 54.7% from the field. In addition, he has career-highs in free throws made (8.3) and attempted (11.6).

The Bucks should finish in the top four in the Eastern Conference with a chance at the first or second seed, and they played without Brook Lopez for most of the season. Antetokoun­mpo was asked to cover more of the paint with Lopez out.

His impact is felt in on-off court stats, too.

With Antetokoun­mpo in the game, the Bucks score 115.7 points and allow 107.7 points per 100 possession­s. When Antetokoun­mpo is on the bench, those

stats suffer at 107.4 and 110.

Antetokoun­mpo also has a player efficiency rating – a measuremen­t of a player’s positive and negative contributi­ons – of 32.29, which is a career-high and the second-best PER in NBA history, according to basketball-reference.com.

Antetokoun­mpo won the award in 2019 and 2020, and while voter fatigue has been cited as a reason why a player doesn’t win two or three consecutiv­e awards, if Antetokoun­mpo doesn’t win his third in four seasons, it won’t be voter fatigue in this case.

Joel Embiid, Sixers

Embiid is having a career year, starting with career highs in points (29.8) and assists (4.3) per game while also averaging 11.3 rebounds, 1.4 blocks and 1.1 steals and shooting 48.7 from the field and a respectabl­e 35.9% on 3-pointers.

He is the reason why the Sixers will get a top-four seed in the East. Also, Embiid and the Sixers endured through the Ben Simmons situation, winning games with the three-time All-star unavailabl­e.

Just like the Bucks with Antetokoun­mpo, the Sixers flourish with Embiid on the court, scoring 114.2 points and allowing 107.1 points per 100 possession­s. When Embiid is not in the game, the Sixers score 106.6 points and allow 110 points per 100 possession­s.

Embiid’s PER is third this season, behind Antetokoun­mpo and Jokic, at 31.37. Nikola Jokic, Nuggets

When the season started, I said Jokic was competing against himself for the award and would need a better season than last to repeat. Guess what? It can be argued he has had a better season, lifting the Nuggets to a possible top six seed without Jamal Murray and Michael Porter Jr.

Jokic is near a triple-double at 26.2 points, 13.6 rebounds and eight assists per game while averaging 1.4 steals and shooting 57% from the field, including 34.6% on 3s, and he’s shooting six percentage points better from the foul line this season compared to 2020-21 and is less than a percentage point from a career-high in field goal percentage.

He also leads the league in doubledoub­les (58) and triple-doubles (18).

Jokic has improved his MVP case as the season progressed, posting two games with at least 45 points, 10 rebounds and 10 assists, joining just six other players in NBA history to post that stat line.

Now, about PER. The stat created by former ESPNER and Memphis Grizzlies front-office executive John Hollinger is not an end all, be all measuremen­t. It is a tool to help determine who is highly productive on the court, and Jokic is posting the best PER ever in season at 32.46 since applying the formula starting with the 2002-03 season.

In the past 20 seasons, there have never been three players with a PER higher than 30 in a season – until this season, illustrati­ng just how superb Jokic, Antetokoun­mpo and Embiid have been.

 ?? BILL STREICHER/USA TODAY SPORTS ?? Nuggets center Nikola Jokic (15) and 76ers center Joel Embiid (21) are two of the lead candidates for the MVP award.
BILL STREICHER/USA TODAY SPORTS Nuggets center Nikola Jokic (15) and 76ers center Joel Embiid (21) are two of the lead candidates for the MVP award.

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