The Day

NBA star Kawhi Leonard is the Associated Press top male athlete of 2019

-

He was the Fun Guy. The board man who got paid. He overcame injury to reclaim his rightful place as one of the very best basketball players on the planet. He conquered the NBA world for a second time, bringing a championsh­ip to Canada. And then he joined the Los Angeles Clippers, ready to start anew.

“What it do, baby?” For Kawhi Leonard in 2019, there finally is an answer to his infamous question: He did everything, without talking much.

Leonard is The Associated Press' male athlete of the year for 2019, comfortabl­y winning a vote by AP member sports editors and AP beat writers. He becomes the fifth NBA player to win the award, joining Larry Bird (1986), three-time recipient Michael Jordan (1991 through 1993), three-time recipient LeBron James (2013, 2016, 2018) and Stephen Curry (2015). The award has been made annually since 1931, and Simone Biles was announced Thursday as the women's recipient for 2019.

Leonard was the NBA Finals MVP for the second time, leading Toronto to its first championsh­ip — five years after he first smudged his fingerprin­ts on both trophies with the San Antonio Spurs. He wound up leaving the Raptors in the summer for the Clippers, returning to his native Southern California and turning the historical­ly woeful franchise into one of the top teams in the league.

“The ride was fun,” Leonard said earlier this month on his return trip to Toronto, summing up his year with the Raptors. “I had a great time.”

By now, it's no secret that Leonard is a man of few words. He is not a man of few accomplish­ments. He received more than twice as many points in the balloting as any of the other 18 vote-getters. Baltimore Ravens quarterbac­k Lamar Jackson was second, followed by Kansas City Chiefs quarterbac­k Patrick Mahomes, tennis star Rafael Nadal and reigning NBA MVP Giannis Antetokoun­mpo of the Milwaukee Bucks.

“Kawhi's pretty steady,” said San Antonio coach Gregg Popovich, Leonard's former coach with the Spurs. “He's not a big talker. He doesn't try to find the limelight or anything like that. He's just a good guy who wanted to be good.” Somewhere along the way, he became great. Leonard was the best player in last season's playoffs, after a regular season where he missed 22 games mostly because of what has become known as “load management” — the fancy term used on nights when he would sit out to rest. Leonard missed most of the 2017-18 season with the Spurs because of a complicate­d leg issue, and the NBA said last month that he is still dealing with “an ongoing injury to the patella tendon in his left knee.”

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States