The Guardian (USA)

Nuggets’ Nikola Jokić named NBA Most Valuable Player for second year in a row

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Nikola Jokić plays for Denver. And for Serbia.

Both places can once again make the same claim: For the second consecutiv­e season, they’re home to the best player in the NBA.

The league announced Wednesday night that Jokic had captured back-toback MVP awards. The Nuggets’ big man is the second consecutiv­e internatio­nal player to win two in a row, after Milwaukee’s Giannis Antetokoun­mpo – who hails from Greece - earned the title in 2019 and 2020.

This marks the first time internatio­nal players have won the award in four consecutiv­e seasons. Canada’s Steve Nash went back-to-back for Phoenix in 2005 and 2006, followed by Germany’s Dirk Nowitzki winning for Dallas in 2007.

Internatio­nal players finished 1-2-3 in this year’s MVP voting. Jokic got 65 first-place votes and 875 points from the panel of sportswrit­ers and broadcaste­rs that cover the league and decide on awards. Philadelph­ia’s Joel Embiid was second with 26 first-place votes and 706 points; Antetokoun­mpo was third, with nine first-place votes and 595 points. Devin Booker of Phoenix wound up fourth.

“I don’t know what else you can say about Nikola at this point,” Nuggets coach Michael Malone said in a statement. “He’s consistent­ly improved his game, he’s consistent­ly proven people wrong when they doubt him and he’s consistent­ly the best player on the floor night in and night out.”

The 27-year-old Jokić averaged 27.1 points, 13.8 rebounds and 7.9 assists on a team that was missing two max players in Jamal Murray (ACL) and Michael Porter Jr (back). The do-it-all center nicknamed ‘Joker’ created a new category, too, in becoming the first NBA player to eclipse 2,000 points, 1,000 rebounds and 500 assists in a season.

He’s now a member of another rare club – the 13th player to win backto-back NBA MVP awards. He joined the likes of Antetokoun­mpo, Stephen Curry, LeBron James (twice), Nash, Tim Duncan, Michael Jordan, Magic Johnson, Moses Malone and Kareem AbdulJabba­r (twice). Larry Bird, Wilt Chamberlai­n and Bill Russell each won the award in three straight seasons.

Jokić was taken by the Nuggets with the 41st pick in the 2014 draft. His selection that day flashed across the bottom of the television screen during a Taco Bell commercial.

He’s come a long way. He’s eligible for a supermax extension that could guarantee him nearly $254m over five seasons starting with 2023-24.

James extended his record, too – 19 years in the league, 19 years of getting at least one vote in the MVP balloting (a fifth-place vote). Nobody has gotten votes in more seasons, or obviously, in more consecutiv­e seasons than James.

Despite their disastrous season – the Los Angeles Lakers didn’t even make the play-in tournament – James’ numbers remained among the league’s best. The 37-year-old averaged 30.3 points, 8.2 rebounds and 6.2 assists per game, moving past Karl Malone for No 2 on the all-time scoring list and into position to pass Abdul-Jabbar as the league’s all-time leader late next season.

James has seen the game change during his 19 seasons. He was part of the last USA Basketball team that didn’t win Olympic gold – the squad that went to Athens in 2004 – and even was convinced then that the game was only getting stronger around the world.

Jokić is further proof of that happening.

He’s not demonstrat­ing it by himself, either. Antetokoun­mpo and Embiid have more than done their part. Dallas’ Luka Doncic (fifth in the MVP vote) is already a EuroLeague champion and certainly seems like he’ll win at least one NBA MVP award before he’s done.

They are the new class of internatio­nal greats, following in the footsteps of Nowitzki, Hakeem Olajuwon, Tony Parker, Manu Ginobili, Pau and Marc Gasol, Yao Ming and others. The debate will rage about which internatio­nal player – either now or all-time – is the best, but Antetokoun­mpo (two MVPs and a championsh­ip) and now Jokić (two MVPs after being a secondroun­d pick) have surely entered the chat.

Canada got a championsh­ip in 2019 when the Toronto Raptors won the NBA title. That night, the Canadian flag was soaked in champagne, Pascal Siakam danced with the flag of Cameroon around his shoulders, team president Masai Ujiri did interviews with a Nigerian scarf around his neck, and they were only a few of the Raptors with deep internatio­nal ties.

It’s not inconceiva­ble that five internatio­nal players could be lottery picks in next month’s draft. And there’s hardly anyone who doesn’t see France’s Victor Wembanyama – a 7ft 2in player with guard skills – as the certain No 1 pick in the 2023 draft right now.

Those newcomers will want to be like Jokić. They’ll want to be the MVP, and he’s just the latest name to show those kids from around the world that it’s possible.

 ?? Dylan Buell/Getty Images ?? Denver’s Nikola Jokić averaged 27.1 points, 13.8 rebounds and 7.9 assists to take home MVP honors for a second straight year. Photograph:
Dylan Buell/Getty Images Denver’s Nikola Jokić averaged 27.1 points, 13.8 rebounds and 7.9 assists to take home MVP honors for a second straight year. Photograph:

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