Tuesday, January 29, 2013

Kotaeru

We'll never see this again :-/

Daily Japanese lesson: Kotaeru = to answer

I was born in Washington, D.C. and spent most of the early part of my life in nearby Capitol Heights, MD.  Before I moved to Greenbelt and started watching the University of Maryland, I was a big Georgetown fan...Allen Iverson and Victor Page were household names.  Needless to say, I was a HUGE Allen Iverson fan throughout his Georgetown years, and well into his years as a Philadelphia 76er.  If you rooted for the underdog or the street guy or the little guy, you rooted for Allen Iverson.  Generously listed at 6'0" tall, he played with a fire and heart that was close to unmatched.  I will forever remember this graphic being displayed in the 2001 NBA Finals


You could say whatever you wanted about him not being a team player or being a heistbox or whatever, but dude was committed to playing and sacrificing his body for his team.

No matter what you think of Allen Iverson as a person or a player, there is no denying his influence on the game.  From the beginning of his career he was an impact player, winning Rookie of the Year honors while averaging 23.5/7.5/2.1 and playing 40(!)min a night.  We all remember the infamous crossover on Michael Jordan...



In the 4 years after Jordan's 2nd retirement, Allen Iverson led the league in scoring average 3 times.  In the 2000-2001 season he led the 76ers to the NBA Finals, earning MVP honors and leaving us with another classic



For all of the on-court heroics and spectacular moments that AI gave us though, what he's perhaps best remembered for is...



Not simply the CLASSIC "practice" rant, but everything that went along with it (I'm curious if he realized that the laughter during the interview was more at him than at what he was saying)...some fans are too young to remember the time in which Iverson played, but if you wanted to point at anything that you felt was "wrong" with the league, Iverson was the poster child.  Tattoos?  Check.  Durag?  Check.  Cornrows?  Check.  The cocked fitted hat?  Check.  White tees and baggy jeans?  Check.  A rap album littered with "nigga" and "faggot"?  Check. Iverson was everything that Michael Jordan's clean-shaven image wasn't.  You could see his influence on other players in the NBA as well, and his "jack it up" mentality definitely contributed to a number of children growing up playing basketball "the wrong way."  As David Stern cracked down on the league (dress codes, etc.) you could see that the NBA was no longer a place that welcomed the likes of Allen Iverson.  Indeed, as he said in the below interview, he effectively ended up leaving (or being kicked out) of the NBA rather than change who he was as a person



Today I heard a story about the Dallas Mavericks making AI an offer to join their D-League team...AI predictably refused, basically saying it wasn't for him.  This is right in line with his refusal to be a bench guy, commenting that an MVP doesn't come off the bench.  For the most part, this is true.  Since I really started watching the NBA, the MVPs were...

Michael Jordan (a starter for the vast majority of his career)
Charles Barkley (a starter even in his twilight)
Hakeem Olajuwon (a starter for most of his career)
David Robinson (a starter for all but 2 games of his career)
Karl Malone (a starter for every post-rookie season game)
Shaquille O'Neal (a starter for the vast majority of his career)

And the current guys like Nash, Dirk, LeBron, Rose, Kobe, etc. are all still starting whenever they aren't injured.  When you add the fact that AI won 4 scoring titles, it's pretty understandable that 1. He wouldn't want to come off the bench, and 2. He wouldn't want to play in the D-League at all.  This is the #1 overall pick of the same 1996 NBA Draft that spawned Ray Allen, Kobe Bryant, and Steve Nash.  His career averages are 26.7/6.2/2.2.  He's got the 2nd-highest career playoff ppg at 29.7ppg.  He's won 4 scoring titles.  Led the league in steals 3 times.  Led the league in minutes per game 7 times, and averaged 41mpg.  Ray is coming off the bench, but we saw the uproar that it caused when he was asked to come off the bench during his 16th season for Avery Bradley, and I'm sure that even now he struggles with coming off the bench, even if it's for Dwyane Wade.  As long as Kobe is getting 38min a night and starting in the NBA, there's no way you can really expect AI to think he should be in the D-League.

That being said, there's a reason why Kobe has scored over 30,000 points and AI capped out at a little over 24,000, despite having a higher per game average.  Ironically, a major part of that is practice.  Kobe practices...a lot.  He spends enormous amounts of time improving and perfecting his game, as well as making sacrifices to stay in top shape.  This is why he's still leading the Lakers, despite being 17 seasons in (plus 7 Finals trips).  Allen Iverson, for all of his heart and determination, never developed a reliable jumpshot, couldn't stay healthy most seasons, and is undersized while being slower than he was in his prime.  Without any video of Allen Iverson going up against NBA competition in 2013, it's unlikely that a team would spring even for a 10-day contract.  Most of the older players in the league, whether it's Rasheed or Kurt Thomas or Jerry Stackhouse have an advantage over AI: size.  Size will always be wanted, as seen by the Heat signing Juwan Howard last year and Birdman this season.  If AI had a serviceable 3 ball like Stackhouse or even just had an abundance of energy and maybe 85% of his old speed, like a Nate Robinson, he might be able to convince a team to take a chance on him.  As it stands now, though, he's an old, undersized, temperamental player with 3 years of NBA rust on him.  The odds just aren't that high for him to be allowed to jump back in the NBA.

Which brings me to this...as an Allen Iverson fan, I think that he's got to do whatever it takes to get back in the league and have a proper send-off.  When he showed up in Philly during last year's playoffs, amid speculation about his finances, that crowd showed him a TON of love...Philly is the type of city that respects someone like Allen Iverson.  I think most fans of that era would love to see AI in a 76ers uniform (even though they've got plenty of guards in Holiday, Turner, Young, Wright, Richardson, etc.), but what about Allen Iverson joining the Atlanta Hawks?  They just lost Lou Williams and I'm pretty sure Lou and AI are cool with each other, maybe Atlanta takes a chance on AI as a backup guard.  At the end of the day though, unless AI can prove that he's not merely a shadow of himself (which for all we know, maybe he's having a Tim Duncan/Kobe Bryant revitalization) he won't be getting any starting nods in a league with an abundance of talented guards.

Saturday, January 26, 2013

Middle of the Season

Title was a Meek reference...


Sup?  I've been slacking again...as is my custom.  It's a combination of year-end/year-beginning/month-end work bullshit, getting back in the gym after getting bored with Insanity, and spending time with various people.  Just a lot of stuff.  I've been watching a lot of basketball though (and taking an almost perverse joy in watching the Lakers lose in an embarrassing manner), so I DO have some mid-season thoughts.


Ladies and gentlemen, your 2013 NBA All-Star starters

NBA All-Star 2013


My first thought is I'm pissed that I can't go down to Houston for the game due to work.  My second thought is that I'm not terribly upset with the choices.  That being said, I am annoyed at a couple of things.



Eastern Conference

Let's start with the good here. LeBron, Anthony, and Wade have all been very good this year; the former 2 are MVP candidates, and for all of the talk about Wade declining, he's still producing 20.8/4.7/4.5 on a TS% of 57.8 (his PER is 23.8, above Kobe's).  Rumors of Wade's demise are greatly exaggerated, and in a conference where the best teams have mostly had sub-par guard play, it makes sense that he's starting.  It's hard because we expect so much more from Wade, but he's probably still the best SG in the league.

Now for the bad.  Kevin Garnett is great.  People forget that part of the reason Kobe was only the best player in the league for a couple of years is that KG was the best player in the league for a couple of years.  Even now, in his 18th season, KG is arguably the best defender on his team.  If Garnett doesn't play well, the Celtics will not get far in the playoffs, period.  That being said, 14.7/7.2 are not All-Star starters numbers, period.  I was pissed at Roy Hibbert getting an All-Star spot last year, and Garnett doesn't get an exception for his past glory.  A number of bigs were better qualified, including...

HE'S AN ANIMAL

Chris Bosh is averaging a modest 17.3/7.2/1.4, but on an excellent TS% of 60.6.  Outside of LeBron, he's been the most consistent Heat player this year, and he's arguably had to make the most sacrifices/changes in this Big 3 experiment.  Dude can still ball, as Denver learned in the 3rd game of the season.  We underrate him, but if he was leading a team, he'd be a 20/10 guy easily.  The coaches rectified this mistake by voting him in as a reserve.

Fucking lol'd.

Yup, Mr. Spray Paint-Hair is actually playing pretty well this year, averaging 16.1/10.0 while helping anchor a Bulls team still without their best player, former MVP Derrick Rose.  While I predicted Chicago would get the 5th spot this year, there were others who felt they wouldn't be able to stay in the playoff hunt without Rose.  They currently lead their division and are a few games out of 1st place in the East.  Boozer is a huge part of this, as is...

Soul!

Joakim is one of those players whose numbers don't tell the entire story.  12.2/11.0/2.1 are pretty good numbers for a center these days, but the fact that he plays 38min a night (when he had been playing ~30min a night before this season) is testament to how hard Coach Thibodeau is riding Noah.  He leads the defense, period.  His effort is never in question, and the team largely follows his example.  Like Bosh, Noah was voted in as a reserve by the coaches. 

I'm speechless.

The reigning Defensive Player of the Year is still in pretty good form this season, averaging 12.1/10.9/1.1 while sporting a sizzling TS% of 69.7 (which is DOWN from last year!).  The best pick-and-roll finisher in the league today is still a huge part of what the Knicks do; he's arguably an anchor for the Knicks both offensively and defensively.  For those of us who grew up watching basketball in the 90s, numbers like 12/11 aren't that impressive; we saw the Ewings, Robinsons, Shaqs, Hakeems, etc., not to mention the plethora of power forwards.  However, at some point we have to get over the fact that bigs today can't hold a candle to those of the past, and from there appreciate what we do have these days.  Tyson Chandler is a perfect example of what a team wants from their center today, and I'm really surprised that Knicks fans didn't vote him in; luckily the coaches had more sense than the fans.


I'm astonished as well, Brook.

The biggest snub on the East, IMO, is Brook Lopez.  His presence on the Nets fits his frame; you could argue his absence was the largest factor in Avery Johnson's firing.  I've heard some people say that the lack of Nets selected for the All-Star team was a show of solidarity for Avery, but...you're going to punish Brook for that?  In case you were wondering, Brook's PER is 4th in the league, only behind...you know, 3 MVP candidates (LeBron, Durant, and CP3).  His numbers are impressive, especially considering he only plays 29min a night (18.6/7.4/2.1), and the team is 24-11 with him, 2-5 without him.  His rebounding could use work, but a PER of 25.4 is ridiculous. Melo is having an MVP-candidate season and his PER is lower than Brook's.  A travesty, especially considering the effort the Nets and the NBA have made to make the Brooklyn Nets the new hotness.  Embarrassing.



Then there's the selection of Rajon Rondo.  Rondo is a very good example of why we need to watch the games instead of simply looking at stats.  His numbers are good; 13.7/11.1/1.9 are very solid...but when you watch the games, you see he just doesn't take over games the way you want your best player to.  His assist total is inflated by unnecessary passes when he has easy looks at the basket, he avoids contact so he doesn't get to the foul line, and while his mid-range game is better than it has ever been, it's still not something that teams are threatened by.  Additionally, his team isn't exactly overperforming; despite picking up Jason Terry and Courtney Lee, and despite Paul Pierce's recent performance, the Celtics were hovering around the .500 mark when voting finished.  If we're going to ignore a team's record when considering who is an All-Star, then I can think of a number of perimeter players equally qualified to be on the team.


Lmfaoooooo

Jrue Holiday has done his best with a team missing arguably arguably the 2nd-best center in the NBA when healthy.  His numbers are great, 19.0/9.0/1.4 would be appreciated on any team.  He's the lead guy on a team just trying to stay afloat until their star big returns, and his team's record really isn't that terrible when you consider they also lost two pretty big parts of last year's team.  Coaches agreed with this and voted him in as a reserve.

Yup, you're down 10 again.

I was not a Kyrie believer.  When he was drafted by Cleveland as the #1 pick after only playing 11 college games, I thought that Cleveland had gone crazy.  That being said, I'm a fucking idiot. Yes, Cleveland is 12-32, tied for the most losses this season...but Kyrie is far from being the problem.  He's been spectacular, averaging 24.0/5.6/1.8 on 47/40/85 splits.  I used to think John Wall was a better player, but Irving is such an outstanding shooter (while Wall is a pretty poor one) that despite Wall's athleticism, I have to give it to Kyrie.  In my opinion, if we were going to ignore records, then Kyrie should have had the starting spot at PG for the East.  Again, coaches agreed that he should be on the All-Star team, and they voted him in.


The Rondo selection isn't anywhere near as egregious as the Garnett selection, IMO.  He's still a top PG despite his flaws, and he's played at an above-average level.  My biggest gripe with his selection is that his team has been mediocre, so there's no way that it should have had 2 starters.  Rondo starting alone would have been fine, and I would have been OK with Paul Pierce being a reserve selection.



Western Conference


Again, let's start with the good. Chris Paul is the best PG in the game, and has played like it.  His team is currently the 3rd seed in the West, and even that is partially due to him being injured for the past few games. They ran off a 17 game win streak and at times looked like the best team in the NBA.  He deserved the starting spot.  While Blake Griffin's numbers have been down, this is partially due to his minutes decreasing.  If you've watched the games, then you've seen an improved mid-range game, passing ability, as well as defensive commitment.  With Kevin Love injured, Dirk working himself back into prime condition, and the advancing ages of Garnett, Duncan, Z-Bo, etc., Griffin is in the argument for best all-around PF in the game. He deserves his spot.  Kevin Durant...I don't have to get into why he deserves it...which brings me to my issues.


People have been bitching about Dwight's lack of efficacy this year, despite him leading the league in rebounding.  Personally, I think he's been fine considering he's recovering from back surgery and has been dealing with a shoulder injury.  16.7/12.1/2.5 is a line that most centers would love to have...but Dwight has been better than this.  His team is currently 7 games below .500, and his numbers outside of rebounding probably don't justify him being voted in over some of the following:


You got selected. Thumbs up indeed.

People have really wanted to throw Tony Parker over Tim Duncan in the MVP talk, and for the life of me I can't understand it.  The Spurs go where Tim Duncan goes, period.  17.5/9.8/2.7 sounds good, but when you consider it's coming in 30min a night, that's excellent production.  And his team?  The Spurs are currently the 2nd seed in the West, effectively even with the Oklahoma City Thunder.  Coaches voted this perennial All-Star into the game.

Friends!  Ones you can depend on!

It's really difficult for me to separate Z-Bo and Marc Gasol.  While Z-Bo cleans up on the boards, averaging 11.5 rebounds/game, Marc Gasol, despite the numbers, is probably the best center in the game right now.  That's right, a man averaging 13.3/7.5/1.8 may very well be the best center in the game.  Again, you've got to watch the games.  His passing and defense are keys to Memphis' success, and when combined with Z-Bo, they make the best big duo in the league today.  If I was voting for someone to start in place of Dwight, I'd probably select Marc, but the selection of Z-Bo by the coaches doesn't make me mad at all.


This just looks weird.


The argument against David Lee has always been that his numbers are meaningless, but now that he's on a team that's winning games, it's impossible to argue against the sole 20/10 guy for most of this year (he's currently at 19.7/10.7).  His health and presence on this team (combined with a teammate who I'll mention later) have been a large part of why the Golden State Warriors are currently 5th in the Western Conference. I personally would have selected him over Dwight, considering his team's record, and the coaches indeed selected him as a reserve.


"That guy's got problems"

Yup, that's DeMarcus Cousins.  Why is he there, you say?  While I wouldn't select him over Dwight, 17.9/10.6/1.5(!) is pretty good for a big.  His FG% is pretty poor for a big, but man. DeMarcus is the epitome of the "if he ever gets it together mentally" player.  Even with all of his on-court issues, he's been very productive, albeit for a bad team, and I've got to wonder if all he needs is some veteran guidance.  This is an All-Star talent, despite him not making the All-Star team.


And then there's...

He's slowly going insane.

Kobe Bryant has been very good this year.  Despite his steady slide in production, he is still at near-career-best shooting efficiency numbers.  That being said, his team is still 7 games under .500.  If we're going to put on airs about how we won't select a Monta Ellis (for example) because his team is doing poorly, why in the world are we giving the 11th seed in the West 2 starters?  At least Boston's the 8th seed in the East.  While I'd sooner remove Dwight from the starting line-up than Kobe, there are some other guards I would have rather seen in the starting line-up.

This guy...

The first Russell W to recently take the sporting world by storm is still a beast.  Filling in the playmaking gap left by James Harden's departure, Russell is again among the league leaders in assists per game; he's averaging 22.6/8.3/5.3/1.9 on admittedly poor shooting efficiency.  His detractors will always point to the number of shots he takes while being a teammate of the best scorer in the league, but without Russell's aggressiveness, Kevin Durant would not perform at the level that he does, period.  Westbrook deserved a starting spot IMO, and the coaches made sure he was in the ASG.


#BEARDGANG

It's not just because we're rocking similar beards...James Harden, despite his recent shooting slump, has been pretty damn good in his new starting role.  He's currently averaging 25.9/4.5/5.5 and has led the Rockets, who most of us thought would be pretty bad this year, to a 24-22 record and the current 8 seed in the West.  He leads the league in FT attempted and FT made, and is pretty much the reason the Houston offense clicks.  Coaches voted him in, and he'll basically serve as the host for the All-Star weekend.


OH MY GOD IT'S HEALTHY

In a pretty odd occurrence, Stephen Curry has been mostly healthy this year, playing 40 games at 38min a night.  In an equally odd occurrence, he's been shooting better from 3pt range (45%) than from 2pt range (42%).  He's a really good shooter, so I'm expecting his FG% to go up, but 20.9/6.5/1.7 is pretty good.  The other part of why Golden State has done so well WITHOUT Andrew Bogut, Stephen Curry deserved at least an All-Star nod, and he's pretty much the biggest snub on the Western team.


You're still a fuckboy for this shit.

I know I basically shat on Tony Parker earlier, but man.  Tony Parker is good.  Very good.  The numbers aren't eye-popping; 19.8/7.5 are good, but Jrue Holiday's look better, for example.  Then you look at the 33min/game he's playing.  AND the 52/39/81 splits.  AND the fact that his team leads the league in wins.  Then you realize...yo, Tony Parker is playing pretty damn well.  His PER of 22.9 is even with Russell Westbrook's, and his TS% of 58 is higher than Kobe's, Wade's, and Stephen Curry's.  Since he's a Spur, he'll never get the fan vote, but I wouldn't have been mad at him starting at one of the guard spots either.  Coaches voted him in as a reserve.



Personally, I believe the All-Star Game is an opportunity for good players on bad teams to get some recognition of their skills.  As such, I don't have a problem when that happens.  That being said, I feel like I often would hear that certain players shouldn't get All-Star recognition because of how their teams had performed (see: Ellis, Monta).  I can also understand when someone says that an All-Star player should be able to make his team a good team (even though we have clearly seen cases where that simply isn't true).  All I ask is that we keep the shit consistent.  It's irritating when good players (see: Curry, Stephen) are snubbed because they aren't that well known, despite their team doing well...it's even more irritating when players get voted in due to name recognition more than for their play (see: Ming, Yao).  Admittedly, in the Western Conference, both Kobe and Dwight have put up solid numbers, but I can't think of any reason for Kevin Garnett to be in the All-Star Game over Brook Lopez, even if the coaches are voicing their disapproval of what went down in Brooklyn.  Let's try to do better.

Thursday, January 10, 2013

Em.Vee.Pee.

For the record, I wanted a pic of Kareem receiving it


So we're almost at the halfway point of the 2012-2013 NBA season, and people have been discussing their MVP candidates in earnest for quite some time now...and why not?!  It's what we do until the award is actually given out, so I figured I'd join in as well.

The MVP is an interestingly-titled award in that the term "most valuable player" in interpreted in different ways by different people.  I've seen "best player on the best team," "best player on one of the best teams," "player without whom a playoff team wouldn't be a playoff team," as well as "player with the best statistics overall" all used as a definition of what the MVP should be.  Me?  I personally would like the award to go to the most important player, period...so basically, the guy whose departure would cost his team the most wins.  This is difficult to gauge in a game where everything is so related, but advanced statistics continue to make strides in solving this.  The new(ish) stats PER and Win Shares (both total and per 48min) help clear up the picture in ways that didn't exist when I was a child watching basketball.  When you look at Michael Jordan's career, for example, you see that not only did he win 10 scoring titles, but he also led the league in PER 7 consecutive years, and led the league in Win Shares 9 times (8 of these times he also led the league in WS/48).  Every year that he won the MVP (except for his last season with the Bulls, which might have been due to his impending retirement as well as the Bulls' 62-20 record), MJ led the league in PER, Win Shares, and Win Shares/48min.  By the eye test as well as pretty much every metric available today, Michael Jordan was the MVP during the 5 years he won, and you could make the argument that he deserved the MVPs won by Charles Barkley and the 89-90 MVP won by Magic.

After Michael's retirement, the case for MVP became a little more murky.  For example, for all of the dominance that we remember from Shaquille's prime years, he won a grand total of 1 MVP.  That year was of course PRIME prime Shaq, with him leading the league in scoring as well as averaging the most rebounds and blocks per game since his rookie season.  He led the league in PER, WS, and WS/48 as well, establishing what our eyes already told us was true.  The following year, however, Allen Iverson won the MVP...while AI led the league in scoring and steals, his PER was an elite (but not MVP-level) 24; putting that into perspective, during Jordan's worst (and possibly not MVP) MVP season, his PER was 25.2, his worst full season since his rookie year.  A season for the ages typically results in a PER of 30 or above, as MJ has done 4 times, with an additional 3 seasons above 29.  I was into basketball during the 2000-2001 season, though, so I can understand why AI won that MVP. One, despite his team having the Defensive Player of the Year, 6th Man of the Year, and MVP, that Philadelphia 76ers team simply didn't look impressive on paper.  Two, the fact that a 6' guard (closer to 5'10" in reality) weighing ~160lbs could will his team to 56 wins, while leading the league in scoring (over some formidable competition...Stackhouse's best year, Shaq, Kobe, Vince Carter, T-Mac, etc) along with the storylines surrounding the team made AI a prime candidate for MVP.  And finally, if we went by "player who'd cause the most damage with his departure," it's likely that with AI's departure, Philly goes from the only team to win a game against the Lakers that postseason to a team that doesn't make the postseason.  By any advanced metric, AI should not have won that MVP; that MVP belonged to Shaq.  Yet, that isn't always what we go by when we decide who is the MVP.

In recent years, the MVP has gone to the best player on the team with one of the best records in the league. LeBron's Heat won the 3rd most games in the NBA, and eventually the NBA Championship.  Rose's Bulls led the league in wins, and even though I feel like Chris Paul deserved the 07-08 MVP over Kobe, Kobe's Lakers won the most games in the Western Conference that season (Paul's Hornets won one less game...incredible considering that roster, IMO).  I've yet to see an MVP recipient who didn't deserve it on some level...which brings me to this season.

Going by recent criteria (best player on one of the best teams), my top 5 candidates, for the record, are



LeBron James - He literally does everything on that team. It's amazing how much worse they look when he's on the bench.  They're also still the #1 seed in the East...the year of the LeBron has clearly continued, despite his 54/42/73 splits slowly normalizing to his numbers from last year.




Kevin Durant - Simply incredible how much he's improved. In one year, we went from LBJ followed by a healthy Dwight Howard and Chris Paul as the most impactful players to LBJ followed by Kevin Durant.  He's improved defensively, on the boards, as a playmaker, and continues to shoot at a 50/40/90 pace while leading the #2 seed in the West AND being #3 in scoring (while shooting 4(!) less shots/game than the #2 Carmelo Anthony, and 5(!!) less shots/game than the #1 Kobe Bryant)



Chris Paul - Probably my favorite player in the league right now...my roommate notes how I comment on him more than on anyone else in the league, even LeBron or John Wall.  The basic stats don't tell the complete story here; while CP3 averages a very good 17.0/9.5/2.6, this is in 33min a night AND on the deepest team in the league in the LA Clippers.  They have the best record in the league and he leads the league in WS/48.  It's clear that he's the leader, and when you watch them play...he's like a maestro, orchestrating the Clippers, their opponent, the crowd, and yes, the referees.




Carmelo Anthony - Recent foolishness aside, Carmelo and the Knicks have had a very good season thus far.  They're #2 in the East; Carmelo is #2 in scoring.  He's shooting a career-high 43% from 3 as well as a career-high TS% of 59%.  He's shown a different attitude toward playing, period, no doubt the result of: 1. The team as a whole playing better; 2. Getting more touches with Amar'e out; and 3. The addition of Jason Kidd, Rasheed Wallace, and the other oldheads.  His numbers don't tell the entire story, but they do help; Carmelo is an MVP candidate for a reason.



Tim Duncan - I know, it's become hip to pick Tony Parker over Timmy.  I also know that some people would rather give it to Westbrook or Zach Randolph, but I'm giving the slot to Timmy.  His Spurs have the 3rd best record in the league, and Tim is averaging 17.4/9.5/2.6 in less than 30min a night.  While Parker is also having a very good season (19.2/7.1 on 52/39/82 splits), Duncan's defense makes me give him the nod.  This is still Duncan's team, and yet again they'll go as far as he can take them on defense.


Now, I can understand Westbrook being chosen (he's arguably the catalyst for that Thunders squad) or Zach Randolph/Marc Gasol (the Grizzlies have been pretty good this year and you could argue for either of them), but there have been some other interesting picks I wanted to speak on for a bit.




James Harden is proving the disbelievers wrong, one 25pt game at a time (he now holds the Houston Rockets' record for consecutive 25pt games).  The efficiency isn't the same as last year (as expected), but the numbers are astounding; 26.5/5.3/4.2/1.9 on 45/36/86 splits with a TS% of 61%.  His Houston Rockets are currently leading the league in PPG and are the 6th seed in the West.  Due to the low rank of the Rockets, I can't consider Harden a candidate, but whenever he's not playing, you really see the impact he's had on that team.  Can any non-basketball heads name his starting lineup outside of Jeremy Lin?




Despite his team being 5 games under .500, I've consistently seen mentions of Kobe Bryant for MVP.  Kobe's stats are pretty damn good, despite steadily declining from his torrid start; 30.1/5.1/4.8 on 48/36/84, EXCELLENT shooting efficiency numbers for Kobe.  By nearly any measure, this is his best season since his MVP year, and it's possibly better than that year.  Hell, this is an MJ year when you look at it from an offensive standpoint.  However, despite these individual achievements, this has not translated to team success, a modern prerequisite for an MVP recipient; the Lakers are 6-14 when Kobe scores 30 or more points (and this includes a 5 game win streak during which he scored 30+).  Considering their schedule after this point, it is a real possibility that the Lakers won't make it to the playoffs, which would make a Kobe MVP particularly awkward, especially with other qualified candidates.


It's incredible how the goalposts move for this guy, but that's y'all's guy...personally, I can't give the MVP to a guy who can't even get his team to a winning record, but that's just me.  Apparently a scoring title is an instant entry to the MVP conversation.  I just can't, but you guys continue to rock on.