Who’s your money on for the 2015 NBA MVP?

By Ryan O'Connell / Expert

In recent history, the NBA MVP race hasn’t been all that enthralling, due to the fact it’s essentially been a one or two-horse race between LeBron James and Kevin Durant.

However, this season, LeBron started a little sluggishly – compared to his usual high standards – while Kevin Durant has missed a significant amount of games due to injuries. That has opened the door for a host of other NBA stars to win the Maurice Podoloff Trophy for the 2014-15 season.

Yet don’t for a second think that these players are merely the default option after the usual top two candidates. The truth is, they would deserve consideration in any season, such has been the brilliant performances they have delivered thus far.

As we approach the home stretch of the regular season, with every team having roughly 30 games each to play, let’s count down the top five candidates who are in the running to win the NBA’s highest individual accolade.

5. Russell Westbrook
It’s hard to believe that there remain some hard-core ‘Rusty’ detractors. While there is no question that he can still play out of control at times, isn’t a pure point guard, and can get a over-emotional, no NBA player is perfect.

To concentrate on those perceived Westbrook negatives isn’t just slightly out-dated – for he has improved in all three of those facets this season – it also rather foolishly overlooks everything positive that Westbrook brings to the table.

Westbrook is second in the league in scoring, steals and PER (player efficiency rating), and sixth in the league in assists. Yet numbers aside, it’s the force, intensity and passion he plays with that really propels Oklahoma City to numerous victories.

With the Thunder trading for a solid bench just before the deadline, if they can gel quickly, they are the team no one wants to face in the playoffs.

Considering all their injury concerns and other upheavals, if Westbrook can guide his team into the playoffs in the tough Western Conference, and finish the regular season with a multitude of late-season wins, we might see history be made with Westbrook crowned the MVP the season after teammate Kevin Durant took home the same award.

4. Anthony Davis
I mentioned previously that no player in the league is perfect, but that comment may do a disservice to the man they call ‘The Unibrow’.

Consider these per game numbers from Davis: 24 points, 10 rebounds, 3 blocks, 1.7 assists, 1.5 blocks, while shooting 55 per cent from the field and 83 per cent from the line. With numbers like that, it won’t surprise you to know that he leads the league in PER at 31.2 – a figure that is currently the eighth highest ever recorded.

So yeah, you could say he’s having a pretty good season.

Throw in the impact he has on almost every single game in a myriad of different ways, the improvement he’s made to his offensive arsenal, and the fact he’s even hitting game-winning three pointers now, and it’s fair to say Davis is a legitimate MVP candidate. The scary thing is that he’s still just 21 years of age.

What will count against him though, is his team’s position in the standings.

The New Orleans Pelicans currently nurse a 28-27 record, which is actually very solid, but in the brutal Western Conference it’s only good enough to see them sit in 10th spot.

Though Davis has done all he can to get the Pellies into the playoffs, they’re probably going to fall just short, and voters are traditionally reluctant to reward players whose team don’t qualify within the top eight in their conference.

3. LeBron James
‘The King’ is ever so slightly down on his career numbers so far this season, which has seen him became an afterthought for this year’s MVP race. Yet we really should be judging him against this year’s competition, rather than against his own extremely high standards.

The fact is, LeBron’s quietly having yet another great season.

He started a little slowly, and even looked disinterested at times, but a two-week break appeared to rejuvenate the four-time MVP winner, and since then he has looked like the LeBron of old. In other words, the best player on the planet.

If the Cavs can continue their recent hot play and finish the season strong, and LeBron continues to dominate like he has of late, it may be enough for him to leapfrog the other two players left on this list and take home yet another MVP trophy.

Would anyone seriously be brave enough to rule him out?

More importantly, never rule out journalists voting for him in order to complete their already written story about his amazing ‘coming home to Cleveland’ season.

2. Steph Curry
1. James Harden

It was a pretty tough decision to separate these last two, as both Curry and Harden have been sublime this season.

What eventually gave Harden the slight advantage was the fact Curry has a stronger roster surrounding him, the health of said roster, and the Warriors much better coaching staff, led by rookie coach Steve Kerr.

In essence, with less talent on both the roster and the coaching bench – combined with injuries to Dwight Howard – Harden has had to overcome more to put his team in the successful position the Rockets currently find themselves. Houston’s impressive accomplishments are almost exclusively because of him.

Harden’s foul-drawing game isn’t always pretty, but his ability to put the team on his back and get the Rockets the shots their offence desires (three pointers or layups) has been nothing short of sensational. Even his oft-maligned defence has improved this year.

Meanwhile, Curry is the best player on the best team in the league. Yet far from his MVP candidacy being a token nod to a team’s success, Curry has been unbelievable.

He’s pretty much un-guardable on offence, and needs to be defended the minute he crosses the halfway line, such is the crazy range on his jumper.

His amazing ball skills and excellent passing also ensure he’s more than just a one-dimensional weapon on offence. Like Harden, he has also improved his defence, to the point where he leads the league in steals this season – not that this statistic always equates to being a great defender, but it remains telling.

The Warriors are deep and talented, yet when Curry is off the floor, their numbers across the board plummet, highlighting just how important he is, despite Golden State’s loaded roster.

You could therefore make the case that irrespective of which roster you think has more talent, Harden and Curry are equally important to their teams – and you would be right. However, at this stage of the season, I still have Harden in front by just a whisker.

There is, however, a very long way to go.

The Crowd Says:

2015-04-13T10:40:39+00:00

Kirk Gimena

Guest


for me "CURRY" is the best player in the league! he's my "MVP" this year!

2015-03-03T14:30:26+00:00

Sam Rigney

Expert


It has to be Russell Westbrook for mine. The guy dominates games and is so explosive. Statistically and physically he is a freak. If he has another month like his last one he should be an easy choice.

2015-02-26T17:00:49+00:00

Trent Kyle

Roar Rookie


Harden for me... Has carried Houston all season with Dwight in and out of the line up with injuries. The Rockets are 39-18 right now which is amazing considering their other superstar has been out so much. Harden can drop 35-40 points on any given night and you know how influential offence is on the MVP award these days. Curry in a close second for me, having a great year but I don't think he's been better than Harden, Westbrook is coming home strong with unbelievable numbers especially when KD doesn't play. I think if Anthony Davis could have been healthy all season he was headed for MVP. The Pelicans are likely to finish 9th now which won't be enough for AD.

2015-02-24T22:28:06+00:00

ohtani's jacket

Guest


To me, Westbrook has been the most impressive, but I don't see him getting it. If the Warriors hold on to the top seed, I'm guessing the award goes to Curry since the voters like nightly highlight reels coupled w/ team's regular season record. Lebron could still be a factor if Cleveland continue to improve, but the media have never had a fixation about having to vote for Lebron like they did Jordan (though to be fair, they were a few 'someone other than Jordan' years as well.)

AUTHOR

2015-02-24T21:50:01+00:00

Ryan O'Connell

Expert


No question the media can influence things, but Curry is the best player on the best team in the league, and despite how talented the roster is, their numbers with him off the court plummet. In fact, they're not great. That's not hype, that's just fact. So that indicates he's extremely valuable. But, he is a media darling, you're right.

AUTHOR

2015-02-24T21:48:16+00:00

Ryan O'Connell

Expert


Hindsight is one thing, but I said at the time that it was a shocking decision. Harden still had a year to go on his contract, so they could have easily seen what played out for that season. They were coming off a finals berth, and yet they blew it up for money reasons. Prematurely. To be fair to be Presti, I'm sure he was under instructions from Bennett to manage the cap. Ie: not pay the luxury tax. Which I find crazy: the franchise was still earning millions and millions of dollars; it would have eaten into profits, not leave him broke or something. Why own a team if you don't want to win? And I do think Presti could have gotten more for him, personally. Yes, Harden had a bad finals, but he absolutely destroyed the Spurs in the Western Conference finals. They could have paid Harden and Ibaka, and then padded the roster out with role players. Or, they could have gotten more for the trade. Either way, it was a bad decision at the time, and a truly horrible one in hindsight. (In my humble opinion, anyway.)

2015-02-24T21:35:53+00:00

John

Guest


Thing is, ESPN and the wider media overhype Curry to the days. Westbrook is just as good a scorer, a better passer, defender and rebounder. But the media have fallen in love with the idea of the "splash brothers" and Curry's shooting exploits. No doubt the media is influential and are responsible for driving Curry's status. Sure GSW have been the 2nd best team in the league this year (potentially number 1), but I feel that came off having a great team. Iguodala, Klay, Draymond Green, Bogut, Barnes, Speights - they're loaded. The pieces in that team make that team who they are.

2015-02-24T21:32:41+00:00

John

Guest


Presti and the Thunder simply didn't have the cash. Harden wanted a max deal, which was ridiculous because at that time he was just fresh of choking in the 2012 finals. Everyone loves blaming Presti but I think any reasonable GM would have done the same - at that time he wasn't worth a max deal. Hindsight is a great thing but people are unfair on blaming Presti - he wasn't someone who can read the future.

2015-02-24T07:46:28+00:00

Hawkeye says

Guest


Couple of my favourite players in there... Westbrook and Curry - one for aggressive athleticism and the other for slick smooth jazz.

2015-02-24T05:32:09+00:00

Tristan Rayner

Editor


The Hawks have won one more, Memphis are only a few back and the Warrior have a pretty tough few games coming up. Spurs are just hanging in there for the playoffs ;) Kahwi needs to get healthy.

2015-02-24T04:51:18+00:00

Swampy

Guest


"The Warriors aren't looking too hot" ???? Umm, I doubt anyone will catch them for the best record in the league. As a side point the Spurs are in freefall. They are pretty bad to watch right now. They look old and slow. But aren't neutralising that by playing their usual superior team ball.

2015-02-24T04:23:44+00:00

Ryan OConnell

Guest


The Thunder conceivably could have had 3 of the top 6 players in the league. Unforgiveable mistake by Presti!

2015-02-24T04:03:43+00:00

Steele

Guest


Harden for mine, he's done it all year with less support. Being an OKC man, I can't help but think what if he didn't move on to Houston, but it would've been a tight salary cap and some big egos to massage!

2015-02-24T03:22:42+00:00

John

Guest


Westbrook is the best player in the league going round at the moment IMO.

2015-02-24T03:10:04+00:00

Tristan Rayner

Editor


It's from the top 3 only, and I'm more interested in the teams finishing positions to help as a guide. LeBron can take it if the Cavaliers end up in the top-three, but even then he might need a top-two finish and some big numbers. Harden might be facing a slightly slippery slope looking Rockets outfit that could use Dwight back. Curry I'm just not sure about. The Warriors aren't looking too hot just now and may, unfathomably, not hold the 1 seed. Curry's hurt by Klay's success too, ironically. I'm a James fan and I think he can win it again. He'll need peak health and season-best form though, and a winning Cavs team.

AUTHOR

2015-02-24T03:01:15+00:00

Ryan O'Connell

Expert


I'm impressed!

2015-02-24T02:58:07+00:00

Cameron Rose

Expert


Haha, bored on my lunch-break, thought I'd spice it up with a bit of research...

AUTHOR

2015-02-24T02:54:22+00:00

Ryan O'Connell

Expert


Alright, who have you been talking to?

2015-02-24T02:37:27+00:00

Cameron Rose

Expert


Marc Gasol is a smoky that doesn't get spoken about enough. The man is clutch, and I shudder to think how the Grizzlies would go without him. And what about John Wall's speed and vision? If I want to see pure athleticism and smarts on a 28m x 15m court, he's the man I watch.

2015-02-24T02:13:59+00:00

astro

Guest


Everything rests on Lebron...if he keeps playing better and improving, he has to win it. If not Lebron, Harden gets it for me.

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