My 2014-15 NBA award winners

By Ryan O'Connell / Expert

With the NBA regular season finishing today, it is time to nominate who should win the 2014-15 NBA awards.

Though it’s always tough to select the winners, this season was even trickier, due to the large number of quality candidates in almost each of the categories.

However, I’ve painstakingly selected my deserving individuals, so drum roll please…

Most Valuable Player
As I wrote a couple of weeks ago, we legitimately have five candidates for the Maurice Podoloff Trophy. Heck, it might even be six if you include Chris Paul’s second half of the season.

So, now that we’ve reached the end of the regular season, has my mind changed from James Harden as the winner?

Russell Westbrook deserves consideration for his mind-boggling finish to the season. LeBron James is still the best player on the planet, and a victim of his own high standards. Anthony Davis finished with a player efficiency rating (PER) of 31.0, making his one of the greatest regular seasons of all-time.

However, Steph Curry represents the biggest danger to Harden’s MVP candidacy.

Curry deserves more than just credit for leading his Warriors to the best record in the league. In fact, his ridiculous shooting, ball handling and passing over the last few weeks may now give him the edge over Harden.

Harden has had less to work with from a teammates point of view, but Curry lifted Golden State to transcendent levels this season, and finished the season ever so slightly stronger than ‘The Beard’.

So yes, I’ve flipped, and would now name Steph Curry the MVP for 2014-15.

I think.

Defensive Player of the Year
Another cluttered field for this award.

Consider the following list of names: DeAndre Jordan, Draymond Green, Kawhi Leonard, Tim Duncan, Anthony Davis, Andrew Bogut, Chris Paul, Marc Gasol, Rudy Gobert, Michael Kidd-Gilchrist and Tony Allen.

I’ve probably forgotten someone too.

Seeming as there is so much competition, I needed to get really harsh and eliminate players based on them missing games through injury, or playing fewer minutes than other contenders. It’s not entirely fair, but it does help whittle the list down to Jordan, Duncan and Green.

Of those three, Jordan has the most impressive stats, and Green is the most versatile, but Duncan gets my vote. He blocks shots, he rebounds, he locks his man down, he rotates, he’s vocal, he’s consistent, he’s brilliant in the clutch, and he does a number of other things that will never show up in a stat sheet.

Incredibly, at age 38, old man Timmy Duncan should be the Defensive Player of the Year.

Rookie of the Year
The much vaunted rookie class of 2014-15 ended up being somewhat disappointing, mainly due to a number of devastating injuries, but also because it’s evident that many of the young players will take a little longer than expected to develop.

There was some late-season noise that Nerlens Noel was making a strong case for the Rookie of the Year award, but I suspect that was simply a case of journalists attempting to create a story that didn’t exist.

Though Noel had a solid first year, posting stats of 9.9 points, 8.1 rebounds, 1.9 blocks and 1.8 steals per game, this award is only going one place, and that’s Minnesota.

The Timberwolves’ Andrew Wiggins should win in a complete landslide.

Statically, only his scoring average was truly impressive, but it was the growth and improvement Wiggins showcased over the course of the season that should ensure he’s named the NBA best first-year player this season. And I suspect it won’t even be close.

Coach of the Year
Perhaps my favourite NBA gong, and always a hotly contested category; this year being no different.

Greg Popovich remains as great as ever, and the Spurs will once again – amazingly – enter the playoffs as a championship contender. Tom Thibodeau overcame upheavals and injuries to guide his Bulls into the top four in the East.

Jason Kidd’s performance on the sidelines with the Bucks this season is criminally underrated. In Portand, Terry Stott’s runs some of the best plays in the league. Even Brad Stevens did an amazing job getting so many wins out of an underwhelming roster in Boston.

Also, LeBron James did a good job in Cleveland. Oh sorry, I mean David Blatt. (Zing!)

However, this season it’s really a two-horse race between Golden State’s Steve Kerr and Atlanta’s Mike Budenolzer.

Coach Bud has done a wonderful job implementing a system in Atlanta, and considering the lack of big names on the Hawks roster, you need to give a lot of credit to the coach for the way the team executes, both offensively and defensively. He’s done a truly outstanding job.

Yet Steve Kerr deserves to win, because he took a good team and made them great, primarily because of his coaching.

The foundations were already there for a fantastic Warriors team, and previous coach Mark Jackson deserves credit for instilling some defence into a franchise that has never been known for it.

Kerr – in his first year as a coach – maintained that fantastic D, but it was always puzzling that the Warriors weren’t a great offensive team over the last few seasons, considering the weapons at their disposal. That’s where the new coach made the biggest impact.

Kerr made a number of adjustments on offense.

For example, early on, he understood the rare talent he had at centre, and immediately began using Andrew Bogut’s passing skills to their full potential, with the Warriors running some awesome dribble hand-offs from their big man to their elite-level shooters.

The Warriors have an undeniably talented roster, but Kerr propelled this squad to a historically great regular season team; they’ll probably finish with 67 wins, and they beat teams by an average of over 10 points per game.

They were great, Kerr was great, and he was the standout coach this season.

Sixth Man of the Year
Lou Williams’ performance against Miami last weekend sealed the deal: the Toronto Raptor is my best reserve for 2014-15.

In an 82-game regular season, it would be stupidity of the highest order to reward a player based upon just one game, but Williams’ 29-point effort against the Heat typified what he’s done for the Raptors all season.

He’s the epitome of a ‘sparkplug off the bench’, and provides Toronto with some funky types of scoring when he enters the game. He’s also won them a handful of games almost single-handedly.

Isaiah Thomas, Marreese Speights and perennial favourite Jamal Crawford will all poll strongly, but it’s Williams’ award to lose.

Most Improved Player
The popular picks here are Jimmy Butler, Rudy Gobert, Draymond Green, Klay Thompson or Hassan Whiteside, and all would be deserving winners.

However, I’m going slightly left field and nominating Anthony Davis.

‘The Brow’ put up ridiculous numbers this season and established himself as an NBA superstar, while also laying claim to being the league’s future poster child.

In one year, he made the leap from ‘promising young player’ to ‘potential MVP’.

If the award is about recognising those that have improved, how do you go past that type of development?

Executive of the Year
It should be banished Atlanta Hawks GM Danny Ferry.

One can only imagine the level of awkwardness that would be generated by presenting Ferry with the Executive of the Year award, considering no one has seen him since September due to his unfortunate racial comments about Luol Deng.

The Hawks have avoided an uncomfortable scenario by instead nominating head coach Mike Budenolzer, who has presided as the Head of Basketball Operations in Ferry’s enforced absence.

Yet it’s Ferry that deserves the accolades, having assembled a great roster and coaching staff that finished with the best record in the East, despite the absence of a true superstar.

The Crowd Says:

2015-04-16T07:02:30+00:00

Ryan O'Connell

Guest


Fair points, well made.

2015-04-16T06:27:57+00:00

Shaun Mancini

Roar Pro


Wiggins will probably win ROY but Mirotic has been pretty impressive for the Bulls. He got plenty of playing time due to injuries as well. As for the MVP. What a debate this has caused. A few weeks ago i thought Westbrook with triple doubles every night was coming to steal it but it will come down to Curry/Harden. I can't believe people count the Warriors record and roster against Curry winning MVP. Why can't the best player on the best team win? 67 wins, best team on offence, best team on defence and the most entertaining player in the NBA leading them every night. I thought some of the plays he was coming up with were going to break Twitter at times this seasons. I don't agree that you have to carry your team to win MVP.

2015-04-16T06:06:45+00:00

Reegs82

Guest


There’s been some revisionist history on the quality of the teammates around Steph. A mere six months ago Steph was playing with a shooting guard who some people wanted to go Minnesota, Barnes failing to live up to the hype, an utterly undersized power forward in Green, and a center in Bogut who had question marks about how much he would play. Now, the media treats the rest of the like they’ve been perennial world-beaters for years. Yes, the role players have improved but, quality teammates shouldn’t damage one’s MVP bid. Durant didn’t get punished for Westbrook & Ibaka, same with Lebron for Wade & Bosh, and Jordan for Pippen & Rodman. Don’t forget, last season the Warriors also had one of the leagues best starting fives. They’ve switched two of those five and the starting unit is probably the league’s best. The common denominator: Curry.

AUTHOR

2015-04-16T05:15:34+00:00

Ryan O'Connell

Expert


David Griffin is his name - and it's a greta call. He's a real chance, considering the mid-season trades. You could argue Ferry did his job last year, as the Hawks made few changes to their roster in the off-season; they just had a bit more 'seasoning'.

2015-04-16T04:42:32+00:00

Squidward

Roar Rookie


Pretty much agree with all these Curry has it. Just an awesome and entertaining year from him. Lebron probably was most "valuable" but like you said. His bar is set too high Roughie for executive of the year. The astute mid year trades to get waiters out and bring in smith shrump mosgov to Cleveland. Was a season turner. Don't recall his name who is it for Cavs I did like the Bogey mans stats for defensive POTY they're right up there

2015-04-16T02:02:35+00:00

Gobbler

Guest


Ok. Yeah he has been unreal this year. He really is a player that basic stats don't do justice to his value on that team.

AUTHOR

2015-04-16T01:57:47+00:00

Ryan O'Connell

Expert


My intent was to do the opposite! That wasn't meant as a slight, but rather a compliment!

2015-04-16T00:59:46+00:00

astro

Guest


Yep, that's true...he shouldn't be punished for being on a good team, but its hard not to think it makes life slightly easier for him. As I say, I have nothing against Curry, and if he wins (which I think he probably will) then he certainly would be an undeserving winner...its a bit of a coin toss really!

2015-04-16T00:50:44+00:00

Gobbler

Guest


"even though he spends SOME time guarding big guys too" Without knowing the answer, I'll bet that he has spent more time guarding 4's & 5's than perimeter players. You're selling him short there, mate.

AUTHOR

2015-04-16T00:44:27+00:00

Ryan O'Connell

Expert


The MVP is an individual award, sure. But it's an ambiguous one. Does it go to the best player? The most valuable player? The most irreplaceable player? The best player on the best team? The criteria is deliberately vague, because I think the league likes the debates it causes each season. And that ensures that you could make a legitimate case for Curry or Harden, and you wouldn't be wrong. I don't think Curry having better teammates should be held against him. Especially when you consider that a lot of the reason their 'better' is because of Curry. Again, I had Harden winning as little as two weeks ago, so I can certainly see the claims for both players.

AUTHOR

2015-04-16T00:38:58+00:00

Ryan O'Connell

Expert


As a Lakers fan, at the start of the year, I could at least console myself that the Celtics were as dreadful as us. I thought Boston's roster was horrible, and only got worse during the season. So to see them in the playoffs is remarkable, and looking at the way they play, all credit to Stevens. In any other season, he'd be the runaway winner of Coach of the Year.

2015-04-16T00:26:22+00:00

Jack

Guest


Curry, Jordan, Wiggins, Kerr, cant choose, Jimmy Butler. any one disagree

2015-04-16T00:24:18+00:00

astro

Guest


As for MVP, I'm taking Harden. Nothing against Curry, who I think has been brilliant, but MVP is an individual award, so the success of the Warriors doesn't really count as much in my mind, although I realise its a compelling argument for Curry. For me, Harden has been amazing from start to finish. Everyone predicted the Rockets would regress this year after losing Parsons and Asik, and yet, despite long stretches of not having Dwight, Jones and now Beverley and D Mo, they have the same record as the Spurs almost solely because of Harden. Every team focuses on him every night, yet they can't stop him. In my mind, if you switched the two, GS would still have an incredible year with Harden. Their roster is stacked. Teams can't focus solely on Curry in the same was as they can Harden. You can't leave Thompson or Green open, in the same way as you can Jason Terry or Trevor Ariza. And no other team has guys like David Lee and Iggy on the bench. The Rockets bring Corey Brewer and the dumped Josh Smith off the bench...oh, and Joey Dorsey! If the Rox had Curry, would they really be at 55-26? I don't think so...

2015-04-16T00:14:05+00:00

astro

Guest


So glad you mentioned Brad Stevens. I think to get this Celtics team to 7th seed in the playoffs is incredible. This team has one of the worst big men rotations in the league in Zeller and Olynyk in terms of rebounding and rim protection. Sullinger is the teams best rebounder and shot blocker at 7.7 per game, and less than a block a game. They have no one close to an All-Star. They traded away their two best starters in Rondo and Green for picks. They shoot 32% from 3. Their starting PG is a rookie who can't shoot. Yet, they're something like 23-13 since February...just incredible. They'll finish 6 or 7 games behind Washington in the East, a team I thought would compete for the title this year! Imagine what Stevens will do once he gets a decent roster...

AUTHOR

2015-04-15T23:44:28+00:00

Ryan O'Connell

Expert


Haha! Fire away Kev! (Yeah, I read Zach's this morning. I was pleased we had differing opinions on a few things! Though, thankfully, not too differing - as I consider him the most knowledgeable NBA writer.)

AUTHOR

2015-04-15T23:42:50+00:00

Ryan O'Connell

Expert


I think perimeter defenders have been marginalised in the NBA for some time now, so I'd be happy for Draymond to get the award (even though he spends some time guarding big guys too). He'd be deserving, and I'd have no issue with it. He was a very close second, for mine. But the way Duncan anchors what the Spurs do is so impressive, and I find it mesmerising to watch how clinical San Antonio are on D. Green and the Warriors are little more frenetic; they switch and rotate and hustle, and Green just everywhere. So it really came down to a choice of styles, and I chose the Spurs. But I freely admit, there is a touch of sentiment and romance to my selection, which may be unfair on Draymond.

2015-04-15T23:04:13+00:00

Red Kev

Roar Guru


Read Zach Lowe's end of season awards article yesterday, this was a nice follow up Ryan. I think it might be time to pepper AskTheCheapSeats with NBA questions and make Brett answer them all.

2015-04-15T22:04:44+00:00

Niall

Roar Pro


I agree on most of your awards but just can't on Tim Duncan as Defensive Player of the Year. I think with the league now being perimeter dominated, a perimeter defender is the most deserving. I'd go for Draymond Green.

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