Way-too-early NBA award predictions

By Yush / Roar Rookie

We are yet to reach the quarter-mark of the NBA season, but it’s never too early to start awards speculation.

If the season ended today, here are the lucky winners.

MVP – Giannis Antetokounmpo (Milwaukee Bucks)
Honourable Mention – Kawhi Leonard (Toronto Raptors)

The Milwaukee Bucks currently hold the second best record in the East (and the NBA overall) at 12-4. Dating back to 1988 when Jordan’s Bulls had “only” the third best record in the East, every MVP bar Russell Westbrook has come from a top two team in either conference.

Westbrook broke this precedent by averaging a triple double through the season, an extraordinarily rare statistical feat. Assuming the trend continues, Kawhi Leonard from the 14-4 Raptors stands out alongside Giannis.

Giannis gets the nod with gaudy statistical splits of 25.9/12.7/5.5 (points/rebounds/assists). He is also shooting an absurd 55.5per cent from the field, combining volume with efficiency.

Furthermore, public opinion of Kawhi is at an all-time low following his curious exit from San Antonio. The importance of narrative can never be discounted in MVP voting.

Milwaukee Bucks forward Giannis Antetokounmpo (AP Photo/Phelan M. Ebenhack)

Most Improved Player – Zach LaVine (Chicago Bulls)
Honourable Mention – Josh Richardson (Miami Heat)

21 months ago, Zach LaVine tore his ACL. Today he is averaging a career-high 25.3 points per game, which ranks ninth in the NBA.

This is a remarkable comeback from an injury which many players never fully recover from (example – Derrick Rose). Josh Richardson also boasts a compelling case, increasing his scoring average to 20 points per game while shooting 45 per cent from 3. Both players are on losing teams that will likely miss the playoffs in the East.

Due to his compelling injury narrative and statistical prowess however, LaVine wins by a whisker. For those suggesting De’Aaaron Fox as a candidate – while he has improved substantially, it’s hard to vote for a sophomore player in this category.

Rookie of the Year – Luka Doncic (Dallas Mavericks)
Honorable Mention – DeAndre Ayton (Phoenix Suns)

Luka Doncic and DeAndre Ayton couldn’t be more different. Doncic is a floor general averaging splits of 19.2 points/4.1 assists/6.8 rebounds whereas DeAndre Ayton is a 7’1 centre averaging 16.4 points/10.4 rebounds/2.7 assists per game. Both are worthy candidates, but Doncic wins by a fingernail due to team record.

Dallas Mavericks guard Luka Doncic goes up for a shot against Minnesota Timberwolves forward Karl-Anthony Towns (AP Photo/Richard W. Rodriguez)

Ayton’s Suns are currently 3-13 and could finish with the worst record in the league. Moreover, Doncic has played professional basketball extensively in Europe and would be less susceptible to the “rookie wall” than his peers.

Trae Young from Atlanta is also in the mix, but his dismal efficiency (24 per cent from 3!) leaves him trailing Doncic and Ayton.

Sixth Man Of The Year – Domantas Sabonis (Indiana Pacers)
Honourable Mention – Montrezl Harrell (Los Angeles Clippers)

This award is largely a two-horse race (so far). Domantas Sabonis is posting career-best averages of 14.1 points, 9.5 rebounds and 3.1 assists per game. He does all this in just 24.5 minutes per game, while shooting an absurd 68.5 per cent from the floor.

Montrezl Harrell from the Clippers is putting up 15.3 points and 6.9 rebounds a game with similar minutes and efficiency.

Both players are on winning teams with identical records thus far, 11-6. For now, Sabonis has a narrow victory but don’t be surprised if Harrell makes a charge. Harrell has played his best in the past two weeks after a relatively slower start.

Coach Of The Year – Mike Budenholzer (Milwaukee Bucks)
Honourable Mention – Nick Nurse (Toronto Raptors)

Milwaukee currently rank second in the East, after finishing seventh last season. The Bucks’ core roster is much the same, with their only notable recruits being Brook Lopez and Ersan Ilyasova. The difference? Mike Budenholzer.

With a league-best point differential of +11.1 in addition to the second-best overall record, this award doesn’t require much debate.

Nick Nurse deserves to be in the discussion with the Raptors sitting on a 14-4 record, but voter fatigue comes into player after Dwane Casey won last season.

Defensive Player Of The Year – Marc Gasol (Memphis Grizzlies)
Honourable Mention – Giannis Antetokounmpo (Milwaukee Bucks)

This is the most subjective award by far, largely relying on the eye-test. Giannis is definitely in the discussion as a versatile defender who covers multiple positions from the perimeter to the post.

However, Gasol gets the nod, as he is anchoring the NBA’s tightest defense. The Grizzlies allow just 100 points per game, with Gasol also posting his career-best steals average to boot.

The Crowd Says:

2018-11-26T00:13:30+00:00

Jett Hatton

Roar Pro


Sabonis and Harrell are killing it, but surely D Rose is the front-runner for 6th man.

2018-11-23T01:11:21+00:00

Brian Hays

Roar Rookie


No, but Bucks are no lock to finish top 2 in the East? If they finish 3rd is Giannis straight out of the race? The narrative around Lebron, in season 16, in the biggest market taking the most storied franchise back to the playoffs is strong enough to overcome the precedent. If they finish top 5 in the West I think he will get the nod. If he averages 28/8/8 and remains top 2 in PER I just cant see the voters looking elsewhere. Lavine played more minutes in 16-17; but he also shot the ball better, shot more threes at a significantly higher percentage and turned the ball over half as much. He was much more efficient. He shot 5 shots and 5 FTs less a game, and scored 6 less points. He is having a great season, he will likely get MIP, but I still think he is essentially what we all expected if he got healthy and responsibility of the offense. There is pretty much no one else to score in Chicago, and no pressure, so I assume his numbers will be steady at the current numbers; but I still don't think he is essentially "improved" that much.

AUTHOR

2018-11-23T00:25:30+00:00

Yush

Roar Rookie


Can you see the Lakers finishing top 2 in the west though? I can't at this stage. The voters' precedent is set, Westbrook had to average a triple double to break it. 29 of the last 30 MVPs on a top 2 record. 2006 Kobe and 2015 Anthony Davis willed their teams to the playoffs but it wasn't enough. LaVine has definitely improved; Before he tore his ACL in minnesota he was actually averaging more minutes (37.2) than he is now, with much less output. His usage and shots are up for sure, being on a bad team, but i think his confidence to take on this workload is an improvement in itself.

2018-11-23T00:10:36+00:00

Gary McConnell

Guest


Have to consider Serge Ibaka for most improved.

2018-11-22T23:24:31+00:00

Brian Hays

Roar Rookie


MVP - Lebron. 29/8/7. 2nd in NBA in PER. Leading new team to a playoff position in the West. The King is the MVP so far. I just cant have Giannis with his 12% shooting from 3 and 2nd in turnovers in the league. Also, Kahwi started off hot but has been a bit flat of late and only played 13 of 19. Shouldn't even be in the conversation. Numbers aren't even spectacular. Doncic is ROY. MIP - Agreed on Lavine, only issue I have is he actually improved? He had similar years in terms of % and output per 36 mins in previous years, his just playing more and getting more shots up. There is difference between improving and recovering from injury. Nonetheless his been getting buckets.

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