I always use “valuable” as the operative word when voting for the Most Valuable Player, and that is the reason why I have cast my ballot this season for Chris Paul of the Los Angeles Clippers.
It came down to a decision between Paul and LeBron James, and as impressed as I have been with LeBron’s focus, determination and across-the-board improvement in every statistical category except assists, I do not see him as a valuable closer when he is paired with Dwyane Wade, and I thought the Heat should have done better than 18-15 on the road.
A year ago (heck, go back for a majority of the last 30 years) nobody would have ever imagined that the former laughingstock, second-class citizens of Los Angeles would take the Lakers right down to the wire for the Pacific Division title.
Who’d have thought they’d be more entertaining to watch on television than the Lakers.
Who’d have thought they’d even be relevant in something other than the draft lottery?
Paul has completely changed the culture of the franchise, and he and his team played with a finishing kick that was unmatched by anybody in the West with the exception of the Spurs (who are going to win it all, IMHO.) Paul hasn’t had a single bad game since March.
I e-mailed by ballots to Ernst and Young two seconds before posting this column, and I agonized over several selections (especially Defensive Player of the Year) more than I expected.
Here are all of my votes. Feel free to agree or disagree in the comments section. You can even be nasty if you want to. I have thick skin. I can take it.
MOST VALUABLE PLAYER
- Chris Paul
- LeBron James
- Kevin Durant
- Kobe Bryant
- Kevin Love
ROOKIE OF THE YEAR
- Kyrie Irving
- Kenneth Faried
- Ricky Rubio
COACH OF THE YEAR
- Tom Thibodeau
- Gregg Popovich
- Ty Corbin
SIXTH MAN AWARD
- James Harden
- Lou Williams
- Al Harrington
DEFENSIVE PLAYER OF THE YEAR
- Serge Ibaka
- Shawn Marion
- Tyson Chandler
- Steve Novak
- Andrew Bynum
- Nikola Pekovic
ALL-NBA TEAMS
First Team
F- LeBron James F-Kevin Durant C-Dwight Howard G-Kobe Bryant G-Chris PaulSecond Team
F- Paul Pierce F-Kevin Love C-Andrew Bynum G-Russell Westbrook G-Rajon RondoThird Team
F-Carmelo Anthony F-Josh Smith C-DeMarcus Cousins G-Dwyane Wade G-Tony ParkerCousins is the only player from a non-playoff team to make my Top 15, but he is such a better player than Roy Hibbert and Marc Gasol that I couldn’t help myself. I wanted to put Ty Lawson in there, too, but Dwyane Wade (despite all his missed games) is better. Period. Derrick Rose is a glaring omission, but he missed roughly 40 percent of the season (and two big foul shots late in the 4th quarter of the first Heat-Bulls game). ‘Melo’s strong finish (30+ points in 8 of the final 14 games) got him the nod over Pau Gasol, LaMarcus Aldridge, Rudy Gay, Kevin Garnett and Tim Duncan.