Photo: Public Domain
My interest in league MVPs began as the trend of "load management" - the best players taking several games off during the season for rest to be relatively healthy for the playoffs - took hold in the NBA. Russell Westbrook's 2017 MVP season was another motivator; yes, Westbrook had the first triple-double season since 1962. While the statistical achievement was impressive, did it make his team more successful?
I also wanted to stay away from advanced stats that evaluate the overall quality of players - I was looking for players who made huge contributions to help their teams win the most games. If their best games were against weak competition, who cares? As long as their teams won, they should got credit. And if players had great games but lost, well, the game should help them in All-NBA voting, but not the MVP.
Because the most valuable player ought to have the most great games in victories.
One feature I always thought was important to determine a player's contribution to a win was +/-; the difference between how many points the player's team scored minus how many they allowed while he was on the floor. It captures in part how well the team plays because he's on the floor, as opposed to when he's not.
I've used minutes played and/or Player Efficiency Rating (PER) in the past as well in my considerations: minutes played suggest how "valuable" the coach thinks the player is; PER indicates how well he's played in general during the season. Neither, however, were able to indicate the game-by-game effectiveness of the player. I wanted a PER-type stat, but on an individual game basis, not a season basis.
I recently came across "Game Score," which fills that role. The Game Score Formula is:
(Points)+0.4*(Field Goals Made)+0.7*(Offensive Rebounds)+0.3*(Defensive rebounds)+(Steals)+0.7*(Assists)+0.7*(Blocked Shots)- 0.7*(Field Goal Attempts)-0.4*(Free Throws Missed) – 0.4*(Personal Fouls)-(Turnovers)
The Game Score formula was developed by John Hollinger, who also created PER. I don't know how the numbers were arrived at, but they make sense: add the good things together and subtract the bad things done in a game.
Going through the data, I've settled on what makes a game an MVP-worthy game, that will count as an MVP point:
Win the game. (This will always be the rule for the MVP Chase throughout all sports.)
A combined Game Score plus +/- of 30 or more.
The following list is the top ten in MVP Chase points (which is the number of MVP games they've had.)
I didn't have time to update for the weekend, but I wanted to get this out. Players tied in points are listed alphabetically. I sorted the data Stathead.
Through February 28 games:
Shai Gilgeous-Alexander, Thunder, 38
Nikola Jokic, Nuggets 31
Donovan Mitchell, Cavaliers, 25
Karl-Anthony Towns, Knicks, 25
Jaren Jackson Jr., Grizzlies,22
Evan Mobley, Cavaliers, 22
Jayson Tatum, Celtics 22
Jarrett Allen, Cavaliers 20
Jalen Brunson, Knicks, 20
Lebron James, Lakers, 20
One thing that's clarified is that Donovan Mitchell is the most valuable of the three Cavaliers players who are having great seasons for the successful team. My previous tallies didn't always reflect that. They also tended to reward Jayson Tatum a little more than was warranted.
I'd like to to a "proof of concept" by using this criterion (Game Points plus +/-) in other years to see how the MVP Chase winner would have been.
Stay tuned!
James Leroy Wilson writes The MVP Chase (subscribe). Thank you for your subscriptions and support! James is available for writing, editing, research, and other work: jamesleroywilson-at-gmail.com.