After hanging around near the top of the list for most of the season, Jahmyr Gibbs grabbed the top spot in the MVP Chase when it mattered most: the final game of the season.
You might think I'm nuts, but if I got to vote for the NFL MVP, he'd be first on my ballot, followed by the next four on the final top 20 list because that's what I said I would do:
Here's my reasoning. My baseline for a player to earn points for MVP each week was:
For his team to win the game.
To gain 90+ yards from scrimmage or earn a passer rating of 90+, although the player could have finished slightly below these marks if they had scored touchdowns.
For backs and receivers, the standard was to gain enough yards which, if repeated every game, would make one a Pro Bowler or All-Pro. That standard is 90 yards from scrimmage. I set a much lower standard for a quarterback; 90.0 was a little below average for NFL passer ratings. But the quarterback is a difficult position, and as long as the passer rating wasn't too bad, I thought a quarterback's win should count in his MVP candidacy. The more yards or better passer rating the player had, however, the better his MVP score for the week.
Here's a review of last week's top eight candidates to either win the Chase or finish in the top five. They all finished in the top eight, although in a different order.
Jahmyr Gibbs: Gained 90+ yards or more in 11 of 15 Lions victories and scored touchdowns in all four games in which he didn't. 73 yards gained was his lowest in a victory.
Derrick Henry: Gained 90+ yards in 10 of 12 Ravens victories and scored a TD in another. Worst game (in a win): 67 yards, 0 TDs.
Saquon Barkley: Gained 90+ yards in 10 of 14 Eagles victories. No TDs in the three other games he played. Worst game: 54 yards; did not play in one.
Lamar Jackson: Had a passer rating of 90 in all 12 Ravens victories. His lowest rating was 92.8 and his next lowest was 114.7.
Jared Goff: Passer rating of 90 in 12 of 15 Lions victories. Worst rating: 59.7.
Sam Darnold: Had a passer rating of 90 (actually 107) in 11 of 14 Vikings victories; below 75 in the three others including a 48.2 game.
Josh Jacobs: Had 90+ yards in ten of 11 Packers victories. Worst game: 48 yards.
Josh Allen: Passer rating of 90+ in ten of 13 Bills victories and scored a touchdown in two others. Worst rating (without scoring a touchdown): 67.3.
Henry and Barkley both had several monster games, helping their candidacies. If I hadn't committed to making the MVP Chase top 5 the same as the actual ballot top 5, I would put Lamar Jackson in the #2 spot, because, like Gibbs, he was a major contributor to every single victory his team had. I'll re-adjust my rules next year.
Advocates for Jackson winning MVP could say that it isn't his fault the Ravens didn't win more games. Fine, but he's not the reason they won more games either, or they would have. Gibbs had big games in every victory, and the Lions co-led the NFL in victories.
Jaymyr Gibbs is my MVP. Nevertheless, I would choose Barkley and Henry as my All-Pro running backs ahead of him. After all, the MVP isn't about who had the best season personally, it's about who made the most major contributions to team victories.
You could assert that the MVP award should also consider player performances in losses.
No.
James Leroy Wilson writes The MVP Chase (subscribe). Thank you for your subscriptions and support! You may contact James for writing, editing, research, and other work: jamesleroywilson-at-gmail.com.