oaktownwarriors87 wrote:Dooley wrote:2001 to Shaq, 2005 and 2006 to Dirk, 2008 to LeBron or CP3, 2011 and 2017 to Bron. There's a few others where, I would have voted for someone other than the winner if I were a voter, but I don't think the winner was undeserving - probably would have voted for Duncan in 2007 and Bron in 2014 but Dirk and KD were right up there with them.oaktownwarriors87 wrote:
2017 LeBron vs 2017 HardenCode: Select all
Lebron Harden
GP 74 81
PER 27.0 27.4
VORP 6.7 8.0
BPM 7.6 8.7
WS 12.9 15.0
WS/48 .221 .245
Cavs were 7th in SRS and the Rockets were 3rd
Cavs had the #3 offense and the Rockets were #2
Cavs had the #21 defense and the Rockets were #18
It would take a VERY strong media narrative around LeBron for him to take that MVP over Harden.
Arguments for Lebron over Harden in 2017 as I see it:
- Houston's offense held up fairly well with Harden off the court that year, whereas Cleveland's offense was awful with Lebron off the court.
- Lebron was probably a better defender all things considered
- Heliocentrism bad (or at least, heliocentrism juices box-score production)
Weak.
LeBron had Irving and Love while Harden had Eric Gordon and Trevor Ariza.
Hardens individual stats were better. His team stats were better. His box score stats were better. His advanced stats were better and he had no star power on his team.
There is no good argument for LeBron, even if the team built around him sucked while he was on the bench.
"He put up worse numbers and won less games, but his bench was bad!"
Yeah, doesn't hold up
I'm a little confused by this argument.
Why is Harden being compared to LeBron in 2017? Westbrook is the one you should be comparing him with since he's the one who won the MVP award in 2017. I guess if you're saying Harden was more deserving (which I actually do agree with in regards to that particular season), then that would make more sense, but even then you're still going to have to argue why he deserves it over Westbrook.
2018 would make more sense, and quite frankly, I don't see an argument for Harden really deserving it over James anymore. It always felt like, even with Harden's incredible numbers and the Rockets record, LeBron was always the better player. Not to mention, getting Chris Paul was a huge factor in Houston's improvement and Harden playing better, since Paul ended up becoming the main initiator of that team instead of Harden. Meanwhile, Cleveland is most certainly a bottom of the barrel team without LeBron.