Djoker wrote:I personally would have given the 2006 MVP to Kobe but it's debatable. Any one of Nash, Dirk, Duncan, Wade and Lebron could have won it that year. Winning just 45 games hurts his chances and it would be the least wins by any modern MVP so it's not like it's blasphemous that he didn't get it. Although Westbrook got it with 47 wins. In other years, Kobe's case wasn't that great because he never had the luck to combine individual dominance with team success. It was always one or the other but not both and the competition was stiff in some years. From 2000-2002, he was overshadowed by Shaq. In 2003, his great season coincided with Duncan's historic season. In 2004, Garnett had his historic season and the Wolves won more games. In 2005, he was injured and the team missed the playoffs. In 2007, great individually but they won just 42 games. In 2009, Kobe had a fantastic MVP caliber season and the Lakers were fantastic but he was overshadowed by a GOAT-level season by Lebron and the Cavs even won 1 game more. In 2010, weaker season and again overshadowed by Lebron. In 2011, you could have given it to him but Rose was at least his equal statistically and the Bulls won more games. And from 2012 onwards, he never really had a case. So 1-2 MVP's is what you could realistically expect from Kobe the way his career shook out.
Kobe gets underrated a lot by some these days but winning more than 1 MVP isn't indicative of that.
That's really the truth of this matter. Kobe was a top 5 player throughout the 00s but many of the stars had their best seasons individually throughout and overshadowed Kobe by a bit at least.
What is an interesting take in this video is that Lebron gets totally different treatment in regards to success. He had great teams in Miami and onwards, which explains his titles. Kobe quite the opposite and still won two after Shaq, against very good competition also, so that isn't against him.