
Back in April, Ben Taylor posted the team records when MVP candidates played, their change in win pace when they didn't play, and their OnWins (which Doctor MJ created and counts the number of games where the player won his minutes). In Win% change, Jokic and Durant led all candidates with a 30% difference between when they played and when they didn't. In the games Jokic missed, the Nuggets played like a team that would win 17 games over an 82-game season. Jokic's OnWins, at 50, was second only to Tatum among the candidates Taylor looked at. Source:
https://backpicks.com/2022/04/13/team-records-when-mvp-candidates-play-onwins-and-wowy/ This entire season is a kind of achievement for Jokic, and I hesitate to take anything away from him because of things that were out of his control. We all know the story, with Murray and MPJ out, it was all on the big man's back.
We know how good he was, but if you need another reminder... over the last two seasons, the Nuggets offensive rating with Jokic on the court is 119.6.

A few years ago you could have questioned whether Jokic would find the right balance between his passing and scoring. (The old question: should Nash have scored more?) This is no longer a question. Over the last two years, the only player with at least 1,400 half-court possessions and a higher PPP than Jokic is 2021 Steph Curry. If you expand that to at least 1,000 half-court possessions, Kawhi Leonard, Kyrie Irving, and Zion Williamson enter the mix, all in 2021. To find someone with a higher PPP than Jokic in 2022, you have to go down to Deandre Ayton and Rudy Gobert, both with less than 800 half-court possessions in the season.

From bball-index: in 2022, Jokic was 99.4% percentile in overall shooting, 98% in finishing, 100% in playmaking, and 99.4% in box creation. See here:
https://i.imgur.com/nAdMuc2.pngFor POY, how do we count "doing more with less?" I personally don't see anything in Jokic's success that doesn't translate to a more talented situation. He touches the ball as much as the pound-the-ball creators, but holds it for half as long. He's moving the ball, he's throwing players open, he's making passes that we haven't seen before. So, to me, the question raised this season was not whether Jokic is the best offensive player in the league. We know that. The question now is how Jokic stands up to the players most of us consider the absolute standards: Jokic vs Nash, Jokic vs Magic, Jokic vs MJ or Bron.
Here's where it feels like we were robbed. We evaluate the best by how they problem solve against the toughest opponents. And it's difficult to take too much from a series in which the Nuggets were just completely outmatched. Aaron Gordon had one of the worst shooting series I think I've ever seen. I wish we could have seen a longer series and a better performance from the rest of the Denver team, because Jokic did seem to be figuring stuff out in the last three games.

I don't really have questions about his offense. Jokic has been a consistent playoff performer on that end.
But the defense. Denver's defense was a mess against Golden State. Sure, the final tally was a bit exaggerated because Poole and other Warriors got hot, but that was at least in part because of the looks they got. I don't think any center in the league can salvage the Nuggets perimeter defense, but there's no question that we have at least two series in the last two playoffs where Jokic's lack of mobility in space was exploited. In the 2021 and 2022 playoffs, Denver gave up 1.13 PPP on pick and rolls where Jokic was the big defender. That would be one of the worst marks in the league over a full season. Compare that to the regular seasons, where the team's mark was 0.81 PPP on the same type of play.
The Nuggets teams we've seen the last few years have not been great supporting casts. They haven't had defenders that can hold their own against quick guards and, outside of not-fully healthy MPJ in 2021, they haven't had any playoff-level offensive weapons. It's still a question how big a deal Jokic's defense with a more supportive cast. After all, we're currently seeing Golden State target a (admittedly hurt) Robert Williams, and I don't think that means he's a bad defender. Except for the most mobile of them, all bigs are in trouble in the playoffs. (Jokic would likely face similar, if less dramatic trouble against Phoenix, Dallas, Memphis, Atlanta, Brooklyn, and Boston -- so roughly 46.6% of playoff teams )
How much to dock him for "huntability?" This is a question that is becoming louder and louder in the playoffs. (How much does a player's value drop when he is the source of an opposing offenses strategy? How often will this come up against the top 16 teams every year?) So, I see Jokic as a slightly negative defender in certain matchups and positive in others. He's never going to be the best rim protector but he has amazing hands.
