Jordan Syndrome wrote:I don’t like to give MIP to young players in their first 3 seasons but there are a handful of players who made huge jumps in their 4th year, including Sabonis, Murray and Mitchell but I don't think it is fair to leave Bam out of it because of 1 season.
MIP: Duncan Robinson
Robinson is already 26.5 years old and at the age of 24 was not even in the league. He went from an end of bench player in 2019 to one of the most important players on a title team.
6MOY: Dennis Schroeder
The other contenders for me were Jordan Clarkson, Goran Dragic and Tyler Herro. I thought it was more impressive for Schroeder to co-exist with two other "PGs" in Paul and SGA.
COY: Nick Nurse
Spoelstra is the only coach I seriously considered for this award aside from Nurse. What Nurse did with a less talented roster in comparison to Spoelstra is just as impressive, if not a bit more. Nurse went zone against Boston and it worked wonders and Spoelstra integrated it with a better roster to better results, but the blue print was made by Nurse.
EOY: Rob Pelinka
I mean the guy traded some middling prospects for Anthony freaking Davis. I like what Riley did as well as Presti. Those 3 are the clear cut top 3 for me. I was never a fan of the roster constructed of the Clippers and the failure highlighted a weakness I personally thought talent would over come.
MIP is the most frustrating award for me because I'm never sure what to do with the young guys. Luka's improvement really was the story of the season so I could get behind a Luka candidacy, but he doesn't "feel" like an "MIP" because he was an actual MVP candidate.
I'll say that I had Robinson as my MIP pick in the RS, but he's regressed big time in the playoffs. For perspective here, I actually think in practice he was the team's MVP of the regular season. In the playoffs he's 5th or 6th. That's not entirely a surprise - we kind of expect guys in his role to have diminished value against a consistent opponent - and it's still a major leap from last year, but makes it harder to say "This is the guy you should pay attention to who has leapt forward this year."
6MOY Schroeder. I expect he'll be a candidate on everyone's mind.
COY Nurse. Yup I get it. Spoelstra's had a dream season in terms of player development though in addition to pulling off the #1 upset of the playoffs and then winning the next round by learning from that team's previous opponent.
EOY Pelinka. Traded for AD. I disagree with this. At the root, the answer is simple: Pelinka and the Lakers FO have just been obviously incompetent. They don't have functional systems like other teams do. "Family run business" sounds great and all, but the Lakers are where they are right now because LeBron simply decided he wanted to attach himself to the Lakers brand (which Pelinka did not in any way make). They have AD because AD told his franchise he wanted to come here to play with LeBron.

























