HeartBreakKid wrote:I look at ROY in splits and do not factor the start of the season as heavily as the last.
But I do greatly urge people who have criteria's that consistently give them the same results as Skip Bayless and Stephen A Smith to tweak it. Nothing good can come from that.

Coincidently, I would say that the player who was actually the best rookie that year, usually ends up better than the selected, narrative-driven, ROY - making the latter a rather pointless philosophy.
Just off the top of my head some examples
Jokic > Towns
Haliburton > Ball
Embiid > Brogdon
Oladipo > MCW
Davis > Lillard
I think Wiggins > Noel is the only exception, and it took a few years for that to be true - and Wiggins didn't exactly light the world on fire either like he was projected to. Wiggins certainly did not deserve a "narrative" boost that he got for putting up an empty 20 points and the incorrect projections that he would become a superstar.
The other examples left the ROY and best rookie likely won the same year (Simmons, Luka, Morant?)
So all sorts of good thoughts here. To chime in on the specific rival rookie comparisons - not to rebut what you said because I do think there's something to it generally:
Jokic vs Towns: To me this is a situation where the way the team plays a guy makes it very hard to have confidence on how the player will scale to a starring role. I found Jokic the most intriguing rookie that year, but sided with KAT for ROY. That probably makes me a bit more likely to look for future Jokiches and not side against them lightly, but I don't want to overcompensate either.
Haliburton vs Ball: Actually, a somewhat similar example as the last, which shows I'm pretty hesitant to side with the lower primacy rookie - though here I'll say that I did actually think Ball was the most intriguing player
Embiid vs Brogdon. Oh man, this one has always stuck with me because I think those voting for Brogdon - which was obviously most people - don't really understand what the award is for. It's about hyping up a future star. The idea then that you'd choose a guy who literally shouldn't be hyped over a guy who looks like a superstar already simply because of missed time is just not helping the sport. It's different if a guy literally doesn't play enough to have that much confidence in him, but literally everyone was dead sure that Embiid was much better at basketball than Brogdon based on what they saw that season.
Oladipo vs MCW. Yup, MCW is a perfect example here because this wasn't actually about the more hyped guy just getting more rope as a rookie. Oladipo was the more hyped guy...but along comes Philly in super-tank mode and this rookie has the literal game of his life as a rookie. 76ers ride that hype wave caring not that the team wasn't good like that, and thus letting MCW develop a set of habits that would absolutely not be what he needed to stick around in the NBA as an in demand piece.
Davis vs Lillard. So, I think this is a classic case of two legit ROY philosophies. Lillard played more like a star as a rookie, but there was no serious talk that Davis shouldn't have been the #1 pick, and there were arguments that Davis was already more impressive than Lillard. Honestly I'll say that Lillard's actually come close to Davis than I expected after their rookie season, but the expectation that Davis would be the better player is to me something that's proven correct.
Funny, because this was before I added ROY to the All-Season Awards, I don't actually recall whether I sided with Dame or AD for the award at the time. I just remember being torn.
Wiggins vs Noel. So, 2014 is an interesting and complicated year here, because I think you could argue that both Wiggins & Noel were focused on because of minutes and expectation, while Nikola Mirotic was the guy coming along unexpectedly in a smaller minute load and getting in the conversation at 3rd. Something I find fascinating though is that Marcus Smart got so little attention compared to that main 3, because I think in retrospect, he probably was the best player of the bunch at the time, and has had the best career of them.
Back to Wiggins & Noel, these guys are such interesting case studies because I don't think we can really argue that folks ahead of time understood the way the NBA landscape would shift so much for them.
In the case of Wiggins, what you had fundamentally was a guy who was clearly going to be a bust of a volume scoring star who proved able to be a great role player when he has mind around the effort he needs to put in on defense. While people at the time noted the theory of him as a strong defender, I don't think anyone was arguing that Wiggins should be ROY with a thought to that side of the court.
In the case of Noel, you've got a guy who just has everything go wrong for him. He goes from his strengths (defense) being built around as a rookie, to having everything re-arranged around a different big the next year (Jahlil), and then everything changes permanently when Embiid actually arrives. Along the way, the NBA finally goes all-in on 3-point shooting, hurting Noel on both sides of the court. Then he has that whole debacle where he bets on himself to earn a max contract and ends up not looking like a rotation player. Had he taken the offer he'd been given by Dallas, they probably would have been invested in finding a way to really figure out a way to use him, and it's entirely possible the dude earns serious DPOY discussion. Instead, he ends up two lopsided of a piece to really fit into anyone else's puzzle.
ROYs who were best rookie?
Simmons - yes, I'd say that was still the correct call amazingly. 2017 had the best set of 3 rookies (in Simmons, Tatum & Mitchell) that I can even remember. But fundamentally, we saw Simmons as the star of a team tear through the end of the regular season and then right through the first round. From there it wasn't a question of whether Simmons could become a star, because he was one. For him to fall apart like he has, while we can identify causes that were visible in him as a rookie, is really about mental things that I don't think I'd ever feel comfortable predicting.
Luka - yup. I do think Trae Young made himself a case and you could argue he had a bit of "better guy later in the year" going for him, but there was never really a time I felt that torn on who should get my vote.
Ja - well now this one is interesting because of the Zion situation. There was an Embiid-like thing going on with Zion. I ended up siding with Ja along with most, but part of the thing for me honestly was Zion's disappointing Bubble run. The NBA really tried to cue it up for Zion to emerge as a future superstar in Florida after his super-exciting previous stint that season, and he just disappointed. But the thing is, speaking with some distance, I think Zion at full strength at an age even younger than his rookie age was a better player than rookie Ja...and I'm not just if peak Ja has actually topped peak Zion yet. This then to say, part of me feels like I should have voted for Zion even though I didn't.
And then the more recent guys:
Scottie vs Mobley. Scottie got the award, I was among those here siding with Mobley. Scottie people certainly have bragging rights at the moment, but honestly I was hoping for more from both of them by this point.
Paolo vs Kessler. Paolo got the ward, I was among those here siding with Kessler. I can't say I regret it. I actually think Paolo making all-star was a pretty significant mistake on the part of the coaches.
Going back further in time:
The 2003-04 the ROY race was very interesting because it was about LeBron vs Melo, but by season's end Wade would emerge as the best player of the bunch for their first few years in the league...and yet no one really talked in these terms during the ROY discussion. Even when Wade earned more playing time than LeBron on the Olympic team, people were not seeing Wade as a guy who was about to breakout as a superstar. I honestly think that Wade probably should have been the ROY based on what I value, but at the time I was debating LeBron & Melo like most everyone else.
Finally I'll go back to when I really started thinking more clearly about this in 2007-08 with Kevin Durant. There you had a guy who was very much anti-valuable early on, but the Thunder were committed to building around him, and it paid off big time by his 3rd season. That same year you had Luis Scola - a 27 year old international legend - and Al Horford. If you believe ROY should be about the most valuable person called a rookie I think it's Scola, if you eliminate someone that old, I think it's Horford. But is it in the best interest of the NBA to put either of those guys forward in the minds of the public instead of KD? No, it really isn't.