Ron Swanson wrote:I guess I'm way more stingy when it comes to what qualifies here. "MVP season" to me means you can make a legitimate case that they were the MVP even over the winner that year, OR they had an all-time great statistical year and were simply blocked by someone having an equally or slightly more historic season (i.e. SGA over Jokic). Therefore, having 11-seasons for Lebron seems like a pretty big stretch considering we're only talking about RS here. Remember, this isn't how many years you were the "best player in the world", which he very much was from 2009-2018. I don't think it's a hot take to say that Lebron hasn't really authored a top-tier MVP level regular season since his last year in Miami, and the numbers mostly support that. Kareem is the only player I have in the double digits (basically every season from '71 to '81. I'm actually surprised at how neatly it broke down for me:
Kareem: 10-11
Jordan: 9-10
Lebron: 8-9'
Wilt: 7-8
Russell: 6-7
I then have Jokic, Giannis, Robinson, Dirk, Magic, Bird, and Duncan all with 4-5.
I don't think there's a season other than 67 after Russell's first and before his last where his regular season performance wasn't the best, at least arguably, in the league. 67 Wilt was just having a ridiculous year and he was always at least arguably the most talented guy to ever play relative to his peers (which you say is one of your exceptions). He just didn't always turn that talent into impact the way Russell did.
What year other than 57, 67, and 69 was Russell NOT arguably the best player in the NBA?
The other issue is that it's easier to be the MVP or in competition for the MVP in a small (8-9 team) league than in a large (25-30) team league. More opportunities for top players to shine equals more competition, even if the actual level of talent didn't increase (and it has increased, particularly as international talent becomes more and more competitive with American grown talent).
“Most people use statistics like a drunk man uses a lamppost; more for support than illumination,” Andrew Lang.