KqWIN wrote:stormi wrote:BNM wrote:
First 18-4 is irrelevant to MVP voters. They only look at overall record. Embiid's lack of availability actually hurts him twofold in the MVP race.
You're hopping into a discussion and regurgitating conversation points that have already been made. I'm not reading that almanac. Yes Embiid loses points for the 6 games he's missed and rightfully so. If he can clean up his missed time (big ask) and get into a consistent play rhythm, continue to boss the advanced analytics, continue to average 30 on 54/39/85 and lead his team to the best record in the conference he'll have an undeniable case to be the rightful MVP.
Leading his team to the best record in the conference is also a meaningless point though right? If anything, it highlights a negative for Embiid which is that he plays in a significantly worse conference.
I’m not one of those people who think MVP should be completely divorced from narratives, but leading his team to the number one seed in the East is as weak as it gets. Embiid’s production and stats speak for themselves...but he really doesn’t have the best player on the best or even elite team going for him.
I didn't use the 'winning the east' thing as a defining benchmark that should throne him MVP. It was in conjunction to display how poor that same team has been in his absence. The disparity of 1-5 without and 18-5 with, which tunnels us back into the durability conversation. But In terms of players that are by definition the most valuable to their squads, he should be a headlining name in that conversation and every impact metric supports that.




















