Sharkboy242 wrote:We're looking at the net difference in who the Nuggets are without Jokic and who the Suns are without booker. If the net difference is greater in the case of Jokic, then he simply has more impact. I don't get why this is so hard for you to grasp.
Obviously MVP is fairly undefined and on-court impact does not necessarily equal value (although I'd agree it should be a large part of it) because different people define value differently. Also, not all impact is the same. It's generally harder to improve good teams by the same margin as bad teams, and turning good teams into great ones is also more valuable than turning bad teams into average ones because the ultimate goal of the sport is to win titles.
That being said, I completely agree that there is zero case for Booker. Not only is he a clearly worse player than the top candidates, he also adds less value to his team. Now, it is completely fine to factor in wins to some degree. But to use this as the main point means you not only disregard the differences in ‘goodness’ between the players and how important they are to their teams, but also to completely neglect context in favor of an overwhelming winning bias (and even then, you could just as easily take CP3 from that Suns team, which just further illustrates the point).
So yes, Booker deserves more credit than he has in the past for being a main contributor to the best team in the league. But no, that does not mean he's a legitimate MVP candidate. Inclusion in one of the All-NBA teams? Now that's more realistic and a conversation worth having, albeit in a different thread I suppose.