shyt was a pretty well thought out OP, with maybe a little bias towards Bron but nikkas acting like he posted some brazy, off the wall shyt 



his chances is some bullshyt.
shyt was a pretty well thought out OP, with maybe a little bias towards Bron but nikkas acting like he posted some brazy, off the wall shyt![]()
You do realize what teams did last season is basically irrelevant, right?

i) I don't think "so much" of those Vegas odds, I simply used it as reference to contest who you thought the pre-season favorite for MVP was
iThe trend of 'best player on the best team' is relevant, what past players averaged and how many games past teams won is irrelevant.
i) The Bulls still had the #1 seed and the Spurs didn't have a clear standout performer (Parker leading scorer with 17.5 ppg)
ii) Lakers had the #1 seed in the West and nobody on the Celtics had better individual stats than Kobe (Pierce leading scorer with 18.9 ppg)
iii) Nash's 2006 MVP win is part white vote, part exception to the rule and part the changing of how MVP was judged (which also ties in with Kobe's MVP a few seasons later)
at you throwing this in after the fact. nikka you ain't got no Ws against me. You've been switching up shyt when I call you out on it.


If he were to do this for the whole season and they finish with the two seed how could anybody dismiss him? I agree he'd be one of the favorites.im developing a Derozan agenda like shyt.. How the fukk can a nikka average 30 +, win the east and NOT be in serious consideration
its super early but to justhis chances is some bullshyt.
If the same team without you won more games than anyone in history, then you come on board and they win less, then no, what happened last season is not irrelevant.
That's one of the easiest ways to prove whether a player was valuable or not. "How did the team perform without him?"
Westbrook was the favorite among gambling addicts dumb enough to toss money at stuff like that before the season even started.
But among people in the league and people who cover the league, Lebron was the favorite.

Those things are all relevant when they demonstrate a precedent, especially when that precedent challenges the absolute rigidity with which you're defining the "best player on the best team" notion.
I AGREE that "best player on the best team" is the main criteria, like I said in the OP, and that's why Lebron has the best chance to win - because whether the Cavs finish with the #1 record in the NBA or not, Lebron will be viewed as the best player on the best team outside of the basically disqualified Warriors. And that is true because what happened last year and in the offseason really does matter, not to mention that Durant/Curry votes are getting split.

i) Durant has been their best performer up to the point, and that could either remain the same or change throughout the season, Besides as I said above, it could come down to both of them winning MVP. It doesn't just have to be one or the other. How the fukk can you say that nonsense in bold when you do not know how "a lot of the voters" will react to a WHOLE season that has barely started?i)The Warriors don't have a single standout performer either. Even in this thread there is serious disagreement over whether Curry or Durant is more likely. And besides that, they've disqualified themselves for a lot of voters for multiple other reasons.
Because what happened last season is irrelevant. When it comes to voting that narrative will be barely be alive - it'll be drowned out and barely recognizable with all that happens in a season. Exception to the rules are usually down to what happens during that season (whether that be voters having an affinity with a particular player's path; a player taking his game and his team to a new level; a player coming outta nowhere to blindside the league, a player posting #s never seen before etc etc) not what happened in seasons prior.iii) How could you have a clearer "exception to the rules" than "The team that set the wins record with the MVP last year, and still couldn't win a ring, added the most recent MVP to the same team and actually performed worse"?
i) Don't use quotations marks if that's not what I specifically stated.But I have no wins against you?
Let's check the scoreboard on the epic-length arguments we've had that could actually be settled with facts from the court:
* I said during that Cavs/Chicago series that the Cavs needed to just sit Kyrie until they absolutely needed him, and only play him the limited essential minutes then. You claimed they needed to keep playing him significant minutes so that he would "stay in rhythm" because "the injury isn't going to get any better and he can't make it worse."
When Kyrie repeatedly re-aggravated the injury against Chicago and Atlanta BEFORE they actually needed him, THEN got knocked out playing too many minutes on the aggravated injury, I was right. The injury did indeed get worse, and they sure as hell should have sat him until they needed him and limited his minutes even then. That might have been a title decision right there.
i) I NEVER said it was worse for the Warriors than any break they had caught - LIES. Can you stop making up shyt?* I said during the 1st round last year that the Warriors caught a lucky break when CP3/Blake got hurt, because it killed any chance the Warriors had of the Curry injury costing them in the 2nd round, and Curry would probably be back long before the Warriors were in danger of losing a series. You claimed that the Curry injury was way worse for the Warriors than any break they had caught and that Curry might be out much longer than we thought.
When the 2nd round proved to be just a warm-up like I predicted, Curry came back on the schedule I predicted and scored 40+ points, setting the NBA record for points in overtime, and yelling "I'm back, I'm back", and the Warriors nearly won the title (and only lost it due to a string of factors in games 5-7 of which Curry's soreness didn't even make the top 5), I was right.

i) He didn't get injured in G3 - he re-aggravated his hamstring during G3, like he had been for most of the postseason. He was listed as unquestionable during a game in the first round against the T'Blazers because he re-aggravated it then. (basically extending back to when he initially was injured, back in March if my memory serves me correct). Yet he still was able to play on. He wasn't able to play on when he injured it in G4.* I said that the Warriors caught a break the previous year when Tony Allen got injured in Game 3. You claimed that Tony Allen didn't get injured in Game 3 and repeated yourself on that claim about 75 times over the course of weeks and multiple different threads.
When I showed you an ESPN article from before Game 4 which clearly stated that Tony Allen had gotten injured in Game 3, I was right.
After returning for Game 6 Friday night and having a very minimal impact in the opening half, Ramona Shelburne of ESPN passed along word that Allen would not return for the second half of the game.
Allen, 33, was limited to 16 minutes in Memphis' Game 4 101-84 loss after appearing to tweak his hamstring in the third quarter. He finished with four points and five rebounds. For the series, Allen is averaging nine points and 4.5 rebounds a game, including a 15-point performance in Game 1.
* I said that Durant wasn't going to the Lakers, he was going to go to a contender. You mocked me and said that he would resign with OKC.
Oh look, Durant went to a contender. I was right.

