Remove this Banner Ad

Massive Choker Dirk Wins MVP

🥰 Love BigFooty? Join now for free.

Gridlock'd

Norm Smith Medallist
Joined
Dec 17, 2002
Posts
7,325
Reaction score
401
Location
Tassie
AFL Club
Western Bulldogs
Other Teams
SA Spurs, Leeds, Renault
Nowitzki chosen NBA MVP

By JAIME ARON, AP Sports Writer
May 11, 2007

DALLAS (AP) -- Dirk Nowitzki has been chosen as the NBA's MVP for leading the Dallas Mavericks to one of the best regular seasons in league history, a team official told The Associated Press on Friday.

The formal announcement will come Tuesday at a news conference, said the team official, who requested anonymity because the announcement is pending.

ADVERTISEMENT


Nowitzki and the Mavericks went from a league-best 67 wins to a stunning first-round elimination by eighth-seeded Golden State, with the big German quite un-MVP-like for most of the series.

Voting was completed before the playoffs.

The story was first reported late Thursday by ESPN.com.

Nowitzki becomes the first MVP in 25 years not to win a single playoff series; it last happened to Houston's Moses Malone in 1981-82. That failure is likely to be remembered more than the fact he's the first European honoree, and the first not to have attended a U.S. high school or college.

Nowitzki's victory also ends the two-year reign of his good friend and former teammate Steve Nash of Phoenix. After blossoming into star players together in Dallas, one of them has been the MVP all three seasons since they've been separated.

Nowitzki earned it this time by being the best player on the best team, leading the Mavericks in scoring (24.6 points per game) and rebounding (8.9 per game).

He was an All-Star for the sixth straight year and started the game for the first time. That was a first for a Dallas player -- as is this honor. On Thursday, he was chosen to the all-NBA first-team for a third straight year.

While Nowitzki's ninth season wasn't his highest-scoring, it was his most accurate. He set career-highs in shooting percentage on field goals (50.2), 3-pointers (41.6) and free throws (90.4); no other player in the league topped 50, 40 and 90 percent.

Nowitzki and the Mavericks came into this season driven by having blown a 2-0 lead in the NBA finals last summer. After losing their first four games, they dropped only 11 more. They won the most games in team history and tied for sixth-most in league history. They also became the first club with three winning streaks of at least 12 games, going on spurts of 12, 13 and 17 in a row.

But reputations are made in the playoffs, and that's where Nowitzki has looked so ordinary in his last two series -- the finals against Miami and the one that ended last week.

Pestered by smaller defenders who were armed with the insight of coach Don Nelson, Nowitzki's coach his first seven seasons, the Warriors limited him to 19.7 points per game on 38 percent shooting. His 3-point accuracy plummeted to 21 percent. In the series finale, Nowitzki scored just eight points on 2-of-13 shooting after having dramatically helped the Mavs avoid elimination in the closing minutes of the previous game.

The combination of last year's collapse against Miami and the Golden State flop have sparked wide debate about whether Nowitzki is capable of leading a team to a title. However, this award is a chance to reflect on the amazing ride that's gotten him to this point.

Growing up in Wurzburg, Germany, his father a successful handball player and his mother a former member of the national basketball team, Nowitzki was discovered at age 16 by Holger Geschwindner, captain of West Germany's 1972 Olympic team.

When Nowitzki said he wanted to get serious about learning the game, Geschwindner devised an unusual training regimen aimed at producing an usual basketball specimen: A 7-footer who shoots 3-pointers.

The Mavericks were wowed by Nowitzki's skills when he worked out at their gym before going to a youth tournament in San Antonio at the 1998 Final Four. They acquired him in a draft-day deal with Milwaukee, which had taken him ninth overall on orders from Dallas.

Playing for Nelson, a wizard of the mismatch, Nowitzki became a nearly 22-point per game scorer by his third season. He's remained at or above that level ever since.

He's already the leading rebounding in club history and is on pace to become the leading scorer next season. This season, he became a more reliable passer, averaging a career-best 3.4 assists per game. He even flirted several times with his first career triple-double. He's also become a solid defender, shaking the mocking name of "irk," as in there being no "D" in him.

Nowitzki turns 29 next month, so he should have plenty more chances to fix his current playoff reputation.
 
I think he thoroughly deserved it since its an award for the regular season. Play-offs is another thing all together.

Well done Dirk on the MVP :thumbsu:

But bloody hell dude, can you do something, anything productive in the play-offs!
 
It certainly looks ugly with the GS series, but on the regular season he was the league's MVP.
 

Log in to remove this Banner Ad

I think he thoroughly deserved it since its an award for the regular season. Play-offs is another thing all together.

Well done Dirk on the MVP :thumbsu:

But bloody hell dude, can you do something, anything productive in the play-offs!

Well said.

He certainly deserved it for his performances throughout the regular season, but geez it will be tarnished by his performance in the GS series.
 
dunno can't see how Dirk deserved this year's.

it's a discomfort award, because of the nonsensical approach to Nash being a 3 time winner. Dirk was no better than in any previous year, he did not step it up this year, and his competition - relative to previous placing - pulled away from him.

Dirk is an MVP type player, I'm ok with that. I'm not ok with him winning it this year.

maybe Nash shouldn't have won 2 years ago, last season was pretty close, but this season it wasn't.

this is the only season that Nash was clearly the mvp.

Dirk just repeated the same thing he has produced year in, year out, and got awarded a lifetime achievement gong because his team was better this year - and it's very questionable that he was responsible for that improvement. Think Josh Howard, Think Avery... but Dirk is a constant, a rock, but no better this year...
 
dunno can't see how Dirk deserved this year's.

it's a discomfort award, because of the nonsensical approach to Nash being a 3 time winner. Dirk was no better than in any previous year, he did not step it up this year, and his competition - relative to previous placing - pulled away from him.

Dirk is an MVP type player, I'm ok with that. I'm not ok with him winning it this year.

maybe Nash shouldn't have won 2 years ago, last season was pretty close, but this season it wasn't.

this is the only season that Nash was clearly the mvp.

Dirk just repeated the same thing he has produced year in, year out, and got awarded a lifetime achievement gong because his team was better this year - and it's very questionable that he was responsible for that improvement. Think Josh Howard, Think Avery... but Dirk is a constant, a rock, but no better this year...

I agree :thumbsu: I guess it all depends on how you interpret the meaning of Most Valuable Player. If you are talking "Best player in the best team" then give it to Dirk..."Best individual talent", give it to Kobe or Lebron...but "Most valuable because he makes his teamates better, and his team would suffer the most if he was taken out of it" then it HAS to be Nash. There is no doubt that of the main contenders, Nash means the most to his team's success, and hence in the MVP in my books.

And yes it is a regular season award...but boy Dirk is going to be embarrassed to receive it after his blink-and-you'll-miss-it playoff stint :o
 

Remove this Banner Ad

Last 3 years it should have been Nash, Dirk, Nash, but they done it Nash, Nash, Dirk.
Thats what i think anyway

Yep I agree also. Dirk should have gotten it last year, i reckon this time they were like "ah well, we screwed him last year, so he may as well have it this year"
 
Dirk deserved it. Really stepped up during the regular season, led his team to the best record, amongst clutch performances, good stats, plus lifting his numbers. Confirmed he is MVP to me against GS because when he went missing so did Dallas.

Nash would have needed a miracle this year to win, simply because he won the last two. It sounds stupid and is stupid logic, but in Sterns league it has everything to do with the fact he is not on par with other 3-straight MVP winners. Unfair but true.
 
Dirk deserved it. Really stepped up during the regular season, led his team to the best record, amongst clutch performances, good stats, plus lifting his numbers. Confirmed he is MVP to me against GS because when he went missing so did Dallas.

but he didn't? :confused:
 

🥰 Love BigFooty? Join now for free.

yep, Duncan and Shaq were clearly better in 04/05....

who had the most wins? how many more games did the Suns win than the season prior?

Nash deserved the MVP in both seasons. Shaq may have deserved it more the first time but it was a close vote and he narrowly missed out.
 
but he didn't? :confused:

What do you mean??

Numbers aren't everything you know, reading the boxscore won't tell you where games are won.

Dirk was CLEARLY the best player on the team with the best record, and he was the barrometer in Dallas' record season. He put up MVP numbers and made all the clutch plays, enough with this shit that he didn't step his game up.

The award may be dulled due to him not showing up in the Playoffs, but nevertheless he was the best player during the regular season.

Other than Nash there really was no other candidate.
 
What do you mean??

Numbers aren't everything you know, reading the boxscore won't tell you where games are won.

umm... you know what numbers do tell you?
whether someone really upped their performance.

when someone has a long and clearly defined line of performance, and nothing changed... pretty hard to make a real argument that they clearly improved, unless in fact you're trying to make an argument that isn't there.

which is what you're doing. trying to pretend something is there, that isn't by using an inappropriate reference to statistics to try and justify something that is entirely baseless.


Dirk was CLEARLY the best player on the team with the best record, and he was the barrometer in Dallas' record season.

so what? he's been their best player for a few years at the same level. now this season they have a better record, and by default the idea is that he has somehow produced more than ever before when we can see this isn't true.


not sure how you can make a serious argument that doing exactly the same thing produced a different outcome? unless we are in bizarro land, something else happened. some of which I have already discussed.

He put up MVP numbers and made all the clutch plays, enough with this shit that he didn't step his game up.

well how about enough of this shit about nebulous improvements that you can't demonstrate with anything other than empty platitudes.

funny thing is I seem to remember an awful lot of clutch plays from howard in crunch time - I guess your broadcasts showed something different ;)

The award may be dulled due to him not showing up in the Playoffs, but nevertheless he was the best player during the regular season.

about those empty statements not backed up with anything?

your whole post has been about nothing. argue for him all you want, but how about you actually do that, rather than lots of nothing.

Other than Nash there really was no other candidate.

how many other candidates do you need? to not be the best player at a given moment you need only one player to be better. doesn't matter if there are 100 players or 1 performing at a higher level, it's still the same outcome.
 
I've said it before, I'll say it again - the last decade should have seen more MVP awards for Shaq and Duncan.

Iverson probably deserved one in that stretch, and Kobe should have won it last year, Nash this year.

I can't see why Dirk won it, yes he was the best player on the team with the best record - but Chauncey and C-Webb don't have MVP awards, and at least those guys could/can play defence as well.
 

Remove this Banner Ad

Remove this Banner Ad

🥰 Love BigFooty? Join now for free.

Back
Top Bottom