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Despite leading the Eastern Conference in the first fan returns of NBA All-Star Voting presented by AT&T, Kevin Durant cracks the top three of the Kia Race to the MVP Ladder for the first time.
So, maybe it’s fitting the hardware awaiting at the end of this journey is dubbed The Michael Jordan Trophy.
After all, Durant is 34 years old, and the trophy’s namesake registers as the last player (1997-98) that exact age to capture the award (Karl Malone was the oldest to win MVP at 35 in 1998-99). At an age when many start to fade, Durant continues to ascend, having led Brooklyn to 16 wins in its last 18 games entering Friday night’s game against the New Orleans Pelicans (7:30 ET, ESPN).
“If he gets better, that would be wonderful for him,” San Antonio Spurs coach Gregg Popovich said of Durant on Monday, before the forward scorched his team for 25 points on 10-of-14 shooting in leading the Nets to their 12th consecutive victory. “But I don’t know how you can get a whole lot better. He loves the game as much as anybody has ever loved the game.”
It certainly shows.
Although the Nets suffered their first loss in a month on Wednesday, falling 121-112 to the Chicago Bulls, Durant finished only one point shy of tying his season high in scoring (44 points). That showing was his third 40-point game of 2022-23, with 28 of the 44 points coming in the first half. Over his last three games, Durant has averaged 30.7 points per game, while shooting 66.7% from the field.
On the season, he’s producing career-highs in field-goal percentage (56.8), effective field-goal percentage (61.5) and free-throw percentage (93.3). If he finds a way to boost his current 3-point percentage (36.9) — which won’t be easy — he’d be on the way to a second career 50-40-90 campaign. Keep in mind, there are just nine NBA players in that distinguished club, as well as one from the WNBA (Elena Delle Donne) and one from the NBA G League (Quinn Cook).
But we all know Durant won’t be chasing stats anyway on Friday at Smoothie King Center against a New Orleans Pelicans squad that will be missing young star Zion Williamson (right hamstring strain). After defeating the Houston Rockets on Wednesday, the Pelicans are 7-2 this season without Williamson. It’s expected the home team will also hit the floor without former All-Star forward Brandon Ingram, who has sat out of the last 19 games due to a toe injury. New Orleans is 4-1 this season in games without both Williamson and Ingram.
1. Nikola Jokic, Denver Nuggets
Last week’s ranking: No. 1
Season stats: 25.2 ppg, 10.7 rpg, 9.5 apg
“The Joker” led Denver to its eighth win in 10 outings (and ninth straight home victory) on a relatively light night Thursday, scoring 12 points with nine assists in just 24 minutes against the LA Clippers. The engine that runs the Nuggets, Jokic had dished at least 40 assists to five different teammates entering Thursday (no other player in the league can stake that claim). The NBA leader in triple-doubles (nine, which includes five in December), Jokic has now shot 50% or better from the field in 29 straight games, trailing only Brooklyn’s Nic Claxton (30 games) for the longest such streak in the league. Check out colleague Brian Martin’s deep dive examining Jokic’s bid to become the first player in 37 years to pull off the MVP three-peat.
2. Jayson Tatum, Boston Celtics
Last week’s ranking: No. 2
Season stats: 30.7 ppg, 8.2 rpg, 4.2 apg
Tatum dropped his second career triple-double (29 points, 14 rebounds, 10 assists) against triple-double king Doncic on Thursday as Boston ended its two-game skid on this current four-game road trip that closes Saturday in San Antonio. In the two losses, the team’s opponents averaged 136.5 points on 58% from the floor and 53% from deep. But Tatum (one steal, two blocks) and the Celtics locked down on Doncic and the Mavericks, holding them to 95 points on 35% from the field and 22% on 3-pointers in what was Boston’s second-largest margin of victory of the season (29 points).
3. Kevin Durant, Brooklyn Nets
Last week’s ranking: No. 4
Season stats: 29.9 ppg, 6.7 rpg, 5.5 apg
Forget about the offseason trade request. It doesn’t factor into things now after seeing how the 12-time All-Star has been a model of consistency in Brooklyn, demonstrating as much during Wednesday’s loss at Chicago. Over Durant’s last 20 games, he’s shot 60.1% overall, 39.4% on 3-pointers and 95.5% on free throws, while ranking eighth in the league in total blocks (55). With Durant leading the way, the Nets own the league’s second-best clutch offensive rating (128.3) and its top clutch net rating (27.4). Durant has produced 25 points or more on 50% or better shooting in 25 games so far this season, which ranks No. 1 in the NBA.
So, maybe it’s fitting the hardware awaiting at the end of this journey is dubbed The Michael Jordan Trophy.
After all, Durant is 34 years old, and the trophy’s namesake registers as the last player (1997-98) that exact age to capture the award (Karl Malone was the oldest to win MVP at 35 in 1998-99). At an age when many start to fade, Durant continues to ascend, having led Brooklyn to 16 wins in its last 18 games entering Friday night’s game against the New Orleans Pelicans (7:30 ET, ESPN).
“If he gets better, that would be wonderful for him,” San Antonio Spurs coach Gregg Popovich said of Durant on Monday, before the forward scorched his team for 25 points on 10-of-14 shooting in leading the Nets to their 12th consecutive victory. “But I don’t know how you can get a whole lot better. He loves the game as much as anybody has ever loved the game.”
It certainly shows.
Although the Nets suffered their first loss in a month on Wednesday, falling 121-112 to the Chicago Bulls, Durant finished only one point shy of tying his season high in scoring (44 points). That showing was his third 40-point game of 2022-23, with 28 of the 44 points coming in the first half. Over his last three games, Durant has averaged 30.7 points per game, while shooting 66.7% from the field.
On the season, he’s producing career-highs in field-goal percentage (56.8), effective field-goal percentage (61.5) and free-throw percentage (93.3). If he finds a way to boost his current 3-point percentage (36.9) — which won’t be easy — he’d be on the way to a second career 50-40-90 campaign. Keep in mind, there are just nine NBA players in that distinguished club, as well as one from the WNBA (Elena Delle Donne) and one from the NBA G League (Quinn Cook).
But we all know Durant won’t be chasing stats anyway on Friday at Smoothie King Center against a New Orleans Pelicans squad that will be missing young star Zion Williamson (right hamstring strain). After defeating the Houston Rockets on Wednesday, the Pelicans are 7-2 this season without Williamson. It’s expected the home team will also hit the floor without former All-Star forward Brandon Ingram, who has sat out of the last 19 games due to a toe injury. New Orleans is 4-1 this season in games without both Williamson and Ingram.
1. Nikola Jokic, Denver Nuggets
Last week’s ranking: No. 1
Season stats: 25.2 ppg, 10.7 rpg, 9.5 apg
“The Joker” led Denver to its eighth win in 10 outings (and ninth straight home victory) on a relatively light night Thursday, scoring 12 points with nine assists in just 24 minutes against the LA Clippers. The engine that runs the Nuggets, Jokic had dished at least 40 assists to five different teammates entering Thursday (no other player in the league can stake that claim). The NBA leader in triple-doubles (nine, which includes five in December), Jokic has now shot 50% or better from the field in 29 straight games, trailing only Brooklyn’s Nic Claxton (30 games) for the longest such streak in the league. Check out colleague Brian Martin’s deep dive examining Jokic’s bid to become the first player in 37 years to pull off the MVP three-peat.
2. Jayson Tatum, Boston Celtics
Last week’s ranking: No. 2
Season stats: 30.7 ppg, 8.2 rpg, 4.2 apg
Tatum dropped his second career triple-double (29 points, 14 rebounds, 10 assists) against triple-double king Doncic on Thursday as Boston ended its two-game skid on this current four-game road trip that closes Saturday in San Antonio. In the two losses, the team’s opponents averaged 136.5 points on 58% from the floor and 53% from deep. But Tatum (one steal, two blocks) and the Celtics locked down on Doncic and the Mavericks, holding them to 95 points on 35% from the field and 22% on 3-pointers in what was Boston’s second-largest margin of victory of the season (29 points).
3. Kevin Durant, Brooklyn Nets
Last week’s ranking: No. 4
Season stats: 29.9 ppg, 6.7 rpg, 5.5 apg
Forget about the offseason trade request. It doesn’t factor into things now after seeing how the 12-time All-Star has been a model of consistency in Brooklyn, demonstrating as much during Wednesday’s loss at Chicago. Over Durant’s last 20 games, he’s shot 60.1% overall, 39.4% on 3-pointers and 95.5% on free throws, while ranking eighth in the league in total blocks (55). With Durant leading the way, the Nets own the league’s second-best clutch offensive rating (128.3) and its top clutch net rating (27.4). Durant has produced 25 points or more on 50% or better shooting in 25 games so far this season, which ranks No. 1 in the NBA.