Right, context is a real factor. MVP isn't an award for best player in the game currently, it's for who was most valuable to their team during the season. Rose turning a likely low playoff seed Chicago team into the #1 overall seed makes him a legitimate contender. If the regular season is about putting your team in the best playoff position, you can't top what Rose did.
I can understand the arguments with 15 games left in the season when several teams were in the hunt for top seeds. But with the Bulls closing winning 12 of 13 and getting the #1 overall, and with Rose's APM climbing to 8th overall in the process, putting him within 1 standard deviation of the league's top APM, why still the backlash?
In response to greyberger (and yes I agree it's a tired argument, but it's also the only active one on this board...)
greyberger wrote:Proof that it's in the eye of the beholder, I guess. My point is - if Ryan Anderson is your third best player, that's a problem, because he played in all 82 games and ended up 7th on the team in minutes.
Noah is the Bulls' 3rd best player, and ended up with about the same minutes as Anderson. Why are Anderson's lack of minutes a problem for the Magic, but Noah's aren't for the Bulls? Rose's supporting cast this season isn't his healthy supporting cast, it comes from the minutes they actually provided. Noah played 40% of the possible minutes, Anderson played 36%.
greyberger wrote:If Jason Richardson is the third best Magic player, that's a problem too - because he's only there for his shooting and he didn't shoot well (or often - 25.5% usg in PHX, 18.6 in Orlando).
I don't see how JRich playing well with the Suns then bad alongside Howard is an argument that Howard is valuable. Rose was playing with a bunch of preseason cast-offs (Bogans, Brewer, Watson, Kurt Thomas) and those players are now seen as valuable pieces again after playing well this season. Does that make Rose less valuable?
greyberger wrote:2.Jameer Nelson (Assists and scoring, mediocre defense, turnover problem)
3a. Ryan Anderson (Shooting, 22 minutes per game, 7th in total minutes in the 9-man rotation ahead of Arenas and Q)
3b. Jason Richardson (Scoring, off-year in usage and efficiency, not much else)
4. Brandon Bass (garbage man, efficient scoring)
5. Turkoglu (washed-up driftwood)
Nelson is a +1.0 defender via 6-year APM, rating him near the league's top PG defenders. Turnover problem is unfair, he's basically league average for point guards with his USG% and AST%.
Ryan Anderson and JRich talked about above.
Brandon Bass is no garbage man. The guy is primarily a jumpshooter, and a very good one.
The Magic had their fair share of driftwood, but they played alright with the starters. The Magic were still a 104 DRating team with Howard off the floor, and just -1 net per 100 poss overall. Not as good as the Bulls' bench, but I don't think that explains the 10 win difference.
You said "proof is in the eye of the beholder", implying that you think there's proof that Rose's teammates were 10 games better, but you didn't reference stats that actually prove that, even though the stats supposedly saying otherwise is the whole crux of this anti-Rose argument. I really think the anti-Rose crew is underestimating just how bad the Bulls' offense would've been without Rose this season. He also has arguably the most dominant defensive numbers in the NBA on Synergy, for what it's worth.