Home US SportsNBA The definitive MVP argument for Victor Wembanyama

The definitive MVP argument for Victor Wembanyama

by
The definitive MVP argument for Victor Wembanyama

An electric regular season is nearing its end, which means two things:

1) We’re about to flow into an even crazier postseason, and 2) it’s time to put the finishing touches on award races.

Chief among them is the MVP award, the NBA’s most prestigious regular season honor. There have been plenty of great individual campaigns this season, but the MVP race has largely dropped to a four-player group: the reigning winner Shai Gilgeous-Alexander, a multi-time winner in Nikola Jokić, and a pair of megastars in Victor Wembanyama and Luka Dončić hunting for their first.

Advertisement

This week, I’m breaking down the cases for all of them — or at least I planned to before Dončić suffered a hamstring injury that may make him ineligible for any awards. This series is less about who I think should win — I revealed that on Friday’s episode of The Dunker Spot — and more about helping others either bolster their arguments for their favorite candidate, or understand the legitimacy of the other cases.

After examining the Jokić case on Tuesday and SGA on Thursday, we’re going to talk about Wemby today.

Let’s dig in, shall we?

All stats are updated through games played on April 10.

Tale of the tape

Record: 50-14 (78.1% win rate, 64-win pace); 12-5 without him (58-win pace)

Advertisement

Notable per-game rankings (min. 50 games): 13th in scoring, 4th in rebounds, 1st in blocks

Notable advanced stats: 1st in LEBRON, 1st in defensive estimated plus-minus (D-EPM), 2nd in estimated plus-minus (EPM), 4th in Win Shares per 48

The basic case: Who’s providing more per-possession impact?

The framing here is important.

Wemby, due to a combination of early injuries, preventative maintenance (nine games as a reserve), and the Spurs’ own dominance in 2026, simply will not play more than Jokić or SGA. He’s trailing both by nearly 400 total minutes, and that’s just not a gap that’s going to close in any significant way on Sunday.

Advertisement

Despite the minutes gap, Wemby has driven winning to an insane degree. The Spurs have won at a 64-win pace in the games he’s appeared in, and have outscored opponents by a whopping 682 points in his minutes — that ranks second behind SGA (+788).

(Hayden Hodge/Yahoo Sports Illustration)

The largest portion of that equation is what Wemby does on the defensive end. To be frank, we’ve never seen a defender like this: 7-foot-4 with an 8-foot wingspan that isn’t stuck in quicksand as a mover.

It’s hard to comprehend, much less actually quantify, what his presence alone does to opposing offenses. He covers an insane amount of real estate, amplified by the Spurs essentially using him as a one-man zone to make the paint inaccessible.

Advertisement

We can start with the easy stuff: Wemby leads the NBA in blocks (3.1, 197 total) by a landslide, and opponents convert only 53.6% of their shots at the rim when he challenges them — third behind Chet Holmgren (47.7%) and Brook Lopez (53% in the Big 2026!) among high-volume rim-protectors.

You’d guess that someone with his dimensions would have a wide “block radius,” but some of the swats from this season are video game-like. His block against Heat guard Norm Powell, in which Powell did the “right thing” by using the rim as a shield on a reverse layup attempt only to get it swatted anyway, is one I’m still struggling to wrap my mind around.

Source link

You may also like