Stephen Curry is the NBA’s first unanimous Most Valuable Player

Agence France-Presse

This is AI generated summarization, which may have errors. For context, always refer to the full article.

Stephen Curry is the NBA’s first unanimous Most Valuable Player

AFP

Curry is the first player in the NBA's 61-year history to receive all 131 first place votes for the Most Valuable Player award

NEW YORK, USA – Golden State superstar Stephen Curry was named the NBA’s Most Valuable Player for the second straight year on Tuesday, May 10 (US time), becoming the first unanimous winner in the award’s 61-year history after a record-breaking contribution to the Warriors’ historic season.

Curry, who returned from injury on Monday to score 40 points in Golden State’s overtime win over the Portland Trail Blazers, won in a landslide, sweeping all 131 first place votes to earn 1,310 points, a statement said.

It is the first time in the National Basketball Association’s history that a player has been the blanket first pick for the award, the league said. No player, not even Michael Jordan in his pomp, has been a unanimous choice for MVP.

The award is chosen by a panel of 130 sportswriters and broadcasters in the United States and Canada with one vote going to fans.

Under a preferential voting system, players receive 10 points for a first choice vote, 7 points for each second place vote, 5 points for third, 3 points for fourth and one point for fifth.

San Antonio Spurs star Kawhi Leonard was a distant second with 634 points while the Cleveland Cavaliers’ LeBron James was third with 631 points.

The Oklahoma City Thunder’s Russell Westbrook (486 points) and Kevin Durant (147) rounded out the top five.

Curry is the 11th person to win back-to-back MVP awards and joins an illustrious club which includes the likes of James, Jordan, Kareem Abdul-Jabbar, Wilt Chamberlain, Magic Johnson and Larry Bird.

The award caps a remarkable year for the 28-year-old Curry, who played a starring role as Golden State compiled a 73-9 record, surpassing the 1995-1996 Chicago Bulls’ 72-win campaign for the most victories in the regular season.

Curry’s personal statistics for the season rewrote the record books.

He shattered his own record for most three-pointers, which had stood at 286, with 402. He also led the NBA scoring charts with an average 30.1 points per game and extended his own record for scoring at least one three-pointer in consecutive games to 152.

Curry produced another electrifying display in the Warriors’ win over Portland on Monday, pouring in a record-breaking 17 points in overtime to guide his team to victory.

His game-changing cameo left Golden State’s management in a state of awed disbelief, with coach Steve Kerr revealing he had not expected Curry to have such an impact.

“The guy has basically played one game in 3 weeks,” Kerr said.

“I expected a lot of rust. I don’t think anyone could have predicted that kind of explosion.

“Once he got going, he didn’t look tired. There were only once or twice when he looked tired, and we got him a breather. I was amazed at his conditioning.” – Rappler.com

Add a comment

Sort by

There are no comments yet. Add your comment to start the conversation.

Summarize this article with AI

How does this make you feel?

Loading
Download the Rappler App!