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Chris Paul, Devin Booker, Deandre Ayton and Suns coach Monty Williams share Paul’s historic night of passing Magic Johnson on all-time assists list.
Arizona Republic
Chris Paul has been the catalyst for the Suns’ resurgent season after arriving in Phoenix in a major offsesaon trade. That’s led to him joining the MVP race. He’s appreciative, but team comes first.
Charles Barkley has been saying for months Chris Paul should be in the NBA MVP conversation.
Radio personality Colin Cowherd just recently put Paul atop his list of MVP candidates.
“Next to LeBron James, nobody in the NBA has the ability to change your basketball team’s win-loss standings. Nobody, expect Chris Paul,” Cowherd said earlier this week on his “The Herd” show.
Cowherd not having Joel Embiid in his top five is a problem considering the Philadelphia 76ers big is averaging 30 points on 51.3% shooting and 11.1 rebounds for the second-best team in the East, but what does Paul have to say about his growing MVP talk?
“I appreciate it,” said Paul as Suns (42-17) prepared to continue their five-game road trip on Sunday at East-leading Brooklyn (40-20) on ESPN at 12:30 p.m.
“I think at the end of the day, I know who I am and I know what I bring to a team, but I also understand with our team, it’s about us. It’s about what we’re doing, we’re building,” Paul said.
“It’s not something I worry about or wake up and think about or anything like that. It’s just about the process like getting ready for tomorrow’s game. I think everything else will take care of itself.”
Paul isn’t putting up monstrous numbers like Embiid or fellow All-Star big Nikola Jokic, who is averaging 26.3 points on 56.6% shooting (40.5% from 3), 10.9 boards and 8.7 assists for Denver, But he’s arguably the biggest reason Phoenix has the second-best record in the West and is on the fast track toward ending an 11-year playoff drought.
The last time the Suns were in the postseason was 2010, when Hall of Fame point guard and now Nets first-year head coach Steve Nash was running the show.
When Nash won back-to-back MVPs in 2005 and 2006, he didn’t average 20 points in either season:
2004-05: 15.5 ppg., 50.2% FG, 43.1% 3PT, 88.7% FT, 11.5 apg., 3.3 rpg., 1 spg.
2005-06: 18.8 ppg., 51.2%, FG 43.9% 3PT, 92.1% FT, 10.5 apg., 4.2 rpg., 0.8 spg.
Paul has similar numbers to Nash’s MVP years this season:
2020-21: 16 ppg., 48.7% FG, 37.7% 3PT, 92.7% FT, 8.8 apg,4.7 rpg., 1.4 spg.
Taking Cowherd’s W-L impact into the MVP equation with Nash, Phoenix finished 29-53 the season before he began his second stint with the Suns after six seasons in Dallas.
The next season, Phoenix erupted for a league-best 62-20 in Mike D’Antoni’s first full season as head coach and with Nash orchestrating his “Seven Seconds or Less” offense.
That’s a 33-win improvement with Nash, who also led the league in assists that year.
All of those factors played into him receiving the award for the first time in 2004-05.
The Paul-Suns narrative isn’t as powerful, but certainly impactful.
Phoenix has already won eight more games this season (42-17 through 59 games) than it did in more games last season (34-39 in 73 games).
“You watch a lot of these games and he’s hitting game-winning shots,” Sacramento coach Luke Walton said about Paul. “He kind of controls the last six minutes of any close game as well as anyone in our league.”
Fourth in the league in assists this season, Paul has passed Hall of Famers Oscar Robertson and Magic Johnson to rise to fifth on the all-time list.
That’s going to resonate with voters when MVP election time comes. Being that he’s 35 years old in his 16th NBA season and still able to perform at a high level will as well.
The Suns would’ve been in playoff contention had they stayed pat with their roster.
They’ve become a championship contender with Paul running the show.
Now Devin Booker is a two-time All-Star who is having his best NBA overall season. Mikal Bridges and Cam Johnson have greatly improved.
Deandre Ayton is playing better. The addition of Jae Crowder has been instrumental.
The Suns have a deep roster and Monty Williams is a frontrunner for coach of the year.
However, Paul has been the catalyst of it all amid the COVID-19 pandemic.
So all of those factors make him a legit MVP candidate.
Paul knows that, but is more focused on Phoenix continuing this resurgent season.
Having a team mindset goes a long way in being considered for the biggest individual regular-season award, too.
Have opinion about current state of the Suns? Reach Suns Insider Duane Rankin at [email protected] or contact him at 480-787-1240. Follow him on Twitter at @DuaneRankin.
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