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The NBA’s Real MVP Every Year

What if the MVP award truly reflected the best player in the league every single season—not narrative, not team record, just pure value and dominance?

Below is a full breakdown, followed by era-by-era context.

The Player Who REALLY Should Have Won NBA MVP For Each Year

YearPlayer
1950George Mikan
1951George Mikan
1952George Mikan
1953George Mikan
1954George Mikan
1955Bob Pettit
1956Bob Pettit
1957Bob Pettit
1958Bill Russell
1959Bob Pettit
1960Bill Russell
1961Bill Russell
1962Bill Russell
1963Bill Russell
1964Bill Russell
1965Bill Russell
1966Bill Russell
1967Wilt Chamberlain
1968Wilt Chamberlain
1969Willis Reed
1970Jerry West
1971Kareem Abdul-Jabbar
1972Kareem Abdul-Jabbar
1973Kareem Abdul-Jabbar
1974Kareem Abdul-Jabbar
1975Bob McAdoo
1976Kareem Abdul-Jabbar
1977Kareem Abdul-Jabbar
1978Bill Walton
1979Moses Malone
1980Julius Erving
1981Larry Bird
1982Moses Malone
1983Moses Malone
1984Larry Bird
1985Larry Bird
1986Larry Bird
1987Magic Johnson
1988Michael Jordan
1989Michael Jordan
1990Michael Jordan
1991Michael Jordan
1992Michael Jordan
1993Michael Jordan
1994Hakeem Olajuwon
1995Hakeem Olajuwon
1996Michael Jordan
1997Michael Jordan
1998Michael Jordan
1999Shaquille O’Neal
2000Shaquille O’Neal
2001Shaquille O’Neal
2002Tim Duncan
2003Tim Duncan
2004Kevin Garnett
2005Tim Duncan
2006Kobe Bryant
2007Kobe Bryant
2008LeBron James
2009LeBron James
2010LeBron James
2011LeBron James
2012LeBron James
2013LeBron James
2014LeBron James
2015LeBron James
2016LeBron James
2017LeBron James
2018LeBron James
2019Kawhi Leonard
2020Giannis Antetokounmpo
2021Nikola Jokic
2022Nikola Jokic
2023Nikola Jokic
2024Nikola Jokic
2025Nikola Jokic
2026Shai Gilgeous-Alexander

The 1950s: Mikan’s Absolute Dominance

Call it the “plumber’s era” if you want, but relative dominance matters—and George Mikan towered over his competition in a way very few players ever have. He was the league’s first true superstar and completely defined winning basketball in the early NBA.

Bob Pettit deserves his credit as well, anchoring the latter half of the decade as an elite scorer and rebounder for the Hawks.

The 1960s: Russell vs. Wilt

This decade is defined by the contrast between Bill Russell and Wilt Chamberlain.

Before 1967, Russell’s impact was undeniable:

  • Eight straight championships
  • Defensive dominance
  • Elite basketball IQ and leadership

Wilt’s statistical dominance was historic, but it wasn’t until 1967—when he shifted toward a more team-oriented style—that he clearly surpassed Russell as the league’s best player.

The 1970s: Kareem’s Era (With ABA Context)

Kareem Abdul-Jabbar was the defining force of the 1970s:

  • Led the decade in scoring and blocks
  • Finished second in rebounds
  • Maintained elite two-way impact

This list excludes ABA players—otherwise, Julius Erving would have strong cases in multiple seasons.

Even so, Kareem’s consistency and longevity make him the clear centerpiece of the decade, with standout interruptions from Walton, McAdoo, and Malone.

The 1980s: Bird, Magic, and Moses

The 1980s featured more fluctuation at the top:

  • Larry Bird dominated the mid-80s with one of the greatest peaks ever
  • Moses Malone had multiple MVP-caliber seasons
  • Magic Johnson, interestingly, likely peaks as the best player only in 1987

That 1987 season represents the height of the Showtime Lakers, where Magic fully combined scoring, playmaking, and leadership.

The 1990s: Michael Jordan’s League

Michael Jordan defines the decade—plain and simple.

Outside of his brief retirement:

  • 6 championships
  • Peak scoring dominance
  • Elite defense

Hakeem Olajuwon’s 1994–95 stretch stands out as one of the greatest two-year peaks ever, but otherwise, this era belongs almost entirely to Jordan.

1999–2005: Shaq vs. Duncan (and KG)

This stretch is a battle between Shaquille O’Neal and Tim Duncan.

You could reasonably flip several of these years either way:

  • Shaq at his peak was the most dominant force in the league
  • Duncan provided unmatched consistency and two-way impact

The one clear outlier is 2004, where Kevin Garnett’s all-around brilliance makes him the obvious choice.

2006–2018: The LeBron Era

From 2008 onward, the league belongs to LeBron James.

Even in years where others won MVP:

  • His all-around impact remained unmatched
  • Playoff performance separated him from the field

The biggest debate here is 2016. Stephen Curry’s unanimous MVP season was historic, but LeBron’s Finals performance underscores why he still held the “best player” title.

2019: Kawhi’s Playoff Peak

Kawhi Leonard’s 2019 run is one of the strongest postseason cases ever:

  • 30.5 points per game in the playoffs
  • Iconic Game 7 buzzer-beater vs. Philadelphia
  • Championship-winning two-way dominance

Despite limited regular-season games, his overall value peaks here.

2020–Present: Jokic Takes Over

The modern era has quickly become Nikola Jokic’s league:

  • Historic offensive efficiency
  • Elite playmaking from the center position
  • Consistent postseason impact

Giannis Antetokounmpo holds 2020, but from 2021 onward, Jokic’s case as the best player is difficult to challenge.

Final Thoughts

This exercise highlights how different “best player” and “MVP” can be. Narrative, team success, and voter fatigue often shape awards—but sustained dominance tells a different story.

And across NBA history, a few names stand above the rest:

  • Mikan
  • Russell
  • Kareem
  • Jordan
  • LeBron
  • Jokic

Each didn’t just win—they defined their eras.


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