
Hamilton native Shai Gilgeous-Alexander wins NBA MVP award over Nikola Jokic
It is the true sporting genius who can impose their will on a game, on a season, in the same fashion all the time and continue to succeed at it.
Nba
50 shades of Shai: How Gilgeous-Alexander is reaching new scoring heights in his best NBA season
In one five-week span, the Thunder superstar had four games of 50 or more points, one of the most blistering stretches of NBA scoring in recent years.
Nba
50 shades of Shai: How Gilgeous-Alexander is reaching new scoring heights in his best NBA season
In one five-week span, the Thunder superstar had four games of 50 or more points, one of the most blistering stretches of NBA scoring in recent years.
A perfect example is Shai Gilgeous-Alexander, the Hamilton-raised, Oklahoma City Thunder point guard who was announced Wednesday as this season's most valuable player in the NBA.
Everyone — opponents, teammates, fans — knows he wants to slither his way to the elbow where the paint meets the free-throw line to knock down 12- to 15-foot jump shots with metronomic consistency.
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Those same observers know that he can snake his way through a maze of large defenders, initiate contact driving to the basket, take a hit, make a basket and saunter to the free-throw line and make a foul shot.
It is his brilliance and why he was judged the best player in the NBA, becoming the second Canadian to win the annual award.
The Thunder point guard beat out finalists Nikola Jokic of the Denver Nuggets and Milwaukee Bucks forward Giannis Antetokounmpo in voting by 100 media representatives who regular cover the league.
Gilgeous-Alexander got 71 first-place votes, Jokic got the other 29 of the 100. Antetokounmpo received 88 third-place votes.
Full disclosure: My five-man ballot, in order, from which the three finalists were culled was Gilgeous-Alexander, Jokic, Antetokounmpo, Boston's Jayson Tatum and Donovan Mitchell of Cleveland.
Gilgeous-Alexander, finishing his seventh season, is now eligible for 'super max' contract extensions that will put him in the salary stratosphere. He could sign a four-year extension worth $293 million (U.S.) this summer or wait to be eligible for a five-year, $380-million deal after the 2025-26 season.
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'You try so hard throughout the season to not think about it and just worry about playing basketball and getting better and trying to win games but as a competitor and as a kid dreaming about the game, it's always in the back of your mind and I'm very thankful to be at this side of, I guess, the ballot,' Gilgeous-Alexander said in a TNT interview, sitting in front of his teammates at the Thunder practice facility.
'But none of this is possible without the guys behind me. The amount of games we won (68) and the fashion that we won the games is so impressive and it's mainly the reason why I got this award.'
The 26-year-old Gilgeous-Alexander has grown into one of the era's best players through a meticulous work ethic, daily dedication to honing his skills and a personality that won't allow him to put himself before his team.
He is confident, of course, but never seeks the spotlight that shines so brightly on him.
'He also wants to be one of the guys,' Oklahoma City coach Mark Daigneault said earlier this month. 'He just wants to operate like another member of the team. You see him walk around the building, he doesn't walk around the building any differently than anybody else.
'He wants to blend into the organization, blend into the team the same way everybody else does. And I just think that balance is very unique.'
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Unique, too, are his skills, which blossomed this season like never before. He led the NBA in scoring, averaging 32.7 points per game and shooting 51.9 per cent from the field, 37.5 per cent from three-point range and 89.8 per cent from the free-throw line on an NBA-best 8.8 foul shots per game. He was part of the NBA's best defensive team as well and averaged 1.7 steals per game.
There are critics who denigrate Gilgeous-Alexander's skills because they see him as someone who hunts fouls, embellishes contact and lives at the free-throw line. It's lost on them, it seems, that Gilgeous-Alexander plays the same style, game after game, and the best defenders in the league can't find a way to consistently stop him. Maybe opponents and fans should find a solution to his skills rather than complain about them.
'I always marvel at his ability to get himself back to zero after every game,' Daigneault told reporters earlier this spring. 'Usually, he's doing it after a great game. That's his secret sauce.
'When he fails, he doesn't point fingers. He doesn't pout. He's not angry. He just gets himself ready to play again.'
In many ways, Gilgeous-Alexander replicates the character of Steve Nash, the only other Canadian to be named the NBA's MVP.
Both are selfless and more worried about team success than personal accolades even though both are and were near maniacal about preparation and setting standards for their teammates to match.
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'He's an absolute master of his craft, and that comes from hard work,' Nash said on a podcast earlier this month. 'That comes from really intentional, purposeful work … A big admiration for him.
'Not just how he's gotten there but how he handles himself … A guy that the league should be putting (out as its face) everywhere.'
It is not as if Gilgeous-Alexander won out easily over his main rival. Jokic, the MVP in 2021, 2022 and 2024, had a truly incredible regular season, averaging 29.6 points, 12.7 rebounds and 10.2 assists per game for the Nuggets, who lost a seven-game, second-round playoff series to Gilgeous-Alexander and the Thunder.
Jokic seems to toy with the game, bending it to his whim and immeasurable skills every time he's on the court.
Gilgeous-Alexander's election continues an incredible run for him. He was an MVP finalist for the award three years ago and finished runner-up to Jokic in 2023-24. Gilgeous-Alexander was also named to the first-team, all-NBA team in two consecutive seasons and is certain to be get the same honour this season.
The result a year ago drove him.
'To be honest with you, I used it as motivation,' Gilgeous-Alexander said in the television interview. 'Last year, all it meant was that more people thought I shouldn't win than I should win, and this year I wanted to change the narrative and have it flipped. I think I did good job of that.'
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At home, he led Canada to a historic bronze medal at the 2023 FIBA World Cup and led the 3-1 Canadian team to the quarterfinals of the 2024 Paris Olympics.
Gilgeous-Alexander was also awarded the Northern Star Award as Canada's athlete of the year in 2023 and has already committed to play for Canada through the 2028 Los Angeles Games.
'It's amazing playing in front of people that are from where I'm from, grew up the way I grew up, seeing the same things I've seen,' said Gilgeous-Alexander, who was born in Toronto and raised in Hamilton. 'It's like a little connection. Obviously … we share a common bond. It's cool.
'I'm proud to be Canadian, to play in front of Canadians, the special feeling whether I know them or not.'
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Winnipeg Free Press
44 minutes ago
- Winnipeg Free Press
He's not Batman. He's Alex Caruso. And he's leading the Thunder in his own way in the NBA Finals
OKLAHOMA CITY (AP) — Alex Caruso got asked after Game 4 of the NBA Finals if he's aware that he's achieved a level of superhero-type status among fans of the Oklahoma City Thunder during this playoff run. After all, having zero 20-point games in the regular season followed by two — and counting — in the NBA Finals against the Indiana Pacers tends to have an effect on people. 'For the superhero reference, we'll just do Robin because that's the only one I can probably make some similarities to,' Caruso said. 'I've got better players around me that are doing more.' That's part of the Caruso story, and he's just fine with that. He was part of the Los Angeles Lakers team — alongside a Batman in LeBron James — that won a title in the pandemic 'bubble' in 2020. And he has helped this Thunder team — alongside another Batman in Shai Gilgeous-Alexander, the reigning MVP and scoring champion who slapped on his cape and carried OKC down the stretch of Game 4 — move within two wins of what would be his second championship. He had 20 points against the Pacers in Game 2 and 20 points again in a probably season-saving win in Game 4; it's no coincidence that those are the games the Thunder have won in this series. And his Game 4 performance was historic; no player in finals history had ever had 20 points and five steals off the bench in a game during the title series. Before Friday, that is, when he did just that. 'He's a competitive monster, clearly,' Thunder coach Mark Daigneault said. 'He's proven that time and again over his career. Certainly in these playoffs … I can't say enough about him as a competitor.' Caruso, 31, is the oldest player on the Thunder roster. And his teammates have no problem pointing out that he's the wise sage of the team, the vet with a ring, the one you go to for advice on virtually any topic. 'He plays the game, he thinks the game and he's also coaching the game all at the same time,' forward Cason Wallace said. 'He's always a few steps ahead.' Caruso's is the quintessential story of bucking the odds. A four-star recruit out of high school, not drafted by any NBA team, and some coaches still lament letting him get away. Among them: Rick Carlisle. Now the Indiana coach, Carlisle was with Dallas when the Mavericks brought Caruso — a Texas A&M guy — in for a workout. They didn't even offer him a summer league deal. Whoops. 'Some of these guys that go under the radar have that level of grit and determination that is able to get them to the league and to get them some longevity and high impact,' Carlisle said. Thursdays Keep up to date on sports with Mike McIntyre's weekly newsletter. James, even now, still calls Caruso 'one of my favorite teammates of all time.' The Thunder feel the same way about him, for obvious reasons. Caruso doesn't need to be Batman. Being a Robin is just fine with him. 'It just comes down to really wanting to win, being super competitive,' Caruso said. 'That's why my career is the way it is. That's why I've had success. That's why I'm still in the NBA. That's why I'm here talking to you right now.' ___ AP NBA:


Winnipeg Free Press
an hour ago
- Winnipeg Free Press
Thunder embraced their moments of adversity this season. It paid off in Game 4 of the NBA Finals
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Edmonton Journal
an hour ago
- Edmonton Journal
Pacers, like Panthers, might have big regrets about blowing Game 4 of finals
Thunder mostly played poorly and had no business being in game, but Indiana finally blew one. Jalen Williams #8 of the Oklahoma City Thunder drives to the basket against Bennedict Mathurin #00 of the Indiana Pacers during the fourth quarter in Game Four of the 2025 NBA Finals at Gainbridge Fieldhouse on June 13, 2025 in Indianapolis, Indiana. Photo by Maddie Meyer / Getty Images Just like the Florida Panthers, the Indiana Pacers might end up deeply regretting wasting a chance to take a stranglehold on a championship series. If the Edmonton Oilers or Oklahoma City Thunder eventually win it all, the Panthers and Pacers will long be thinking about the one that got away. While Indiana was never as comfortably ahead Friday as Florida was in its Game 4 (up 3-0 after a period), only leading by as many as 10 points in the game, they had the double digit edge late in the third quarter and should have beaten a Thunder team playing nowhere close to its regular level. 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Access articles from across Canada with one account Share your thoughts and join the conversation in the comments Enjoy additional articles per month Get email updates from your favourite authors Oklahoma City only hit three three-pointers, handed out just 11 assists — both season-lows — their bench got outscored and their decision to go back to the double-big man starting lineup failed early, plus Shai Gilgeous-Alexander was again being hounded and hadn't dominated and the crowd in Indianapolis was going berserk. And yet, the Thunder, the NBA's best team this year proved it once again, rallying to regain control of what has been a damn good NBA Finals so far. We've seen the Pacers pull off one of the biggest late shockers ever in Game 1; The Thunder respond by looking like a well-oiled machine; Indiana showing they belonged here too with a tremendous Game 3 and then Friday OKC sent the message once again that while they might bend, it's hard to break them. DONE IT BEFORE This wasn't a new thing for the Thunder in these playoffs. Essential Oilers news, insight, opinion and analysis. By signing up you consent to receive the above newsletter from Postmedia Network Inc. Please try again This advertisement has not loaded yet, but your article continues below. In the West semifinal against Nikola Jokic, Jamal Murray and the Denver Nuggets, the Thunder lost the opener at home by two points. Instead of being shook, they won the next one by 43 points. They then fell behind again with an overtime loss, only to win two straight. And when the Nuggets rallied to force Game 7, with Gilgeous-Alexander looking out of gas, Oklahoma City cruised to a decisive victory. They don't seem to get rattled and always maintain belief in their capabilities, even if things aren't working. Clearly the Pacers have something special going on too, but it's not going to be easy for Indiana to re-take momentum in the series. JALEN'S WORLD Gilgeous-Alexander will get most of the attention for his late flourish, but Jalen Williams was just as good in this one. Williams and Alex Caruso consistently kept the Thunder within range of the Pacers when nothing else was working. He got into the paint at will and got to the line (11 attempts, a new high), while playing with an aggressiveness and purpose that few others on the court matched. This advertisement has not loaded yet, but your article continues below. Williams made All-NBA for a reason, but he's still one of the more underrated second-level stars in the league. Without his 12 points in the first Game 4 might have been an early rout. And he just kept coming. Plus, with Andrew Nembhard and the Pacers swarming Gilgeous-Alexander as soon as he touched the ball, trying to exhaust him, which worked earlier in the series, Williams showed off his varied skillset. Not many people his size 6-foot-6, 220 pounds) can capably handle the ball and play guard, but sometimes that's what's asked of Williams. On Friday he brought the ball up a lot, allowing Gilgeous-Alexander to breathe. And while the OKC offence was stagnant, partly as a result, Williams was able to get his points pretty easily. FOUL MOOD Many Pacers fans are furious with the whistle they got in Game 4. While that's often the case for the losing fanbase after losses like this (the Thunder kept drawing fouls late and the officials appeared to miss a Gilgeous-Alexander travel and a Michael Jordan-esque push-off), we'll say again that Indiana should have finished off the Thunder long before the referees became part of the story. This advertisement has not loaded yet, but your article continues below. Pundits definitely enjoyed playing up the angle: 'There were a number of missed travels in this game, no doubt about it,' ESPN's Tim Legler said after the game, per The Indianapolis Star. 'I'm glad to be here for the most Scott Foster game ever,' said The Ringer's Bill Simmons on X. Foster, of course, has a reputation as 'The Extender' for the odd calls that seem to follow him and sometimes end up prolonging a playoff series. Read More STATS PACK Some of our top stats picks from another great NBA Finals game: This advertisement has not loaded yet, but your article continues below. SGA's 14th game of at least 30 points is the most in a single playoffs since Kawhi in 2019. His 15 points were the most in the final five minutes of a Finals game ever, per CBS Sports. Indiana missed 12-of-16 shots to finish the game. Oklahoma City's 11 assists were the fifth-fewest since 1999-2000 and the least by a winning Finals team since 1948. AROUND THE RIM The Thunder abandoned the Chet Holmgren/Isaiah Hartenstein giant lineup — which was barely used in the first three games — in just under four minutes. Overall, the game featured one of the worst defensive starts all season for the Thunder … SGA had zero free throw attempts through one half, which almost never happens, and only a pair through three. But in the fourth he took and made eight, helping turn the game … Pascal Siakam matched his playoff career high of four steals in the first quarter alone. He was tremendous and the key reason the Pacers started so well … The Pacers led after a quarter for the first time all series. @WolstatSun News Cult of Hockey Politics Cult of Hockey Sports