
With Shai Gilgeous-Alexander putting up nightly 30-point masterclasses and leading the Oklahoma City Thunder to the league’s best record, most analysts assumed the award was his to lose. But according to a bombshell revelation from a credentialed MVP voter who spoke to The Ringer this week, the odds-on favorite is about to get snubbed—for a reason that has nothing to do with basketball.
The voter, who requested anonymity to “avoid a mob of OKC fans on social media,” claimed that a critical bloc of voters has coalesced around a single, controversial argument: Shai’s free-throw rate makes his “scoring title illegitimate” in their eyes.
“He hunts contact,” the voter said. “It’s smart basketball, but it’s not virtuoso basketball. When I close my eyes and think of an MVP, I think of someone who dominates without needing the whistle. Shai averages nearly nine free throws a game. That’s not dominance—that’s manipulation.”
The reaction was immediate and ferocious.
Within hours, #ShaiMVP and #VoterFraud were trending on X (formerly Twitter). Thunder teammate Jalen Williams posted a single side-eye emoji that garnered 200,000 likes in 45 minutes. Even LeBron James, who rarely engages in regular-season award debates, liked a clip of Shai scoring through contact against the Clippers with the caption, “So this isn’t MVP-worthy?”
But the fury reached a boiling point when ESPN’s Tim Legler responded on air, calling the rationale “intellectually bankrupt.”
“Let me get this straight,” Legler said, visibly agitated. “We punish Shai for being too skilled at drawing fouls? Since when is efficiency a weakness? This is the same logic that robbed James Harden of multiple MVPs, and we swore we’d never do it again. Now we’re doing it again.”
Advanced stats only add to the confusion. Shai leads the league in Player Efficiency Rating, Win Shares, and Box Plus-Minus. The Thunder are on pace for 65 wins. By any historical standard, he’s a lock.
So what’s really going on?
According to the anonymous voter, there’s a quieter narrative at play among the old guard: “Voter fatigue for the ‘new school’ foul-drawer.” One Eastern Conference executive, speaking without permission, told us, “There’s a group of voters—mostly former players turned media—who genuinely believe Jokić and Giannis are doing ‘harder’ things. And Luka [Dončić] has the ‘narrative bounce-back’ story now that he’s in L.A.”
In other words, Shai didn’t lose MVP on the court. He may lose it in a smoke-filled room of outdated ideals.
The backlash has been so severe that the NBA’s official MVP voter transparency committee is now facing calls to release individual ballots before the award is even announced. “Name and shame,” wrote one popular NBA podcaster. “If you’re going to penalize a guy for getting fouled, at least have the guts to put your name on it.”
Shai himself was asked about the comments after dropping 41 points on the Pelicans last night.
“No comment,” he said with a slight smile. Then he added: “But I’ll see them at the free-throw line.”
For now, the NBA world remains furious—and more convinced than ever that the award stopped being about basketball a long time ago.











