
Let’s say the quiet part out loud. The NBA MVP race has become less about dominance and more about narrative. And no one is benefiting from a softer narrative right now than Oklahoma City Thunder guard Shai Gilgeous-Alexander. The headline is harsh. The truth is harsher: Shai Gilgeous-Alexander is not a true MVP contender. He is a free throw merchant with an elite public relations machine—and the league is falling for it.
Start with the numbers that don’t lie. SGA is averaging over 31 points per game. Impressive, until you peel back the layers. A staggering 30% of his offense comes from free throws. He ranks near the top of the league in free throw attempts per game, often outpacing known foul-baiters like Joel Embiid and Giannis Antetokounmpo. But it’s not the volume—it’s the method. Watch any Thunder game. Shai doesn’t hunt buckets; he hunts whistles. The pump fake, the lean into a defender’s hip, the exaggerated head-snap on a contested layup. This isn’t basketball; it’s performance art designed to manipulate referees. In high-leverage moments, when defenses tighten and whistles get shy, where is SGA? Often fading, because his primary weapon—the free throw—is taken away. True MVPs like Nikola Jokić or Giannis find ways to score when officials swallow their whistles. Shai finds ways to complain.
Now consider the PR machine. You’ve heard the spin: “He’s crafty.” “He plays at his own pace.” “He’s a throwback mid-range killer.” This is the marketing genius of the SGA campaign. By dressing foul-baiting in the clothes of finesse, his team has convinced voters that his game is aesthetic rather than cynical. Compare him to past MVPs. Jokić redefined the center position with passing genius. Giannis bulldozed defenses through sheer force. Even James Harden—the original foul merchant—was also an all-time playmaker and three-point volume shooter. SGA’s playmaking is good, not great. His three-point shooting is average. He doesn’t crash the boards, pulling just five rebounds a game. His defensive reputation is built on steals, not lockdown possession. What’s left? A free throw diet and a social media team that clips every smooth stepback while editing out the arm-flop that preceded it.
Then there is the winning argument. MVP isn’t just stats. It’s elevating a team to historic relevance. Yes, the Thunder are good—but they were already rising on the back of a young core and elite front office moves. Jalen Williams, Chet Holmgren, and the league’s deepest bench of defenders deserve as much credit. In the playoffs last year, when the whistle tightened, SGA’s efficiency dipped. His usage spiked, but his impact per possession shrank. True MVP contenders carry their teams through adversity. Shai, so far, glides through free throws.
The bottom line is this: Shai Gilgeous-Alexander is an All-Star. He’s a top-10 player. But the MVP award used to mean the most dominant, unstoppable force in the league. Not the most creative foul-drawer with the best PR team. Give him the “Kyle Korver Hustle Award” if you want. But keep the MVP trophy away from the free throw line—and away from the man living there rent-free.












