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Posted by Talkhoops.net senior writer and resident Lakers' fan, Phillip Barnett



Before I get into the MVP rankings I'd like to pay special attention to the competition we have this year for the Most Improved Player award. So far this season we've seen a few players step their games up and have been posting numbers that none of us have expected. Right now, it's a four horse race (and two of them are on my fantasy team):

1. Devin Harris
Devin Harris is having a career season with his scoring up 12.5 ppg over his career average and assists per game up 2.7 over his career average. His steals per game, free throw shooting and three point shooting are all up from his career averages too. It's been clear who got the better out of the Kidd-for-Harris deal, and it was cemented when Harris dropped 41 and 13 on the Mavericks about a week ago.

Harris has recorded 30 points or more in eight games during the course of his career, which all have happened this season. In five of those games Harris recorded at least seven assists. In just over a third of the Nets' games so far, Harris has lead the team in points and assists and has had at least two steals in 13 games - including a five game streak with at least two. Harris hasn't just been the best player on his team this season, but he's been one of the league's best point guards. In terms of player efficiency rating, only the Hornets' Chris Paul's rating is higher. Harris' PER is well above guys like Steve Nash, Jason Kidd, Deron Williams and Baron Davis. If Harris keeps this up, the Most Improved player award is all his.

2. John Salmons
In my first draft I had Paul Millsap at number two on this list (don't worry, he's still on the list), but had to switch him with John Salmons for one simple reason: We all saw Paul Millsap's season coming. What we (we as in I) didn't see John Salmon's career numbers coming. I remember while talkhoops.net was doing our 08-09 season preview, Zach Harper and I debated about where Sacramento, Golden State and the Clippers would fall after the Suns in the Pacific Division. I argued that the Warriors would finish above the Kings because the Kings were well, garbage. I recognized that they are a better team this year than last season, but they really had no impact players outside of Kevin Martin. Zach countered by telling me about Salmons, a guy who I thought was an okay basketball player, not one who would end up out playing Kobe Bryant on December 9th.

I had seen him play before, but every time I'd watch a Kings' game I'd concentrate too much on Martin's skin fade rather than watching this team play, and I know that resonates with a lot of NBA fans. With Martin out, someone had to step up and play big for the Kings and Salmons has done it well averaging 20 points per contest - just about eight points per game higher than he was last season. If the Kings were actually winning games the gap between Salmons and Harris wouldn't be so far apart.

3. Paul Millsap
For a guy who hates the Utah Jazz more than any other franchise in the league I sure do like a lot of their players. Jerry Sloan has a group of likeable guys for once in Deron Williams, Corey Brewer, Ronnie Brewer, Ronnie Price, Mehmet Okur and of course Paul Millsap (even with all of those guys that I like, they still have a three headed monster of guys that I can't stand in Carlos Boozer, Andrei Kirilenko and Matt Harpering - damn Jazz). Millsap is one of many undersized power forwards in the league who go out and get the job done night in and night out.

His scoring is up 6.9 points from 8.1 to 15 per game and his rebounding is also up from 5.6 to nine per game. Also, from the last week of November until the 20th of December Paul Millsap was playing as well as any power forward in the league recording 15 straight double doubles and was just a rebound shy of recording his 16th straight - and if it weren't for an injury, he might have went for 16 straight. Because of the injury, however, Millsap is expected to miss seven to 10 days.

4. Rajon Rondo
We saw flashes of brilliance from Rajon Rondo last season, but I didn't expect him to be this good. Along with Harris, Rondo belongs in the discussion of the top-10 point guards in the NBA this season. Even though none of his numbers jump out at you nor are any of his improvements going to be shocking compared to last season, Rondo has improved in every statistical category except blocked shots. What you don't see in box scores is his improved leadership, his mental toughness, his ability to get into the painted area and the trust his teammates now have in him.

We can talk all day long about the Pierce-Garnett-Allen threesome (lol, threesome), but Rondo has been the biggest difference in the Celtics this season - because more than anyone else on the starting five, you can notice a considerable difference in the way the Celtics play when Rondo is off of the floor, and that is just a sign of the makings of a great point guard.  I might not like the fact that he plays for the Celtics, but I love his game. He's developed a chemistry with his teammates - most notably Garnett - that he didn't have last season, and that just makes this team more dangerous as we approach the All-Star Break and that push for the playoffs.

One more thing before I get into the MVP Rankings...

I couldn't leave without talking about the best Christmas gift I've gotten in a while. No, not the electrical desk calendar that was re-gifted and given to me (which I love for some reason), I'm talking about the Lakers beating the Celtics. Of course, this is just one of 82 games and I know that this is relatively miniscule compared to an NBA Finals beat-down, but it did establish the Lakers as actual contenders for the title and I took two things away from this game:

1. For the Lakers to beat any premier team in the NBA this season Kobe Bryant is going to have to get off to a good start. We've seen throughout his career that he takes games his team can make a statement in personal, and sometimes tries to do too much. Of course, it's necessary for Bryant to have bigger games to beat better teams, but if Bryant had gotten off to a slow start and the Lakers trailed at the half, he would have shot them out of the game in that second half. Instead, he hit some tough shots and created some easy looks in the first half, which opened things up for everyone else in the second. If the Lakers are going to take home the Larry O'Brien Trophy home this season and parade down Figueroa, Bryant is going to have to have big first and fourth quarters in big games, there is no other way (well, maybe get Pau Gasol to stop playing like the '92 Angolans every time Kendrik Perkins snarls at him).

2. With the rise of the Eastern Conference and the declination of the West, we're as close as we've been to 80s basketball since, well, the 80s. We have the Lakers dominating the Western Conference and can probably make it to the Finals seven more times over the next nine years and three really good Eastern Conference teams (Boston, Cleveland and Orlando). I'm excited about this for two reasons: A) the Lakers are poised to dominate the West for a while and B) it's starting to look like we're either going to get another Lakers-Celtics Finals or a Kobe-Lebron Finals. How fun would that be? I'm as giddy as I've been since Hot-Pockets came out with their bacon and egg flavor.

On to the MVP Rankings:

1. K. Bryant (3) (24-5) - 26.2ppg    5.5rpg        4.2apg        1.38spg
I'm sure everyone's noticed the rise in Kobe Bryant's scoring since he dropped 32 on Sacramento on the 12th. What a lot of people haven't noticed is the fact that he no longer plays with his injured pinkie wrapped up. Bryant now has enough scar tissue around his pinky that he doesn't need to play with that bandage anymore. Since he's taken it off, his scoring nu mbers per game have risen from 25.8 ppg to 27 ppg. Yes, he has been taken more shots, but his field goal percentage has also risen from 45.6 percent to just over 50 percent from the field. No, Bryant isn't really number one on my MVP rankings (to be explained later), but if he keeps these numbers up, come January 19th, the two spots could seriously be shifting.

2. L. James (1) (25-4) - 27.3ppg    6.8rpg        6.3apg        50.4FG%
I can't have the corniest player of the week holding the number one spot on my MVP rankings, so he's down for the week. I'm just saying, if you're going to send an employee to Washington to fetch the Wizards' white jerseys so you can play in your blue jersey to match your new shoes - which are painfully ugly by the way - on Christmas Day with basketball fans across the country watching as you have your fans do the little chalk gimmick that you stole from Kevin Garnett who stole it from Jordan, then you need to drop 60. Since he wasn't anywhere near 60 (18, nine in the fourth), he loses about 30 swag points and drops to number two this week (be easy Cavs fans and Lakers haters, it's just for the week, unless he decides to do something this wack every week).

3. Chris Paul (2) (17-9) - 20.1ppg    5.2rpg        11.3apg    3.0spg
How do you respond to one of your worst nights where your streak of 108 consecutive steals ended on national television, on Christmas for that matter? Go back out on the next night and lead your team against a quality opponent with 26 points and 10 assists. Everyone has their off nights, but it's hard making a case keeping him above Dwight Howard when Howard's team dominated the Hornets on Christmas by 20 points. I guess when you're the best at what you do you stay in the top 3 of the MVP Rankings even when you get blown out.

4. Dwight Howard (5) (23-6) - 20.0ppg    13.9rpg    3.63bpg    55.0FG%
His impression of Stan Van Gundy and that lay-up he missed were awful, but that's about all he did wrong on Christmas. He's such a physical beast and he's really the first center since Shaq where everyone else on the team benefits because he's so imposing on the block. Yao Ming should have been that center, and has been from time-to-time, but the rest of the Magic team are reaping the benefits of having "Superman" on their team night in and night out. I mean, Jameer Nelson is sixth among point guards in Player Efficiency Rating.

5. Dwyane Wade (4) (16-12) - 28.9ppg    5.1rpg        6.8apg        2.18spg
Dwyane Wade has continued his tear through the league in December this last week by almost dropping a triple-double on Golden State with 32-8-8 and dropping 28 more on Chicago the night after Christmas. After Wade's 15 point effort in a loss to Milwaukee, the Heat have won four in a row and Wade has brought his scoring average up for the month of December to 30 points per game - and I'm still marveling at how much quicker he seems post-surgery.

6. Tim Duncan
This man does everything. We all know he can kiss it off the glass to get his buckets and snatch boards, but in the Spurs current four game winning streak, he has eight blocks and six steals.

7. Chauncy Billups
The Nuggets have two wins out of their last three, and in those two wins Billups dropped 19 and 10 against the Trailblazers and 26 and 10 against the 76ers.

8. Brandon Roy
Brandon Roy is beginning to see what it's like being one of the league's better scorers seeing a multitude of double teams from everyone. The game will just get easier for him if he doesn't start forcing shots.

9.  Dirk Nowitzki
Remember when Nowitzki took too many three-pointers. Now it's like he doesn't take them at all. His mid-range game has gotten that good.

10. Paul Pierce
Two straight losses in California will move you down a few spots. Don't worry Celtics' fans, they're still the best team in the league.

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