James Harden

Brandon Simberg, Staff Writer

Harden is having one of the most efficient seasons of all time, while leading the Rockets to 54 wins. In NBA history, every MVP has been on a top-3 seed in their respective conference. The Rockets are the third-best team in the West while the Thunder are sixth. Harden’s team has a legitimate chance to win the title, while Westbrook’s team doesn’t.

The common argument against Harden is that he plays with better teammates, so his team should be better. I would actually disagree and say Westbrook’s supporting cast is as good, if not better than Harden’s.

If we were to have a re-draft of all Rockets and Thunder players (excluding Harden and Westbrook), then the Thunder’s Steven Adams and Victor Oladipo would most likely be the first 2 picks. The Rockets preseason projected win total, according to ESPN was, 41 wins, while the Thunder’s was 43 wins. If Harden’s supporting cast was better, the Rockets would have had a higher projected win total. Harden elevated not just his play, but his teammates’ play as well. He constantly creates open looks, which is why the Rockets shattered expectations while having the 10th-best offense in NBA history.

Another popular argument for Westbrook is that he is the only player since 1962 to average a triple-double for an entire season. There’s no denying how impressive that is, but if you look at the numbers, Harden had a better statistical season. Harden created 57.6 points per game, which is better than Westbrook’s 56.5. Westbrook does have the rebounding edge, but a closer look at the numbers would suggest that he grabbed many meaningless rebounds. Westbrook grabbed a league-high 91 rebounds off of missed free throws, which helped pad his rebounding totals.

Obviously Westbrook was incredible this year, but Harden is the first player in the last 40 years to score 2,400 points and have 900 assists in a season. He was much more efficient too, becoming the first player since the 1980s to average 29 points a game on only 19 shots per game. Westbrook, on the other hand, led the league in missed shots.

Harden is the MVP and it isn’t that close.