It's been an interesting season, with a few of the established stars/perennial candidates being injured and/or not having outstanding seasons thus far, and a lot of younger stars really starting to make their mark. From the MVP to the championship, the league seems as wide open as it's ever been.
As far as the unwritten rule/criteria that the MVP should go to a standout player on a Playoff team, I think that The Brow is a perfectly legitimate candidate, and that an MVP nod would be well-earned. I wouldn't be too inclined to disagree if he keeps up the same level of play, and ends up winning the award. At the same time, there's a part of me that feels it's a bit iffy to give the MVP to a player on a lottery-bound team, but "it doesn't seem right" is not really a valid argument.
I think it just comes down to what's been established as convention. The top candidates for the MVP usually happen to be on good teams, so when you think of the MVP award, you think of players who are having standout seasons on teams that are also enjoying a decent amount of success. With the West being stacked right now, and Davis having such a big year, the time has probably come to re-evaluate that stance, or at least allow for some exceptions.
As for my pick...I've been going back and forth between a few of the current frontrunners, and right now, I'll go with Stephen Curry. He's putting up some pretty nice raw stats in around 33 minutes per game, and he ranks up there in the league leaders in several categories of raw and advanced stats. I think it's a really close race between him, Damian Lillard, and Anthony Davis. James Harden and Jimmy Butler would probably round out my top five.
I'm guessing Kevin's question about Kobe was tongue-in-cheek, but for the sake of discussion...yeah, no. You probably couldn't even call Kobe the MVP of the Lakers so far this season. If you're talking skill, talent, and career accomplishments, then he's certainly the best player on the team. In terms of his performance though, the value of his contributions, you could argue that he's been more of a hindrance; win shares are admittedly an estimate, but for whatever it's worth in terms of defining as player's value to his team,
by the numbers,
Carlos Boozer has had a more positive impact on the Lakers this season.