
Originally Posted by
Jay P. Mercado
That's correct, Darkwind. My preference only sticks with the BPC award. And since there's a rule regarding BPC awardees becoming automatic nominees for the MVP race, then this may become an issue.
But then, this is where the voting counts. Of course, a lot of fans continue to question the validity of the points from the voters as they can easily be swayed by politics, favoritism or envelopmental approaches. But ultimately, this may actually serve as the balancing factor.
Unlike in the NBA when the MVP is judged based on the player's performance during the regular season, in the PBA, there are 3 conferences to consider. And no matter how one looks at it, the most favorable candidate to win the MVP award would normally come from the team that won the most titles that season - or in the AFC.
The Benjie Paras incident of 1989 was very telling really. I'm a huge Paras' fan but I feel for Ramon Fernandez, who placed 2nd overall in the statistical race (behind Alvin Patrimonio, with Paras placing 3rd overall), led his team SMB to a rare grandslam, and yet, wound up losing the MVP award to the rookie. I just can't understand the aberration really.
But then, there lies the rub. I will contradict myself here now, since the very reason why Paras won was because of the votes. Which ultimately goes back to the root cause of the problem - that voters, regardless of where they come from (media, broadcast panel, PBA office, etc), will always have their perceived "biases." And while statistics are equally important, it shouldn't be the sole weight as well because there are a lot of players who are considered as, in FH words, "stats-pilers." Atoy Co and Abet Guidaben may be regarded as the most notorious stats-padders in PBA history and I don't think they would deny that themselves.
Hence, a balance must be thought out. Statistics (with greater weight given to the AFC which the PBA is actually doing already), team standings, and votes should be merited into these. The voting process should already have considered the team standings (giving more weight to players coming from teams that won titles that season) but as proven in the past, this can easily be defied by the voting population.