The NBA’s annual GM survey, analyzed by Kurt earlier today, contained few surprises.
Who will win the championship? The Heat, as usual.
Who will win MVP? LeBron James, obviously.
Who is the best center? Dwight Howard, of course.
Who’s the best coach in the NBA? Gregg Popovich, surely.
Which player makes the most of limited natural ability? A white guy, as always.
Kevin Love won that vote on a question that has been slightly re-worded. The previous six winners – under the wording, “Which player does the most with the least?” – were Love, Luis Scola, Mehmet Okur, Bruce Bowen, Steve Nash and Nash. This season, Marc Gasol, Matt Bonner, Jared Dudley, Nick Collison, Stephen Curry, Danny Green, Chuck Hayes, Roy Hibbert, Kyle Korver, Nash, Scola, Anderson Varejao and Greivis Vasquez received votes.
The voting doesn’t need to be unanimous along racial lines to see the bias. In a league where black players are a majority, these results stand out.
Love sees it:
It's the "White Guy" award!! @APkrawczynski: Another from NBA GM survey: @kevinlove is player who makes most of 'limited natural ability.'
— Kevin Love (@kevinlove) October 22, 2013
And so does Steve Kerr:
“@kevinlove: GM survey: Love is player who makes most of 'limited natural ability.'” Other than being 6-10, insanely strong w/velvet touch?
— Steve Kerr (@SteveKerr) October 22, 2013
@SteveKerrTNT we suffer from the same condition...
— Kevin Love (@kevinlove) October 22, 2013
@kevinlove It's a disease that we will face for a lifetime. There is no cure!
— Steve Kerr (@SteveKerr) October 22, 2013
Ethan Sherwood Strauss of HoopSpeak keenly addressed this issue last season:
My vote would go to Al Jefferson, who’s far from an elite NBA athlete, losing athleticism with age and a little short for his style of play. But he’s added a jumper, improved his passing and cut down on his turnovers. That’s the textbook definition of getting the most out of a limited natural ability.In a strange way, it’s insulting to Jefferson – and all black athletes – that he’s not credited more often for doing more with less, because few acknowledge that he has less. We must move past the paradigm that all black athletes are freakishly talented. It’s obviously inaccurate.We’ve made progress in this realm – the rise of the black quarterback is evidence – but there’s still a long way to go.