• Home
  • FIBA
  • EuroLeague
  • NBA/NCAA
  • National Leagues
  • Podcast
  • Features
  • More
  • Contact

Grimag

  • FIBA
  • EuroLeague
  • NBA/NCAA
  • National Leagues
  • Podcast
  • Features
  • More

Lauri Markkanen is why the MIP award exists

April 25, 2023

With the Finland and Utah Jazz superstar picking up a much deserved NBA Most Improved Player award, Emmet Ryan on the inevitable rise of Markkamania

The timing felt like everything. On the eve of EuroBasket, Lauri Markkanen’s time in Cleveland was over and he was being shipped to Salt Lake City as the Utah Jazz blew it all up and went full rebuild mode. Right then, in early September, whatever fire needed to be stoked went from embers to a sea of flames that could be seen across continents. Lauri Markkanen was going to get the world’s attention, wherever he played.




The stuff you already know
Markkanen ran wild at EuroBasket, ending a more than 50 year wait for Finland to make it to the quarter finals and entering god mode on the floor whenever he wanted. By the time he was done in Berlin, it wasn’t so much that he might be a piece that Utah would want to keep long-term but how quickly it would take eyes in the US to realise that the Jazz would be crazy to not have him as a key part of the rebuild.

The Jazz, of course, lost a lot but far less than anticipated and Markkanen impressed mightily throughout the season, with his unique style including being the first player to make 100 dunks and 200 threes in the same season. From the off in SLC, there was no doubt that Lauri had become the star he was meant to be after lingering in the odd spot of being the last starter with the Cavs. He got the All Star nod as expected and Utah enters this off-season with one bona fide key man before it starts using the extraordinary pile of draft assets it has built up.

The stuff you really ought to know
The I in most improved often gets a weird rep because how much do we really gauge improvement and how exactly do we define it? Fortunately, Markkanen made it as easy as possible to understand what a year to year improvement looks like through both the eye test and the raw numbers.

We’ve been over the former but he raised field goal percentage from 45 to 50 per cent this year, 3P% to 39 per cent from 36 per cent, even his free throw average was almost up a point at 88 per cent. Rebounds? Up from 5.7 to 8.6 per game, assists from 1.3 to 1.9, and points from 14.8 to 25.6 per game. All of this while his minutes only rose from 31 to 34 this season.

That’s a leap and then some. Markkanen joins some great company amongst Europeans with Gheorghe Muresan (1996), Boris Diaw (2006), Hedo Turkoglu (2008), Goran Dragic (2014), and Giannis Antentokounmpo (2017) the other Euros to previously win the prize.


BallinEurope is ramping up its YouTube game this season. Subscribe to our channel now for player exclusives, analysis videos, and much more.

A quick note on SGA
I genuinely have to give the dude some props because I remember being surprised when I saw Shai Gilgeous-Alexander was even on the shortlist, mainly because I figured he couldn’t have improved that much. Dude already looked like a star last season.

My bad and then some as he really did some extraordinary work numbers wise getting to new levels this season and made the type of gains that are difficult to make in raw stats after the prior year he had. Good work SGA, this was just the wrong year to be in the running.

Now back to why you’re here
So what’s next for Markkanen? Well the bad news is that the Jazz aren’t going to be among the elite next year but they have already outperformed expectations and effectively played their way out of the play-in conversation at the tail-end of the season. If someone had told you in October that Markkanen’s team would be doing the same thing as Dallas at the end of the season, would you have believed them? That’s the wild world the Jazz find themselves in now.

They should realistically be, at the very least, in the conversation for the 7 or 8 slots next season and the right move here or there could have them sniffing an actual playoff berth earned in-season not through the play-ins. That’s going to involve a whole lot of things going right but we’ve already seen that Markkanen can make things right. The dude has found the baller he was meant to be. Once he gets back from military service, expect him to be focused squarely on getting even better.

BallinEurope has a book, a real life actual book called I Like it Loud, and you can buy it on Amazon now. It’s here as a book and here in Kindle form.

Apr 25, 2023Emmet Ryan
Powered by Sidelines
Share on FacebookShare on Twitter
This post was published on April 25, 2023
The weight of expectationIreland’s men know their fate but what’s their future?

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

Emmet Ryan
2 years ago Features, NBA/NCAAFinland, Lauri Markkanen, Susijengi, Utah Jazz
Recent Posts
Kostas Papanikolaou plays a smaller on-court role these days, but his leadership remains vital to Olympiacos’ pursuit of a Euroleague title.
Kostas Papanikolaou’s Quiet Fire Powers Olympiacos
5 days ago
Cedi Osman and Juancho Hernangomez shone but Panathinaikos crumbled as Efes forced Game 5. Emmet Ryan breaks down what went wrong in Istanbul.
Why Panathinaikos Fell Apart in Istanbul
6 days ago
Olympiacos beat Real Madrid in Euroleague chaos—proof Georgios Bartzokas and his team are built for the Final Four.
What Olympiacos Proved in Beating Real Madrid
7 days ago
Categories
Recent Posts
Kostas Papanikolaou’s Quiet Fire Powers Olympiacos
Why Panathinaikos Fell Apart in Istanbul
What Olympiacos Proved in Beating Real Madrid
Tags
EuroLeagueNBAYouTubeReal MadridCSKA MoscowFC BarcelonaFIBAOlympiacosPanathinaikosZalgiris KaunasACBSpainMaccabi Tel AvivRicky RubioTeam SpainLos Angeles LakersMontepaschi SienaPartizan BelgradeLithuaniaIrelandGermanyPau GasolItalyTeam LithuaniaTurkeyTeam FranceCaja Laboral BaskoniaLietuvos RytasFenerbahce ÜlkerGreeceJuan Carlos NavarroSerbiaSan Antonio SpursTony ParkerMinnesota TimberwolvesFranceDirk Nowitzkibasketball highlightsTeam RussiaALBA BerlinEuroCupEuroleagueDallas MavericksTeam USAEuroBasket 2011
Share
0
Facebook
ABOUT
BallinEurope.com was founded in September 2007 by Christophe Ney (who now runs the excellent scouting-themed website European Prospects) and Tobias Seitz, both then bloggers for FIBA.com with over 10 years’ worth of experience in the professional basketball world each. The mission then was to “provide a very unique perspective of Basketball in and about Europe.”
Most Commented
Why Andrei Kirilenko and CSKA Moscow must win the Euroleague
13 years ago
180 Comments
Euroleague Transfers Table 2008/2009
17 years ago
168 Comments
A week in highlights: Spanish block party, mighty Milos, Utah rap and some dude dunking in L.A.
14 years ago
139 Comments
Archives
Get In Touch

Email: emmetryan@gmail.com

Name: Emmet Ryan

2014 © BallinEurope. Join JCI Dublin