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Tyrese Maxey is Quietly Crashing the MVP Race
Bill Streicher-Imagn Images

11 games into the 2025-26 NBA season, Tyrese Maxey is doing something no one predicted a year ago: forcing himself into the MVP conversation.

With the Philadelphia 76ers navigating post-James Harden identity shifts, Maxey is quietly rewriting the script. His recent stretch of 30+ point nights and 40+ minute outings suggests this is not just a breakout but a takeover. He might not yet sit on the same pedestal as Nikola Jokić or Giannis Antetokounmpo in the minds of voters, but the data, the performances, and Philly’s new identity centered around him should at least include him in the conversation.

Maxey’s game log this season reads like the start of a superstar surge. He’s already delivered big minutes and big numbers. The start of the year has been the strongest stretch of his professional career.

More importantly than the stretch along is the fact that it looks sustainable. Maxey isn’t trying to match Jokić’s career; he’s trying to meet the expectation of what an MVP candidate looks like. His early-season numbers show he’s trending that way. As of Nov. 13, he’s averaging 32.1 points while hitting 4.0 three-pointers in 40.5 minutes. And crucially, he’s doing it while carrying the 76ers’ offense.

A New Identity in Philadelphia

The MVP award is not just about stats—it’s also about impact, leadership, how a player lifts a franchise, and how he changes the feel of a team. Maxey has become the go-to guy, showing that the 76ers have moved on from their old ways. The team is not just dependent on Joel Embiid. They’re now a two-pronged attack with Maxey at the forefront of what’s next.

For a franchise that has been circling the same “championship or bust” mountain, Maxey offers a new vision: fast, joyful, competitive. That shift in mood and expectation can help elevate his MVP case beyond raw numbers.

For the 76ers, it means the long-awaited “next era” might already be here. Maxey’s rise is not just good for him—it’s good for Philly’s future.

If Maxey keeps playing this way, he’ll redefine what an MVP candidate in a “big man-dominated” era looks like. Many recent MVPs have been power forwards, centers, or scoring guards with established pedigrees. Maxey is rewriting that mold.

On the league level, watching a player like Maxey—smaller frame, lightning pace, high shot volume and high efficiency—succeed at MVP candidacy may push teams to rethink roster construction. It’s speed and skill over size alone.

Chasing the League’s Best

He’s not Jokić, Giannis, or Shai Gilgeous-Alexander, but look at the current MVP odds and leaderboard: Maxey already sits among them, and that’s early. Maxey is among the top scorers, matching Giannis and SGA in scoring output. That’s huge for his MVP case.

Efficiency will be a key differentiator in this race. Maxey’s shooting efficiency stands 45.8%. This is solid but lags behind players like Jokić 73.3% and Giannis 63%. Another factor that will stand out is the all-around impact of each candidate. Jokić stands out with elite rebounding and assisting numbers averaging at 13 rebounds and 11.9 assists. Maxey’s averaging 8.3 assists and 4.9 rebounds is strong for a guard but he doesn’t yet produce the rebound or rim-impact numbers of the big men.

The Next Step

Maxey’s rise is still in its early chapters. The big tests are coming: deep playoff run, consistency through slumps, leading the 76ers when defenses adjust. But he’s not just showing potential — he’s proving it.

And for a franchise, a league and a fan base thirsty for fresh storylines, Maxey makes sense. He is the new face of a team with championship aspirations. Maxey is possibly the new standard for what a 21st-century MVP can be.

This article first appeared on The Lead and was syndicated with permission.

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