Shai Gilgeous-Alexander’s Biggest MVP Moments

Shai Gilgeous-Alexander stepped into legendary company by receiving his second straight MVP. Check out his best moments.

Shai Gilgeous-Alexander’s Biggest MVP Moments
Oklahoma City Thunder v Los Angeles Lakers - Game Four
Source: Luke Hales / Getty

The NBA MVP announcement was supposed to be one of those clean, made-for-TV moments. Shai Gilgeous-Alexander, live on Amazon Prime with Taylor Rooks, Steve Nash, Dirk Nowitzki, Blake Griffin, and Udonis Haslem, getting the official word that he had gone back-to-back as the league’s Most Valuable Player. Then Shams Charania did what Shams does and spoiled the surprise before the show could really land the plane. Still, even with the leak, there was no taking the shine off SGA’s night. The Oklahoma City Thunder superstar officially won his second straight MVP, and at 27 years old, he is already building the kind of résumé that makes basketball history start rearranging itself around him.

And because Shai is Shai, he did not celebrate the moment alone. Before accepting the award, he blessed his Thunder teammates with the kind of gift baskets that matched the level of the season: Audemars Piguet watches, Burberry trench coats, golf clubs, YSL cologne, custom Levi’s Canadian tuxedo sets, iPhone 17s with free AT&T service, Spotify Premium memberships and custom Don Julio 1942 bottles. Last year, when he won his first MVP award, he gave his teammates Rolex watches. This year, he leveled it up, and the Thunder players even wore the trench cats to his MVP news conference afterward.

Gilgeous-Alexander won the 2025-26 MVP convincingly, receiving 83 of 100 first-place votes and 939 total voting points. Nikola Jokić finished second with 634 points and 10 first-place votes, while Victor Wembanyama finished third with 569 points and five first-place votes. Luka Dončić finished fourth, Cade Cunningham finished fifth, and Jaylen Brown, Kawhi Leonard, and Donovan Mitchell also appeared on ballots.

When you look at the full picture, it is hard to argue against the voters getting this one right. SGA averaged 31.1 points, 6.6 assists and 4.3 rebounds across 68 games while shooting a career-best 55.3% from the field. He led Oklahoma City to an NBA-best 64-18 record, kept the Thunder at the top of the league while Jalen Williams missed a major chunk of the season, and still made it look almost routine. He became the only guard in league history to average more than 30 points while shooting better than 55% from the field, which is a ridiculous sentence no matter how many times you read it.

What made SGA’s case even stronger was how easy he made it all look. The Thunder were so dominant that he appeared in the fourth quarter only 42 times in 68 games, and he still led the league with 175 clutch points on his way to winning the Clutch Player of the Year. He scored 20 or more in every regular-season game he played, became the first player since Wilt Chamberlain in 1963-64 to do that across a qualifying season, and finished with 43 games of 30-plus, eight games of 40-plus and one 50-piece. That is not just production. That is nightly inevitability.

Going back-to-back puts Shai in a room that most players never even get close enough to knock on. He became just the 14th player in NBA history to win consecutive MVPs, joining names like Bill Russell, Wilt Chamberlain, Kareem Abdul-Jabbar, Moses Malone, Larry Bird, Magic Johnson, Michael Jordan, Tim Duncan, Steve Nash, LeBron James, Stephen Curry, Giannis Antetokounmpo and Nikola Jokić. That is history book company!

Now the conversation gets even more uncomfortable for anyone slow to fully accept what is happening. SGA already has the MVP, Finals MVP, championship, scoring title and now a second straight MVP. If Oklahoma City repeats as champions, the “best player in the world” conversation becomes less of a debate and more of a referendum on how much people are willing to let go of old names. It also starts forcing bigger conversations about where Shai already sits among the great guards of this era and how quickly he is climbing toward all-time status.

The next step runs directly through Wembanyama and the San Antonio Spurs. The Thunder and Spurs enter the Western Conference Finals as the two best regular-season teams in basketball, with Oklahoma City going 64-18 and San Antonio going 62-20. This is the first NBA playoff series between two teams with at least 62 wins since the 1998 NBA Finals between Michael Jordan’s 62-win Chicago Bulls and the 62-win Utah Jazz.

That is why the hype around this series feels different. You have the back-to-back MVP against the third-place MVP finisher and Defensive Player of the Year. You have the defending champion Thunder still undefeated in these playoffs after sweeping the Suns and Lakers. You have a Spurs team that went 4-1 against OKC during the regular season and has the one player in the league who can make Shai’s rim pressure feel less automatic. Most people still expect the Thunder to survive it, but a lot of the smartest basketball voices are treating this like the first real seven-game test of Oklahoma City’s postseason run.

But if there is anybody built to answer that kind of challenge, it is SGA. That has been the story of his whole season. When Oklahoma City needed a bucket, he got it. When they needed history, he delivered it. When they needed him to steady the team through injuries, noise, big games and title-defense pressure, he never blinked. So, in celebration of Shai Gilgeous-Alexander winning MVP again, here are the biggest MVP moments from his season.

Shai Gilgeous-Alexander’s Biggest MVP Moments

The Game-Winner Against The Nuggets

This is the one that has to be on the list. On March 9, SGA hit a step-back three with fewer than three seconds left to give Oklahoma City a 129-126 win over Denver. He finished with 35 points, made 14 of his 21 shots, hit two threes in the final 15 seconds and tied Wilt Chamberlain’s record with his 126th straight 20-point game. It was one of those moments that felt bigger than one regular-season game because, at the moment, people were still trying to make the MVP race feel neck and neck. Shai beat Jokić head-to-head and gave voters the kind of signature shot that sticks.

Breaking Wilt Chamberlain’s 20-Point Streak Record Against Boston

Three days later, SGA turned around and made more history against the Celtics. He scored 35 points in a 104-102 Thunder win, giving him his 127th straight game with at least 20 points and passing Wilt Chamberlain for the longest such streak in NBA history. The moment was even colder because Boston had OKC in a real fight, and Shai scored 14 in the fourth quarter to make sure the record came with a win.

Dropping A Career-High 55 In A Finals Rematch

The season was barely underway before Shai reminded everyone that the MVP trophy was still living in Oklahoma City for a reason. On Oct. 23, he scored a career-high 55 points in a double overtime win over the Indiana Pacers, the same team OKC beat in the previous NBA Finals. For a defending champion, that is exactly how you send the league a message early. For an MVP candidate, that is how you start stacking receipts before Thanksgiving.

Ring Night Heroics Against Kevin Durant & The Rockets

Opening night could have been messy. The Thunder were raising a banner, Kevin Durant was back in OKC in a Rockets jersey, and Houston had enough size and talent to make the champs uncomfortable. Shai started slow, but still finished with 35 points, five rebounds, five assists, two steals and two blocks, then hit the game-winning free throws with 2.3 seconds left in double overtime. That is how you start a title defense and an MVP campaign at the same time.  

Leading OKC To A 24-1 Start

By Dec. 1, the Thunder were 20-1 and already moving like a team that had no interest in giving the league its belt back. SGA had 26 points, including 10 in the fourth quarter, in a win over Portland that pushed OKC into historic early-season company. That kind of start matters in MVP races because it made Shai’s case feel like more than numbers. It made it feel like dominance. The Thunder ended up tied with the 2015-16 Golden State Warriors with a 24-1 start.

Winning Clutch Player Of The Year

The MVP case was never just about volume. Shai also became the league’s certified closer. He led the NBA with 175 clutch points and won the Clutch Player of the Year award, adding another layer to his candidacy beyond the 30-point nights and the best record. The Thunder did not just trust him when games got tight; they built their late-game identity around the fact that he was probably going to get to his spot anyway.

Scoring 20+ Every Single Night He Played

This was less one moment and more a season-long flex. SGA played 68 games and scored at least 20 points in every single one, something that had not been done by a qualifying player since Wilt Chamberlain in 1963-64. That kind of consistency is almost hard to process in today’s league, especially for a guard facing traps, elite wing defenders, and playoff-style attention every night. It was real “you know what’s coming, and you still can’t stop it” basketball.

Becoming The Most Efficient 30-Point Guard Ever

Averaging 30 is one thing. Averaging 30 while shooting 55.3% from the field as a guard is different. He became the first guard in league history to average more than 30 points while shooting better than 55% from the field, and also joined Michael Jordan as the only guards to average at least 30 points on 50% shooting or better in four straight seasons. That is the type of stat that separates an MVP season from a regular superstar season.

Keeping OKC On Top While Jalen Williams Was Hurt

One of the strongest parts of SGA’s MVP case was that Oklahoma City did not have a perfect-health season around him; Jalen Williams missed a lot of time, and the Thunder still finished with the best record in basketball. That matters because MVP is not just about who has the prettiest stat line. It’s about who raises the floor, keeps the standard high and makes a great team feel inevitable even when the roster is not whole.

Sweeping The Lakers To Stay Perfect In The Playoffs

The MVP is a regular-season award, but timing matters when the announcement comes during the postseason. Shai helped send the Lakers home as Oklahoma City completed its second straight sweep to begin the playoffs, keeping the Thunder undefeated through the first two rounds. By the time he officially got the trophy, he was not just being rewarded for the season he already had. He was still actively reminding everybody why he won it.

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